After
Ben Bernanke's announcement of a
new round of
quantitative easing on September 13, 2012, which open-endedly committed the FOMC to purchase $40 billion agency
mortgage-backed securities per month until the "labor market improves substantially", some media outlets began hailing him as the "blogger who saved the economy", for popularizing the concept of nominal income targeting.[4]
In the wake of the
2008 financial crisis, Sumner began authoring a blog where he vocally criticized the view that the
United States economy was stuck in a
liquidity trap.[6] Sumner advocates that
central banks such as the
Federal Reserve create a futures market for the level of nominal gross domestic product (NGDP, also known as nominal income), and adjust monetary policy to achieve a nominal income target on the basis of information from the market. Monetary authorities generally choose to target other metrics, such as
inflation, unemployment, the
money supply or hybrids of these and rely on information from the financial markets, indices of unemployment or inflation, etc. to make monetary policy.[7]
In 2015, Sumner published The Midas Paradox: A New Look at the Great Depression and Economic Instability. The book argued that the Depression was greatly extended by repeated gold market shocks and
New Deal wage policies.
Sumner contends that inflation is "measured inaccurately and does not discriminate between
demand versus
supply shocks" and that "Inflation often changes with a lag...but nominal GDP growth falls very, very quickly, so it'll give you a more timely signal stimulus is needed".[11] He argued that
monetary policy can offset
fiscal austerity policies such as those pursued by the British government in the wake of the
2007 economic crisis.[11]
In April 2011, the
Reserve Bank of New Zealand responded to Sumner's critique of inflation targeting, arguing that a nominal GDP target would be too technically complicated, and make monetary policy difficult to communicate.[12] By November 2011, however, economists from
Goldman Sachs were advocating that the Federal Reserve adopt a nominal income target.
Nathan Sheets, a former top official at the Federal Reserve and the head of international economics at
Citigroup, proposed that the Federal Reserve adopt a nominal consumption target instead.[13]
Sumner has argued that one cannot account for the impact of
fiscal policy without first considering how
monetary policy may affect the outcome; fiscal stimulus may not succeed if monetary policy is tightened in response. Economic journalists have referred to this as the Sumner Critique, akin to the
Lucas critique.[14] Summarizing this thinking, The Economist suggested that a growth rate of 5.3% would result in concerns over (future) inflation and tightening of monetary policy, largely because 5.3% is beyond both projections and goals of the Federal Reserve.[15]
Other views
Sumner self identifies as a libertarian, some have criticized his policy proposals and beliefs as anti-liberal.[16][17][18]
Sumner has been criticized for being "anti-white": namely, for his statements that white people should not be allowed to immigrate because they're less likely to be entreprenuers, and his statement that 'white people' are unable to grasp different parenting styles, and are incapable of making artsy films. [19][20]
Sumner has great disdain for populists like Jair Bolsonaro and Donald Trump, and Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orban. He has compared these men to the devil, referred to them as the new "axis of evil", and believes they are akin to the mass murderer Adolf Hitler. [21][22][23][24]
China
Sumner has lamented what he sees as
"anti-China" sentiment in the United States and Europe.[25][26] In one post titled "cHiNa iS tHe reAL thReAt", using
alternating caps, Sumner implies that
Russia's military support of
Alexander Lukashenko represents a bigger threat to the United States.[27] Sumner has also juxtaposed the actions of China and Russia in another blog, where he said "I notice that Russia (which has far more nukes than China), actually does invade other countries. We worry that China might invade other countries".[28] Sumner, frustrated by people he calls "morons", has attempted to prevent people from associating his views with support of the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP), has contrasted China, which he calls "a very good country of 1.4 billion people", with the CCP, which he describes as "a very evil government".[29]
Chinese economy
Sumner is
bullish on the Chinese economy, and has mocked various predictions made throughout the 2010s suggesting that the Chinese real estate market would collapse.[30] Sumner has attributed the growth of the Chinese economy to economic growth in Europe.[29] He also subscribes to a
win-win philosophy regarding US-Chinese trade relations, describing one trade deal between the two countries as "a big win for China. And that’s means it’s a win for Americans".[31]
Sumner has criticized U.S. intelligence's findings in the
origins of Covid-19,[33] and opined that the virus could have originated in
Thailand or
Laos,[34][35] citing a Wall Street Journal article and a Bloomberg article, respectively.[34][35][36][37]
Sumner has praised China's handling of the
Covid-19 pandemic, and has been critical of the handling of the pandemic in the United States and Europe, saying in one blog that "China succeeded against a crisis that was objectively far greater than the crisis faced by Europe and America".[25] While the strict measures taken by the Chinese government, such as officials locking residents in their home to enforce quarantines, and assigning residents color codes to evaluate whether they should quarantine, have been criticized by journalists,[38][39] Sumner praised the country's ability "to control the epidemic under difficult circumstances".[25]
Sumner has criticized the slow development of the
COVID-19 vaccines, blaming
medical ethicists, and said that "thousands died" as a result of delays to the vaccines' development.[40]
Donald Trump
Sumner is a vocal critic of
Donald Trump, calling him "
Putin's puppy",[27] and opining that he has a "contempt for democracy".[41] Sumner believes that Trump has a "longstanding infatuation" with Putin, citing a comment Trump made in which he called Putin "a leader far more than our president", referring to
Barack Obama.[41][42] Trump is a frequent target for criticism on his blog, as is
Tucker Carlson,[28][43][44] and Vladimir Putin;[27][43] this has resulted in a number of ad hominem insults being directed at him in his blog's comment section.[43][45] Sumner has taken to banning comments from people he calls "Russian trolls".[43] Some of the deleted messages were links to articles published in the medical journal
The Lancet.[citation needed] These articles were contrary to the views of the prevailing orthodoxy.[citation needed][clarification needed] Sumner has repeatedly used the term "
Trump derangement syndrome" to describe support of Donald Trump, and has described support for Trump as "a personality cult".[44] Sumner also believes that Trump encouraged China "to put
Uighurs into
concentration camps", citing a disputed claim made by former
National Security AdvisorJohn Bolton.[28][46]
Sumner viewed the Trump administration's stance towards China as detrimental to the economies of both countries.[31] Sumner views the two countries' 2019 trade agreement, negotiated in part by the Trump administration, as "a loss for the Trump administration", and added "I expected the Trump administration to lose, but not this badly".[31] Sumner describes Trump's policy as "brazenly trying to steal money from the Chinese, and is igniting a cold war with China".[28] Sumner has been critical of Trump's efforts to ban
TikTok and
WeChat in the United States,[47] despite privacy concerns about TikTok.[48]
Sumner has lambasted Trump for his handling of the Covid-19 pandemic, saying that Trump "would gladly kill enormous numbers of Americans to get re-elected" and that it was responsible for large amounts of American deaths.[49] In one blog post, Sumner pondered whether Trump's policy had killed Americans, and stated that this was designed to make Trump "look good".[49]
Sumner has been critical of the American media's response to the Trump presidency, saying that "the press has gone easy on Trump", and said that media outlets have a "shameful double standard" when it comes to covering Trump.[50]
TikTok
Sumner hails the success of TikTok as "a truly heartwarming story of entrepreneurial success",[40] and has criticized the Trump administration's efforts to ban it,[47] despite concerns over potential privacy violations.[48][51][52]
Personal life
Sumner frequently visits China, owns Real Estate in China, and defends criticism against China. [53][54][55] Well known in Bentley's economics department as a "
technophobe," Sumner, who purchased his first cell phone in 2011, apparently "triggered expressions of surprise and amusement when he informed his colleagues that he was starting a blog."[2]
Sumner, Scott B. (2015). "What Would Milton Friedman Have Thought of Market Monetarism?". In Cord, Robert A.; Hammond, J. Daniel (eds.). Milton Friedman: Contributions to Economics and Public Policy.
Oxford University Press. pp. 246–264.
ISBN9780198704324.
Sumner, Scott B. (2012). "5. How Nominal GDP Targeting Could Have Prevented the Crash of 2008". In Beckworth, David (ed.). Boom and Bust Banking: The Causes and Cures of the Great Recession.
Independent Institute. pp. 129–165.
ISBN978-1-59813-076-8.
Horan, Patrick; Sumner, Scott; Beckworth, David; Russo, Christopher M. (July 12, 2021).
"What's Going On at the Federal Reserve?". Discourse. Mercatus Center. Retrieved November 2, 2021.