Here’s John Kay in the FT arguing that helicopter drops don’t work. He says:
“even if the lucky recipients of the helicopter drop went straight down to the pub to celebrate their good fortune, the publican would return the cash to the banking system by the end of the day, and the notes would end up back in the vaults of the central bank. The helicopter drop does not give households reason to hold additional notes in their wallets, shops to keep more cash in their tills, or banks to hold more currency in their branches.”
He further adds that this sort of money issuance would be viewed as fiscal policy which would be untenable in the current environment.
And here’s Eric Lonergan arguing that Kay is wrong:
“The policy is extremely simple: central banks should print money and transfer it to households. All the empirical evidence on similar policies suggests that this raises spending. It logically follows that deflation should never be a sustained threat in economies that can create money at will.
Mr Kay instead follows a convoluted line of reasoning, arguing that money is a liability of the state because we pay taxes with it — that is semantic confusion.”
I think they’re both right for different reasons. Eric has the operations right. And John has the politics right. Here’s how I think of things:
No Comments