I'm not sure it matters who is saying it Maizie. The reason I asked was that I believe that this is how most people think governments already work.
Well, that comes as a surprise to me, because I have seen myriad posts on GNet which assume that the government funds its spending with revenue from taxation.
I posted the academic paper in response to this, from ENO on this thread:
Fact: if you think the government tardy in the processing of asylum applications then be willing to pay more tax.
That doesn't sound to me like someone who believes that the government spends before it taxes. It sounds to me like someone who believes that the government has to up its tax revenue before it can spend. It is just an example of many similar posts.
We know that out of the tax already available, out of managed borrowing, or a mixture of both, such a scheme, once promised, will be started.
And you are making the same assumption in thinking that the only source of government revenue is taxation or borrowing.
You must have missed the extract from the paper that I highlighted
The CF, we find, provides a line of sovereign credit-money to the state itself, backed by the state’s power to raise future tax revenues. Government ‘spending’ should then be understood as a form of money creation.
Yes, ' backed by the states's power to raise future tax revenues', but nothing about borrowing. Because the money initially spent is neither tax revenue or borrowing; it is newly created money. When the government, over the last decade, authorised the Bank of England to raise some £900billion to buy bonds it wasn't anticipating a £900billion injection of future tax revenue. It was technically 'borrowing', because bond are an instrument used for 'borrowing money from investors and institutions, but as it was 'borrowing' from itself it was under no obligation to repay itself. And the money the BoE used to buy those bonds was newly created money.(As all bank lending is).
What I would guess that most people also believe is that we cannot borrow hugely more than the economy can stand or we get the Liz Truss effect.
£900billion of QE demonstrates that the state can 'borrow' from itself (create money) with no adverse consequences. It wasn't inflationary, nor did it spook the markets. Current inflation has nothing to do with QE.
It is the ability of a country with a sovereign currency to create its own money that you are missing in your attempt to say that you knew all along about how a government spends. Your post just demonstrates that you still will not accept this fact and that you don't know about government spending.