Money from First Principles
Based on Steve Keen’s analysis for engineers
This series breaks down the fundamental principles of money, banking, and government finance using first-principles reasoning and CircuitJS simulations.
Chapters
Introduction: First Principles vs. Reasoning by Analogy
Why reasoning by analogy fails for government finances and the accounting foundationTransaction Tables (Godley Tables)
Modeling economic flows with stock-flow consistent tablesTwo Competing Models of Banking
Part 1: Loanable Funds ModelAdding Government Sector
Part 2: Loanable Funds with Fiscal PolicyEndogenous Money Model (BOMD)
Part 3: Bank-Originated Money and DebtFurther Bond Operations
Part 4: Open Market Operations and Central Bank ToolsThe Fundamental Identity
Sectoral balances and the key insightPolicy Implications
What each model predicts for government policyAdvanced Topics
Money supply, inflation, trade, and capital adequacyExercises
Hands-on model building and experimentationKey Takeaways
Summary of main insightsFurther Reading
Resources for deeper exploration
Ready to begin? Start with the Introduction →
This analysis demonstrates that first-principles reasoning, grounded in double-entry bookkeeping, leads to radically different conclusions than reasoning by analogy from households to governments.