Government spending, not taxes, drives economy and money value.
The government creates money by accepting it for taxes. Taxes give value to money, and government spending provides the money supply. The government doesn't need public money to spend, but the public needs government money to pay taxes. This means fiscal policy determines how much money is issued and its value, while monetary policy sets interest rates. In this approach, deficits are normal, and fiscal policy stabilizes currency value, not monetary policy.