Close Menu
Think Money Wise
  • HOME
  • BANK
    • BUDGET
  • BONDS
  • INVESTEMENT
  • FINANCE
    • MICROFINANCE
  • RETIREMENT
  • STOCKS
  • TAX PLANNING
What's Hot

How to stop Canadians from trying to avoid paying taxes and fool the CRA

December 30, 2025

Is Quantum Entering Its Infrastructure Phase?

December 30, 2025

A day in the life of the modern auditor using AI

December 30, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Think Money Wise
  • HOME
  • BANK
    • BUDGET
  • BONDS
  • INVESTEMENT
  • FINANCE
    • MICROFINANCE
  • RETIREMENT
  • STOCKS
  • TAX PLANNING
Think Money Wise
Home»TAX PLANNING»MMT questions
TAX PLANNING

MMT questions

Editorial teamBy Editorial teamDecember 21, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
MMT questions
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


These are fair questions to ask, and the confusion is understandable because MMT is often misrepresented.

First, MMT does not say “raise taxes whenever inflation is above target”. Inflation is not a single phenomenon with a single cure. The key MMT question is what is causing the inflation.

If inflation is being driven by excess demand across the economy – too much spending chasing too few resources – then yes, higher taxes can be part of the response, because they withdraw spending power. But that does not mean raising taxes on people already struggling. Taxes would need to be targeted at those with surplus income or wealth, not those facing a cost-of-living crisis.

Much recent inflation, including in the UK, has not been demand-led. It has been driven by energy prices, supply shocks, profiteering, rent extraction and broken supply chains. In those cases, broad tax rises or interest-rate hikes mainly hurt the poor while doing little to address the cause. Regulation, price controls, excess-profit taxes, and direct public provision are often more effective.

Second, MMT does not advocate “massively increasing spending regardless of conditions”. Spending must always be judged against real resource capacity. If there is no spare capacity, untargeted spending can be inflationary. But targeted spending that relieves bottlenecks – housing, energy efficiency, childcare, transport – can actually reduce inflation over time by expanding supply and lowering household costs.

So the MMT position is not “spend more, tax later”. It is:

• diagnose the source of inflation

• protect the poorest from price shocks

• tax excess income, wealth and profits where needed

• spend to expand capacity and reduce future inflation

MMT is about using the right tools for the right problem, not ignoring inflation or hardship.

I hope that helps.

Clearing MMT confusion seems to be part of my job these days.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
hinafazil44
Editorial team
  • Website

Related Posts

A day in the life of the modern auditor using AI

December 30, 2025

Leading with Confidence in Accounting

December 29, 2025

Who is stealing the light?

December 28, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

How to stop Canadians from trying to avoid paying taxes and fool the CRA

December 30, 2025

Is Quantum Entering Its Infrastructure Phase?

December 30, 2025

A day in the life of the modern auditor using AI

December 30, 2025

KFF Health News: Trump’s Idea for Health Accounts Has Been Tried. Millions of Patients Have Ended Up in Debt.

December 30, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
Loading
About Us

Welcome to Think Money Wise, your trusted source for practical financial insights, money management tips, and strategies to build a secure and informed financial future. Our mission is to simplify financial knowledge and empower you to make informed decisions about saving, investing, and managing your money with confidence.

Top Posts

How to stop Canadians from trying to avoid paying taxes and fool the CRA

December 30, 2025

Is Quantum Entering Its Infrastructure Phase?

December 30, 2025

A day in the life of the modern auditor using AI

December 30, 2025
Subscribe to Updates

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
Loading
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
Copyright © 2025 Thinkmoneywise. All Right Reserved

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.