This is one of a series of posts that will ask what the most pertinent question raised by a prominent influencer of political economy might have been, and what the relevance of that question might be today. There is a list of all posts in the series at the end of each entry. The origin of this series is noted here.
This series has been produced using what I describe as directed AI searches to establish positions with which I agree, followed by final editing before publication.
Why have I included myself in this series, writing about my own work as a third party? There are several reasons for doing so.
Firstly, this series, as it transpired, refers to the work of 50 people who have influenced my thinking over the 50-year period since I went to university to study economics. It is in that context that it is relevant, I think, to note where that thinking has led.
Secondly, several commentators, including my old friend John Christensen, with whom I have worked for almost 25 years now and whose own work is referred to in this series, suggested that it would be incomplete unless I did so. I have accepted their suggestion that I do something that would not have occurred to me. I do, then, continue in the style I have used for all others included here.
Richard Murphy has spent much of his career as a political economist exposing what he regards as one of the most damaging myths in modern political economy: that governments are financially constrained in the same way as households. This belief, he argues, lies at the heart of austerity, underinvestment, social insecurity and the failure to respond adequately to climate breakdown.
Murphy's work draws on accounting, monetary operations and institutional reality to show that governments which issue their own currency do not need to “raise money” before they can spend. They create money through the banking system, and taxation follows to manage inflation, shape behaviour and redistribute resources. Once this is understood, the central constraint on policy is no longer financial but real: the availability of labour, skills, materials, technology and ecological capacity.
This reframing has profound implications. It means that many of the solutions to the most urgent social and environmental problems we face are not unaffordable. They are unchosen.
Hence, the Richard Murphy Question: If governments create the money that sustains our economies, and if we have the real resources to provide security, care and a livable future free from fear, why do we continue to organise society as if we cannot afford to do so?
The myth of the household analogy
Murphy's starting point is simple: a government that issues its own currency is not like a household. Households must earn before they spend. Governments spend by creating money and taxing afterwards.
Yet public debate is dominated by the opposite belief. Governments are said to “run out of money”, to need to “balance the books”, and to require borrowing before spending. These claims are not merely inaccurate. They are politically consequential. They justify cuts to public services, constrain investment, and create a false sense of scarcity.
Murphy's challenge is direct: the limits we are told exist are largely fictional.
Real resources, not money, are the constraint.
If money can be created, what limits government action? Murphy's answer aligns with ecological and Keynesian insights: real resources. The question is not whether we can afford to employ people, but whether the people, skills and materials exist to do the work. The question is not whether we can afford a green transition, but whether we have the capacity to deliver it without generating inflation.
This shifts economic debate from accounting to reality. It forces policymakers to confront actual constraints — labour shortages, supply chains, ecological limits — rather than hiding behind financial ones.
Tax as a tool, not a funding source
Murphy also challenges conventional views of taxation. In his framework, taxes do not fund spending in a currency-issuing state. Instead, they serve three primary functions:
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to control inflation by reducing demand by reclaiming money the government has spent into circulation,
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to redistribute income and wealth,
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to shape economic behaviour.
This perspective reframes debates about tax policy. The issue is not whether taxes are needed to pay for services, but how they are used to create a fair and stable economy.
Austerity as political choice
Murphy's critique of austerity follows directly from his analysis of money. If governments are not financially constrained in the way commonly assumed, then cuts to public spending cannot be justified on grounds of necessity. They become political choices.
Austerity, in this view, redistributes resources away from public services and toward private wealth. It creates insecurity, not because resources are lacking, but because access to those resources is restricted.
Murphy, therefore, treats austerity not as prudence but as policy failure.
The integration of care, ecology and accounting
What distinguishes Murphy's work is its integration of monetary analysis with broader social goals. He argues that understanding how money works is essential for addressing:
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underfunded public services,
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climate change,
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the care economy,
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and democratic accountability.
If the financial constraint is misunderstood, all of these areas suffer. Governments underinvest, societies tolerate avoidable hardship, and long-term challenges are deferred.
Murphy's contribution is to connect the mechanics of money with the ethics of policy.
Why the myth persists
If the reality of government finance is as Murphy describes, why does the household analogy persist? Part of the answer lies in political convenience. The belief in financial constraint limits expectations. It narrows debate. It protects existing distributions of wealth and power.
If people believe that governments cannot afford to act, they are less likely to demand action. The myth, therefore, functions as a form of control, shaping what societies consider possible.
What answering the Richard Murphy Question would require
To take Murphy's argument seriously would require a fundamental shift in economic thinking and policy. That would involve:
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Abandoning the household analogy in public finance.
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Designing policy around real resource constraints rather than financial myths.
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Investing in public goods such as health, education, housing, care and climate where capacity exists.
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Using taxation actively to manage inflation and inequality.
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Restoring democratic control over economic priorities.
- Creating a focus on sustainability.
These changes would not remove limits. They would replace imaginary limits with real ones.
Inference
The Richard Murphy Question exposes one of the most consequential misunderstandings in modern political economy: the belief that governments are financially constrained in ways that prevent them from addressing social and environmental challenges. Murphy's work suggests that this belief is not simply mistaken but harmful.
If the true limits on economic policy are real resources and ecological boundaries, then many of the hardships societies accept today are not unavoidable. They are the result of decisions made within a framework that misrepresents what is possible.
To answer his question is to recognise that the problem is not that we cannot afford a better society, but that we have chosen not to create one.
Previous posts in this series:
- The economic questions
- Economic questions: The Henry Ford Question
- Economic questions: The Mark Carney Question
- Economics questions: The Keynes question
- Economics questions: The Karl Marx question
- Economics questions: the Milton Friedman question
- Economic questions: The Hayek question
- Economic questions: The James Buchanan question
- Economic questions: The J K Galbraith question
- Economic questions: the Hyman Minsky question
- Economic questions: the Joseph Schumpeter question
- Economic questions: The E F Schumacher question
- Economics questions: the John Rawls question
- Economic questions: the Thomas Piketty question
- Economic questions: the Gary Becker question
- Economics questions: The Greg Mankiw question
- Economic questions: The Paul Krugman
- Economic question: the Tony Judt question
- Economic questions: The Nancy MacLean question
- Economic questions: The David Graeber question
- The economic questions: the Amartya Sen question
- Economic questions: the Jesus of Nazareth question
- Economic questions: the Adam Smith question
- Economic questions: (one of) the Steve Keen question(s)
- Economic questions: the Stephanie Kelton question
- Economic questions: the Thomas Paine question
- Economic questions: the John Christensen question
- Economic questions: the Eugene Fama question
- Economic questions: the Thomas Hobbes Question
- Economic questions: the James Tobin question
- Economic questions: the William Beveridge question
- Economic questions: the William Nordhaus question
- Economic questions: the Erwin Schrödinger question
- Economic questions: the Karl Polanyi question
- Economic questions: the Richard Feynman question
- Economic questions: the Wynne Godley question
- Economic questions: the Erich Fromm Question
- Economic questions: the John Ruskin question
- Economic questions: the Paul Samuelson question
- Economic questions: the Joan Robinson question
- Economic questions: the Abba Lerner question
- Economic questions: the Thorstein Veblen question
- Economic questions: the David Ricardo question
- Economic questions: the Robert Nozick question
- Economic questions: the Viktor Frankl Question
- Economic questions: the Kate Raworth question
- Economic questions: the Herman Daly question
- Economic questions: the Mariana Mazzucato question
- Economic questions: the Guy Standing question
- Economic questions: the Joe Stiglitz question
- Economic questions: the Naomi Klein question
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Clear, concise, compelling.
Thank you.
Thank you
A compelling series. Our reading lists over the last half a century (!) display considerable overlap. But what’s excited me most has been the new names you have introduced me to. Each widening my world.
Thank you
Is it just me who thinks this is a bit weird? Come on be honest !!
Why?
As I niote, I was persuaded to do this, but what is weird about noting my own opinion and what it might mean? I do that very day, after all. So, please explain. And please explain why this was the thing that made you comment here for the first time.
Hi Andrew.
I’ll be honest with you. It’s my best language.
Richard’s lifetime of work shines a light on political dark corners where privilege breeds more and more power by stealing from the vulnerable and poor, and then blaming them for the resulting inequality. It shows us that things don’t need to be as they are. It points to a solution to at least two of the major problems of our times, and shows us how classical economic strategies have caused them.
Therefore, a few weeks ago, I proposed to the good prof that he should be in this series, even if that might feel weird. His approach and work has merit, relevance and pertinence, just like the others in the series. Arguably much more so. Aside from those qualities he has an intact moral compass and the intention to do good, two special qualities that appear to be in shorter and shorter supply as inequality gets more and more extreme.
PS. Weird isn’t necessarily a bad thing! 🙂
Thanks
You were not alone, but thanks all the same.
[…] what I have called “economic questions”. A little reluctantly, and as a result of persuasion, I have included myself in this series as a concluding entry to indicate the point I have reached after 50 or so years of […]
YES!
(and useable on the omnibus)
Sorry to be nitpicky, but I think “It means that many of the most urgent social and environmental problems we face are not unaffordable. They are unchosen.” would read better as “It means that solutions to many of the most urgent problems… etc”
Otherwise, a great piece and a fitting addition to the series!
Thanks and edited
The answer was never, “It is the economy stupid.” It is politics stupid. Advisors for our political leaders have been getting the answer wrong for decades. The belief that people like Peter Mandelson are some kind of political mastermind is falling. All they have is an insatiable thirst for power just like billionaires and they want in on it.
Yes – I’ve heard 0f this fella from someplace – a worthy addition to your list for sure.
🙂
Perhaps the next series should look at some of the aspiring politicians who agree with Murphyism and are trying to get a foothold on the ladder to power? Then we’d know who to back.
We can talk, write, explain, theorise as much as we like but nothing will happen until a significant number of like-minded people join or form a party which will campaign to get them elected into power.
As an aside: Sir Oswald Mosely began as a Conservative MP, then crossed the floor to Labour. After several years he became frustrated with the lack of action and swung back across the floor and right out of the window to embrace Fascism. Is this what we are seeing on a broader scale now?
Who are they?
I have no Idea. I was hoping you might know at least one, hence the suggestion. What chance one or two are hiding behind the curtains in the Labour party?
Maybe, but only maybe, Clive Lewis