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Her central argument, developed for a general audience in her book The Deficit Myth, holds that such a government can never \"run out\" of its own money the way a household or firm can, and therefore the meaningful constraint on public spending is not the size of the deficit but the real capacity of the economy — labor, materials, productive capacity — and the risk of inflation. In this view, taxes and bond sales serve purposes other than funding the state, and the fear of deficits often functions as a political obstacle to worthwhile investment.\n\nThe political implications are what have made Kelton a widely cited and contested figure. If affordability is not the true barrier, then debates over programs such as a job guarantee, expanded public healthcare, or large-scale green investment become questions of political will and real resources rather than balanced-budget accounting. This reframing has been embraced by many on the progressive and democratic-socialist left, for whom it dissolves a long-standing rhetorical trap: the demand to explain \"how will you pay for it.\" Kelton served as chief economist for the Democratic minority on the U.S. Senate Budget Committee and as an economic adviser to Bernie Sanders's presidential campaigns, roles that placed her ideas close to a rising left-populist movement.\n\nMMT and Kelton's presentation of it remain seriously disputed within the economics profession. Prominent economists across the spectrum have argued that the theory understates inflation risk, blurs the practical independence of central banks, or overstates fiscal room, and critics span mainstream Keynesians as well as conservatives. Kelton, an academic economist who has held university appointments, engages these debates publicly and has become one of the most visible communicators of an unorthodox macroeconomic vision. Her lasting influence lies less in any single policy than in shifting the terms of argument: she has pressed a broad audience to treat government budgets as tools of political choice rather than fixed moral limits, and to ask first what an economy can actually produce.",false,5,true,"2026-07-15T01:50:05.569471+00:00","'academ':333C 'account':209C 'across':300C 'actual':402C 'advis':264C 'advoc':41C 'afford':172C 'american':7B,33C 'appoint':339C 'argu':17B,304C 'argument':66C,373C 'ask':396C 'audienc':71C,379C 'balanc':207C 'balanced-budget':206C 'bank':317C 'barrier':177C 'becom':196C,346C 'berni':266C 'best':35C 'blur':311C 'bond':134C 'book':74C 'broad':378C 'brought':10B 'budget':208C,258C,383C 'budgetari':27B 'campaign':270C 'capac':116C,123C 'central':65C,316C 'chief':248C 'choic':388C 'cite':167C 'close':276C 'committe':259C 'communic':352C 'conserv':330C 'constraint':102C 'contest':169C 'critic':323C 'currenc':20B,60C 'currency-issu':19B 'debat':16B,179C,342C 'deficit':76C,112C,147C 'demand':236C 'democrat':222C,252C 'democratic-socialist':221C 'develop':67C 'disput':293C 'dissolv':228C 'econom':263C,296C 'economi':119C,400C 'economist':8B,34C,249C,299C,334C 'embrac':214C 'engag':340C 'expand':187C 'explain':238C 'face':23B 'fear':145C 'figur':170C 'financ':61C 'firm':96C 'first':397C 'fiscal':320C 'fix':391C 'float':59C 'framework':49C 'function':149C 'fund':140C 'general':70C 'govern':22B,53C,82C,382C 'green':194C 'guarante':186C 'healthcar':189C 'held':337C 'heterodox':48C 'hold':78C 'household':94C 'idea':275C 'implic':159C 'independ':314C 'inflat':128C,309C 'influenc':360C 'invest':156C,195C 'issu':21B,55C 'job':185C 'kelton':2A,4B,30C,164C,245C,286C,331C 'keynesian':326C 'known':36C 'labor':120C 'larg':192C 'large-scal':191C 'last':359C 'lead':39C 'left':224C,281C 'left-populist':280C 'less':362C 'lie':361C 'limit':25B,393C 'long':231C 'long-stand':230C 'macroeconom':356C 'made':163C 'mainstream':15B,325C 'mani':216C 'materi':121C 'meaning':101C 'minor':253C 'mmt':46C,284C 'modern':11B,43C 'monetari':12B,44C 'money':90C 'moral':392C 'movement':283C 'myth':77C 'never':84C 'obstacl':153C 'often':148C 'one':28B,347C 'overst':319C 'pay':242C 'place':273C 'polici':366C 'polit':152C,158C,199C,387C 'populist':282C 'practic':313C 'present':288C 'presidenti':269C 'press':376C 'produc':403C 'product':122C 'profess':297C 'program':181C 'progress':219C 'promin':298C 'public':40C,62C,104C,188C,343C 'purpos':137C 'question':197C 'rather':204C,389C 'real':115C,202C 'refram':51C,211C 'remain':291C 'resourc':24B,203C 'rhetor':233C 'rise':279C 'risk':126C,310C 'role':271C 'room':321C 'run':85C 'sale':135C 'sander':267C 'scale':193C 'senat':257C 'serious':292C 'serv':136C,246C 'shift':369C 'singl':365C 'size':109C 'socialist':223C 'sovereign':58C 'span':324C 'spectrum':302C 'spend':63C,105C 'stand':232C 'state':142C 'stephani':1A,3B,29C 'tax':132C 'term':371C 'theori':13B,45C,307C 'therefor':99C 'tool':385C 'trap':234C 'treat':381C 'true':176C 'u.s':256C 'underst':308C 'univers':338C 'unorthodox':355C 'view':131C 'visibl':351C 'vision':357C 'way':92C 'well':328C 'wide':166C 'within':294C 'worthwhil':155C","economist",[],[],[],"Economist, Modern Monetary Theory advocate",[123],{"archetype_slug":56,"strength":124,"description":125},7,"When a program is dismissed as unaffordable, you answer that a currency-issuing government's real limits are resources and inflation, not the deficit — and The Deficit Myth is where that case reaches the public. It turns \"how will you pay for it\" from a fiscal veto into a question of political priorities.",[],[]]