Government
Spending Makes Recessions Worse
by
Dom Armentano
by Dom Armentano
DIGG THIS
The National
Bureau of Economic Research has officially confirmed what everyone
already knew: The U.S. economy has been in recession for many months.
The question now is whether anything constructive can be done about
it.
Historically
there have been two very different public policy responses to a
serious economic slowdown. The first laissez-faire is to simply
allow market prices to adjust to the new economic reality. Since
most economic slumps are caused by a decline in demand associated
with the bursting of a credit/money bubble, prices tend to adjust
downward fairly rapidly. We have seen some of this in the current
crisis with real estate, stock and commodity prices (especially
crude oil) falling dramatically. This falling price process tends
to "clear out" the malinvestments of the credit boom and eventually
sets the stage for a sustainable economic recovery.
This price
adjustment process, though efficient, is painful. And the larger
the initial credit bubble the larger and more painful the collapse.
Many thousands of homes go into foreclosure, banks and hedge funds
fail, capital goods industries are especially hard hit, and the
recession normally lasts between 11 and 14 months. Lower interest
rates and modest unemployment benefits tend to ease the economic
hardships somewhat. We have had 10 recessions since 1948 and managed
to survive them all.
An alternative
policy approach, which is being tried this time, is to treat the
recession with almost unprecedented doses of government intervention.
In this scenario, the Treasury and the Federal Reserve engage in
policies aimed at "reflating" the bursting credit bubble. The Fed
lowers interest rates dramatically and inflates the money supply
by purchasing government and even commercial debt. And the Treasury
gets the legal authority to spend upwards of $700 billion to bail
out Fannie and Freddie, commercial banks, investment banks, insurance
companies, and any other private firms too big to fail.
So far, at
least, the results of this approach are not promising.
The final public
policy shoe to fall early next year will probably be massive public
works programs (infrastructure spending) to create "jobs." The President-elect
Obama economic team and economist Paul Krugman have already gone
on record as favoring such a proposal. They also seem to support
another, bigger, round of so-called "stimulus" spending by consumers
funded by tax rebates.
But will any
of this shorten the recession? A decent argument can be made that
all of these public policy responses will only make things worse
and prolong the slump.
The longest
recession in modern times is the one that began in 1929. It lasted
a full 43 months and was quickly followed by the 1937 recession
that lasted another 13 months. Almost one half of the months between
1929 and 1939 were recessionary. And between 1929 and 1939, the
average yearly unemployment rate in the U.S. was a staggering 16.9%.
Though Presidents
Hoover and FDR unbalanced the federal budget, created the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation (to bail out banks and businesses), enacted
the National Industrial Recovery Act, engaged in massive public
works projects (WPA), and inflated the money supply sharply after
1934, nothing really worked. After 10 years of political and economic
unrest and uncertainty, the unemployment rate was still 17.2% on
the eve of our entry into WW2.
Laissez-faire
economic ideas (deregulation, tax cuts) are currently out of favor
but the fact remains that the Krugman and Keynesian policies of
bailouts, deficit financing, and public works have never really
worked. They didn't work in the U. S. in the 1930's; they didn't
work in the 1990's in Japan.
They don't
work because they prop up unsustainable investments in the private
sector rather than clear the way for new entrepreneurship. And they
don't work because government central planning is hopelessly naïve
(they even have trouble mailing out rebate checks). Sometimes in
economics (as in medicine) doing "nothing" (allowing the
system to heal itself) works better than drugs with nasty side effects
or bureaucratic attempts at reconstructive surgery.
This originally
appeared in the Vero Beach Press Journal.
December
18, 2008
Dom
Armentano [send him mail]
is Professor Emeritus at the University of Hartford (CT) and the
author of Antitrust
and Monopoly
(Independent Institute, 1998) and Antitrust:
The Case for Repeal
(Mises Institute, 1999). He has published articles, op/eds and reviews
in The New
York Times, Wall Street Journal, London Financial Times, Financial
Post, Hartford Courant, National Review, Antitrust Bulletin
and many other journals.
Copyright
© 2008 Dom Armentano
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