Stephanie Kelton, author of ‘The Deficit Myth’, joined Yahoo Finance Live to discuss Biden’s infrastructure plan and why she thinks he can go bigger. SEANA SMITH: All right. And we want to turn to ...
An article by Stephanie Kelton of MMT fame titled, “Biden Can Go Bigger and Not ‘Pay for It’ the Old Way,” appeared in the New York Times recently. She cautions against increasing taxes to fund ...
As President Donald Trump flirts with breaching Republican orthodoxy by letting tax cuts expire for some higher earners, he’s found support from the lead economic adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders’ 2016 ...
The national debt now tops $34 trillion, a record high. So how worried should we be? That seems to depend on which economist you ask. Joining us now is Stephanie Kelton. She's a professor of economics ...
The two most recent recessions—the one that accompanied the global financial crisis of 2007-2008 and the Covid recession of 2020—could not have been handled more differently, and therein lie some ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about economic policy for the 21st century. Since pretty much everyone over the age of twelve knows that printing money ...
Fiscal policy in a pandemic. We discuss why COVID-19 is giving a bigger voice to economists with very different ways of looking at the deficit. Guests Stephanie Kelton, professor of economics and ...
Stephanie Kelton would probably have done some things differently, but she couldn’t have asked for a better political and economic backdrop for her new book, The Deficit Myth: Modern Monetary Theory ...
The pandemic has offered economist Stephanie Kelton a chance to help turn Modern Monetary Theory into practice. What if the federal deficit didn’t actually matter? Modern Monetary Theory explained ...
America’s growing income inequality has long needed attention. Last January, under emergency circumstances, it finally got some, in the form of a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package. The quietly ...
Fiscal policy in a pandemic. We discuss why COVID-19 is giving a bigger voice to economists with very different ways of looking at the deficit. Joseph Stiglitz, professor of economics at Columbia ...
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