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Countering the Cantillon Effect
Season 1 · Episode 469

Countering the Cantillon Effect

An 18th century French economist was dead right about how only the rich win from new money creation. It's still happening. How do we fix it?

Debunking Economics - the podcast · Steve Keen & Phil Dobbie

August 20, 202541m 55s

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Show Notes

18th century economist Richard Cantillon theorised that new money added to the economy always reaches the wealthiest people first. If there’s a lot of it, the extra supply will push up prices, but the rich won’t feel it, they’ll just create it. The impact down the track is that the poor, surviving with the same money as before, get hit with the higher prices. 


Phil suggests that wouldn’t be the case if extra money was created through government spending. It would be the workers and those on welfare getting the first touch of the new money. But, as Steve explains, most money created through government deficits is counteracted by the private sector buying up the government’s bonds. Most of the new money is created through private debt - bank loans, for example. So Cantillon was right.


The way to fix the problem s to put in place policies that would see more of a balance between public and private sector money creation.


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