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Kent's avatar

A timely shot across the bow!

I ask this not because I’m opposed to the basic insight of MMT, but because I’m not an economist and struggling to understand the implications:

Let’s assume a super-simplified economy that consists of just two classes of workers and their respective products: public sector nurses (healthcare) and private sector farmers (food). While MMT allows us to easily increase nurses’ pay or employ more nurses, no amount of fiat currency can increase the yield of food per acre or the land used for farming. If an increasing proportion of school-leavers prefer nursing to farming, how does MMT address the imbalances or shortages?

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