unSILOed with Greg LaBlanc

645. Making Money Work: Banks, Capital Theory, and the Fed’s Blind Spot with Steve H. Hanke

37 snips
Apr 27, 2026
Steve H. Hanke, Johns Hopkins applied economics professor and currency expert. He argues macro should center on the Quantity Theory of Money and Capital Theory. He explains how commercial banks create money while investment banks intermediate savings. He critiques universal banking, faults the Fed for ignoring broad money measures like Divisia, and links post‑COVID money growth to 2022 inflation.
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INSIGHT

The Fed Is Blind To Broad Money Measures

  • The Fed largely abandoned broad money measurement and many macro models omit money aggregates, leaving policymakers 'blind' to money-supply-driven inflation.
  • Hanke points to political and intellectual resistance to Friedman-style monetarism inside the Fed.
INSIGHT

Divisia Aggregates Reveal True Money Trends

  • Use Divisia (weighted) money aggregates rather than simple-sum M2 because components have differing moneyness.
  • William Barnett's Divisia indices weight currency 100% and reduce weight on assets like T-bills as interest rates rise.
INSIGHT

Measurement Errors Made Volcker's Tightening Too Harsh

  • Mis-measuring money in the Volcker era made policy overly tight; Divisia M2 fell faster than simple-sum M2, so correct measures might have avoided deep recessions.
  • Hanke cites Barnett's work showing simple-sum misled Volcker on money contraction severity.
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