@PoliceStateUK
Towards the end of the article the journalist tries to criticise Polanski's economic ideas - but in so doing actually reveals her own ignorance...
She equates MMT with 'printing more money', and then equates this with the German inflation crisis of the 1930s, etc. What MMT actually says is that printing more money is OK as long as the economy can absorb it without causing inflation, or it can be removed through tax before it does. She is way behind modern analysis of the Weimar inflation - which is not now thought to have been caused by printing too much money, but by excessive First World War reparations having to be paid in foreign currencies, which meant directing German production into exports and therefore causing domestic shortages - limiting the capacity of the economy to absorb money - hence rising prices.
She's also wrong about the national debt - only a very small proportion of which is in the international bond markets, and it is those markets that need the bonds, not the government. If a bank attracts lots of savers everyone thinks it's positive - but much of the national debt is just the same - it really isn't a problem. And Polanski is absolutely right when he says that the huge chunk of the national debt owed to the Bank of England (I think its a quarter, maybe as much as a third) is not really debt at all, since the Bank of England is owned by the government. If you owe money to yourself, it's a fiction, not a debt.
Journalism marred again by the poor economic understanding of journalists.