Understanding Government Finance
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About this ebook
The government budget is not like a household budget. This report introduces the financial operations used by a central government with a free-floating currency, and explains how they differ from that of a household or corporation. The focus is on what constraints such a government faces, and explains why such governments only face a limited risk of involuntary default.
It introduces a simplified framework for the monetary system, along with the operating procedures that are associated with it. Complications seen in the real world are then added to this framework.
This report also acts as an introduction to some of the concepts used by Modern Monetary Theory, a school of thought within post-Keynesian economics.
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Understanding Government Finance - Brian Romanchuk
Chapter 1 Overview
1.1 Introduction
One often hears the suggestion that a central government’s budget is just like that of a household or a corporation. Although it is true that double-entry bookkeeping applies to governments as well as households, any resemblance is largely superficial and misleading. A central government defines the nature of the monetary system in which it operates, which is not the case for those in the private sector. The limits of government spending are not determined by narrow financial constraints, but rather, its effects on the broader economy. After all, no other entity can legally print money!
There are two common conventional arguments as to why governments face financial constraints. The first is that the bond market could refuse to lend to the government, which is known as rollover risk. The second form of constraint is based on arguments from economic theory, known as the governmental budget constraint. This report discusses these concepts, and explains why they do not appear to bind governments.
This freedom from financial constraints does not characterise all governments. A government that fixes its currency to an external instrument, or a sub-sovereign government (a city, province or state) faces financial constraints due to this lack of control over its financing. This eReport is not aimed at the analysis of such governments, although there is some discussion of how they differ from governments lacking such constraints. Examples of governments that I will be discussing are the central (federal) governments of countries such as Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, and Australia.
This report is aimed at those who have an interest in governmental finance, but who are not necessarily experts. The use of equations is largely avoided; instead, concepts are illustrated with graphs. The focus is on the operations behind government finance, and so there is limited discussion of economic theory. This reduces the scope of discussion; an analysis of the specific effects of fiscal policy upon the economy requires the use of economic theory.
The focus here is upon the general principles of governmental finance, and not the details of its accounting nor the financial mechanics. Towards this end, a Simplified Framework of governmental finance is developed and explained. This framework is quite similar to current Canadian practices.
Although the objective is to avoid discussing economic theory in detail, some of the basic concepts of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) are introduced. Modern Monetary Theory is a school of thought within post-Keynesian economics, which is distinguished by its focus on the operations used in government finance. This book is within the MMT tradition, but I am not attempting to make this an introduction to all of the concepts used by MMT. I am presenting the analysis of governmental finance in a conventional manner, and I am discussing a framework in which bank reserves do not exist. (Many of the existing primers on MMT are couched in terms of a system that uses bank reserves.) Once the underlying principles are understood, bank reserves can be bolted onto the framework as a special case.
I would also note that I am trying to follow a neutral analytical stance, but my message will probably not be welcomed by fiscal conservatives (who tend to be the ones that argue that the government budget is just like a household budget). In my view, this is just laziness on their part; it is entirely possible to argue in favour of a smaller government without inventing non-existent financial constraints on fiscal policy. In any event, the intended audience includes those with an interest in the bond markets, and these readers will eventually discover that investment strategies that rely upon financial constraints biting into governments with free-floating currencies are almost certain money-losers.
I am not proposing any particular set of reforms to the monetary system (other than arguing that the financial system ought to be properly regulated). By contrast, there is a large number of people arguing for deep reforms to the monetary system, which is a reaction to the shenanigans that became apparent during the Financial Crisis of 2007-2009. (Throughout this text, I refer to that particular financial crisis as the Financial Crisis,
which may appear quaint if other intervening crises appear by the time you are reading this.) Although I am well aware of the defects of the current system, I believe that the reforms need to be focussed on the real economy, not the monetary system.
1.2 About this Report
This report is the first one published by BondEconomics.com. Later reports will cover other topics of interest in the analysis of bond markets and monetary economics. The target audience will vary from report-to-report, as will the level of complexity.
This report is aimed at those who are not specialists, but who are comfortable reading media articles about finance or economics. The amount of jargon being used has been reduced, although some technical terms are retained if they are commonly used elsewhere, and an explanation is given. This text is not aimed at academics, and no attempt has been made to provide an exhaustive literature survey. The references supplied should allow an interested reader to begin developing a more formal understanding of the literature if so desired.
Although a version of this report may eventually be published in a paperback edition, it was laid out on the presumption that it would only be available in electronic format. It is marketed as an eReport rather than an ebook to underline to readers that this is not a full-length book. Formatting decisions were made to respect the ebook format; for example, large tables and equations do not display properly upon many e-readers. In addition, there is no need for an index, as it assumed that readers would use the built-in search capability of the e-reader.
I finally wish to note that this report uses Canadian spelling and punctuation, which is a hybrid between English and American customs. The most obvious difference here is my use of cheque rather than the American check. I keep American spelling unchanged within quotations, as well as in proper names (such as Hyman Minsky’s book, Stabilizing an Unstable Economy, which I would render as Stabilising).
Montréal, Canada, June 2015.
Chapter 2 Understanding Money
2.1 Introduction
This eReport is a discussion of monetary operations and government finance in contemporary developed economies, in which the value of the currency floats freely. At the time of writing, the only developed economies where the currency is not free-floating are those within the euro area, and other nations that are closely linked to the euro (for example, Denmark). However, the situation is fluid, and it is possible that some or all of those countries will have free-floating currencies by the time you read this.
My starting point is how the monetary system works, and I am not discussing what economists refer to as the real economy
–the production of goods and services. To offer an example of what this distinction means, I am not discussing what resource inputs are required to produce 10,000 automobiles, rather I am discussing how those automobiles are paid for.
This is a departure from conventional textbooks, where one starts with a simplified real economy,
where exchanges consist of barter. (A barter transaction is one in which goods and services are exchanged without money–or a claim on money–being exchanged.) It is only in later chapters that a special good–money–is introduced.
In my view, this barter-based theoretical framework is misleading and unhelpful. The normal assumption is that goods are valued in barter transactions on how much utility
they provide when they are consumed. For example, if you prefer to eat a banana rather than an apple, you would be happy to trade an apple for a banana. Although this works for goods that are consumed, money is not directly consumed (except when rich people light cigars with high denomination notes as a form of conspicuous consumption). This then forces economists to insert any number of fixes
into their models to explain why money has value.
2.2 Money Is a Unit of Account
If we are analysing a monetary economy, the first question to ask is: What is money?
Some economists can give a very long answer to that question. However, from the perspective of someone analysing the monetary operations of a modern economy, the best answer is: money is a unit of account.
In other words, money is a unit of measurement, not a thing in itself. Like a kilogram, for instance. You can have a kilogram of feathers, you can have a kilogram of breakfast cereal, you can even have a standard kilogram weight, but you cannot have a kilogram.
If a kilogram measures mass, what does money measure? It measures debt.
All forms of money in a modern economy are effectively debt instruments, and monetary transactions therefore consist of a trade of something else for a debt instrument. These debt instruments are measured in a common unit, which is the domestic currency like the Canadian dollar, U.S. dollar, or the British pound.
If there were no common unit of measure, it would be extremely difficult to pay these debts back. This is because debts are often settled by the debtor handing the lender a debt instrument of a third party, and you need a common measure to compare their values.
The creation of this unit of account also allows double-entry bookkeeping to function.
For example, a corner store can have many different goods in inventory: the amounts of types of chocolate bars, drinks, etc. The storeowner has to track this real
inventory, and call suppliers to replenish particular products as they are sold. However, if that storeowner has a loan with a bank, the bank will wish to see accounting statements with the amount of inventory, so that the bank can judge the health of the business. The banker does not want to see a list of each type of chocolate bar, rather a one-line summary like Inventory: $10,000
. The only way to lump together all of the various types of inventory is to assign each of them a monetary value, and then aggregate (add up) those values.
If we want to analyse