Macro
for Dummies
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
The Golden
Road Out of Financial Crisis
He who
goes a-borrowing, goes a-sorrowing.
The quote comes
from Ben Franklin. But it was recalled to us neither by Americas
president, nor Britains Prime Minister. Instead, the Telegraph
in London reported it from the mouth of Cheng Siwei, a top
member of the Communist hierarchy.
What goes around
comes around. The Anglo-Saxons have forgotten what makes a successful
economy. The Chinese have remembered.
Just look up
Warren Harding on Wikipedia. The first entry you will find is not
the 29th president of the United States of America, but a rock climber
with the same name. But what do you expect? History is nothing but
a long list of disasters in chronological order. Historians love
calamity. And they reserve their highest accolades for those who
cause them. The same is true in financial history. Those who make
it big are those who make it worse.
It is safe
to assume that no one working at the Federal Reserve or at the White
House has a picture of Warren Gamaliel Harding over his desk. Yet,
if American presidents were ranked on the basis of how well they
faced up to financial disaster, Warren G. Harding might be somebody.
His handsome face would be carved on Rushmore. His likeness would
grace the $100 bill. Harding was the last American president to
deal honestly with a major financial crisis. Every president since
has tried to scam his way out of it.
By the time
Harding took office in 21 the Panic of 1920 was taking the
unemployment rate from 4% to nearly 12%. GDP fell 17%. Then, as
now, the presidents subordinates urged him to intervene. Secretary
of Commerce Herbert Hoover wanted to meddle as he would 10
years later. But Harding resisted. No bailouts. No stimulus. No
monetary policy. No fiscal policy. Harding had a better approach;
he cut government spending and went out to play poker:
We will
attempt intelligent and courageous deflation, and strike at government
borrowing which enlarges the evil, and we will attack high cost
of government with every energy and facility which attend Republican
capacity
it will be an example to stimulate thrift and economy
in private life.
Let us
call
for a nationwide drive against extravagance and luxury,
to a recommittal to simplicity of living, to that prudent and normal
plan of life which is the health of the republic.
Within a decade,
Hardings views were collectibles. But in 1921, he still saw
the economic world as a moral world ordered not by man, but by God.
This was not the result of long study or deep reflection on his
part. He was probably the dummy everybody said he was. As Keynes
pointed out, politicians are always in thrall of some dead economist.
At least Harding was in thrall to the good ones.
No statute
enacted by man can repeal the inexorable laws of nature, he
announced. Our most dangerous tendency is to expect too much
of government
Harding was
not the first to see the economy as a “natural” order
one that
you disturbed at your peril. A Taoist named Zhuangzi, who lived
about the same time as Alexander, observed: Good order results
spontaneously when things are let alone.
Later, economists
of the Scottish enlightenment, notably Adam Smith and Adam Ferguson
elaborated. Smith, like Harding, saw the economy ordered by the
invisible hand of God. Ferguson saw markets as a spontaneous
order, which were the result of human action, but not
the execution of any human design.
The same basic
insight led Irving Fisher the greatest economist of the 1920s
to come up with his debt-deflation theory of depressions.
After people had borrowed, they needed to pay back. Busts followed
booms; there was no getting around it.
Warren Harding
may never have been the brightest bulb on the White House porch,
but intuitively he understood that proper macro-economic policies
were more the product of virtue than of genius. Debt led to trouble;
thats all he needed to know.
Keynes came
along a few years later. Keynes was a genius; everybody said so.
And he had an answer for everything. Nature? Government could do
better. Debt? Dont worry about it, he said. Why not just let
capitalism sort itself out? Without government intervention, it
will only get worse, said Keynes.
But Harding
had already proved him wrong. Harding did the very opposite of what
Keynes recommended. Instead of increasing government spending, he
reduced it. He cut the budget almost in half. He slashed taxes too
and
cut the national debt by a third.
Japan at the
time struggled with the same downturn. But it had no Harding at
the helm. Instead, its masters prefigured Keynes, trying to stay
the correction using price controls and other interventions. The
result was a long-drawn-out affair that lasted until 1927 and ended
in a bank crisis. In America, meanwhile, by 1922 unemployment was
back down to 6.7%. By 1923 it was down further to 2.4%.
This lesson
was entirely lost on the worlds economists. When the next
crisis hit a decade later, they turned to Keynes. Of course, it
turned out to be a moral world after all. They got what they deserved.
October
26,
2009
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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