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Lauri Raittio's avatar

If one affirms that money is endogenous, new private and public debt are new spending power and human beings often act as irrational and not well-informed, then all kind of non-equilibrium states are possible, such as placing astronomical size of off-balance sheet liabilities for CDS and other gambling instruments. Especially, when one party, the public state, plays one role in the game (especially changes in public debt) and an other role by changing and enforcing the rules of the game for everybody.

Would it be more useful for theory to give plausible explanations for 90% of the time instead of being upside-down deadwrong 100% of the time with loanable funds model? E.g. does quantum physics give useful insights even though they know 'everything' except small stuff, big stuff, cold stuff, hot stuff, fast stuff, slow stuff, heavy stuff, dark stuff and turbulence?

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Alexander Leipold's avatar

Did you read Steve Keen, The New Economics: A Manifesto, chapter two: Money Matters?

It contains some systems dynamics models of bank and government money, credit. Different sectors of the economy can be added to create a more complex model. The benefit of engineering based systems dynamics modeling is that it shows oscillating behavior including the "great moderation" and the following great recession.

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