Title: Macroeconomic policy formulation: functional finance versus sound finance

Authors: Neil Hart

Addresses: School of Economics and Finance, University of Western Sydney, Locked Bag 1797, PENRITH NSW 2751, Australia

Abstract: Current macroeconomic policy formulation emphasises trade-offs associated with promoting economic recovery through expansionary fiscal policy and the need to deliver 'fiscal sustainability' defined in terms of stabilising and reducing government debt ratios. This paper argues that these 'tensions' do not emerge from a considered interpretation of orthodox macroeconomic theory, but instead from the self-imposed 'sound finance' constraints that governments have placed on the formulation of macroeconomic policies. Lerner's system of functional finance, said to have provided the logical framework for Keynes's policy, has been largely neglected in the recent literature and policy deliberation. This paper considers the relevance of Lerner's system of functional finance to contemporary macroeconomic policy formulation.

Keywords: fiscal policy; fiscal sustainability; sovereign debt; functional finance; macroeconomic policy; policy formulation; sound finance; Lerner; financial crisis; economic recovery; government debt ratios; self-imposed constraints.

DOI: 10.1504/GBER.2013.050666

Global Business and Economics Review, 2013 Vol.15 No.1, pp.36 - 48

Published online: 30 Oct 2013 *

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