Coronavirus: Top economist says central banks should give away 'free money'
The Irish minister for finance disagrees, saying there are "far better ways in which we can get our economy to recover".
Stephen Murphy
Ireland correspondent
@SMurphyTV

David McWilliams, an author and former economist at the Central Bank of Ireland, said money should be printed and put into the accounts of the public and businesses in a bid to boost consumer spending and combat deflationary shock.
The tactic is known as "helicopter money", or a "helicopter drop", a term coined by American economist Milton Friedman in the late 1960s, as a metaphor for a government showering its people with cash from above.
There have been some precedents set during the coronavirus crisis.

"Sometimes in economics, very simple solutions are avoided precisely because they're simple. What we're trying to do is to get money from the central bank to the people.
"Why have the banks in the middle been complicating it? The solution to a cash crisis is free money. I know it sounds ridiculously easy... because it is."
For helicopter money to work - in other words, for people to spend the free money - they have to believe the government has printed, or created, the funds.

Mr McWilliams describes this as "the alchemy of central banking".
"Once inflation is low, the central bank can just print the stuff," he said.
"We have an economic vaccine - it's called money. We know the central bank prints it. It doesn't even have to print it, it just has to put a zero after people's accounts.
"We have the vaccine, we know what to do. And amazingly, we're not using it because of some morality idea that we can't do this because it will lead to inflation, when we know we're in a deflationary spiral.
"It is absolutely nonsensical. It is as mad as a laboratory having the vaccination for COVID-19, and saying 'we're not going to use it'."
"The issue with helicopter money is that policy approach presupposes giving the same to everybody," he said.
"I believe the way we need to help somebody who's lost a job is completely different to somebody who's kept a job. We need to treat both those needs separately."
However, helicopter money can be tailored with a sliding scale depending on the recipient's circumstances, as with Mr Trump's stimulus cheques.
Other European countries may be considering the tactic more carefully. Last month, the head of France's central bank Francois Villeroy de Galhau (also a member of the ECB's governing council) mooted the possibility that a central bank "would create money on a lasting basis to finance business directly".
Proponents say helicopter money would especially boost small businesses, which are more vulnerable to cash flow issues.

She has had to lay off most of her staff, and is now only open for deliveries three days a week.
She "absolutely" supports the concept of helicopter money as a way to loosen potential customers' purse strings.
"It's a domino effect," she said.
"If people have money, they're spending. I can spend on the farmers that deliver to me every day, the producers. It's a domino effect for everyone, so everyone's winning."
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