Gorbachev
and the Most Complete Test in Economic History
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
Feds
See Every Emergency as an Opportunity
Only a moron
would allow economists to make decisions for him. So, this week,
we give thanks to morons. We're referring to the dumbbells who took
part in the largest and longest and most complete test in economic
history. Two generations and 20 million of them. The poor lumpen
of Mitteldeutschland proved that capitalism even with heavy state
interference delivers the goods better than a planned economy.
Readers may
know Mikhail Gorbachev as a fellow who advertises Louis Vuitton
luggage. But before he made it big as a mannequin, he was the top
man in the Soviet Union. It was not an easy job. The empire was
falling apart. So, in a rare act for a public official, Gorbachev
told the Soviet people the truth: "We can't go on like this,"
he said in 1986. Three years later, on November 9th, 1989, the test
was over.
What they were
going on with was a system of compulsory economics in which bureaucrats
made the key decisions. They decided how much capital to allocate
to what sector...how many people to employ...how much to charge
for the output, and so forth. Of course, in order to make these
decisions, Soviet economists had already discovered that they needed
to make a lot of other decisions too such as where people would
live, how much they would earn, what they would do, and which of
them would be starved to death. So, it was a very controlled experiment.
Conditions were so miserable in the East that the government needed
a vast network of spies and gulags to keep the malcontents from
ruining the test. Still, 5,000 people fled to the West. 136 were
killed trying to get over the wall that separated West Berlin from
the East.
The results
were obvious even before the test began. Ordinary people, looking
out for themselves, always make better decisions than economists
working for the government. Taxi drivers are better at getting people
from place to place. Automobile manufacturers are better at making
cars. Bakers bake better bread. Consumers buy what they really want.
And capitalists make better investments. But just because a thing
is absurd doesn't mean it is unpopular. There are people who get
upset when they discover that there is H2O in their drinking water.
There are also people who want apparatchiks to make their decisions
for them. And recently, there are more of them. Many Germans in
the East long for good old days when things were under control.
They call it "ostalgie."
After a bit
of food and a roof over his head, a man becomes more concerned with
status than with survival. It is not how rich he is that matters;
it's how rich he is compared to those around him. Status brings
reproductive advantages, say the socio-biologists. But it brings
disappointments too. And envy. So wicked and destructive is the
urge to envy that the Catholic Church banned it as a cardinal sin.
Societies suppress envy in a variety of ways. Some tax the rich.
Some force everyone to wear the same dreary clothes. Most level
the population by sticking everyone into the same education, retirement
and healthcare systems.
Capitalism
doesn't make anyone rich. It only allows people to compete for wealth
on more or less equal terms. Naturally, some are better at it than
others. Most people prefer alcohol, television or jobs on Wall Street
to the rough and tumble of real enterprise. And almost everyone
is prey to bubble delusions, hoping to get something for nothing
from the latest fad investment. And then, when capitalism corrects
their mistakes, they turn ostalgic, longing for the state to intervene
and rig the game in their favor.
"After
the wall fell: capitalism is a disappointment" says a headline
in yesterday's Montevideo paper, La Republic. A poll showed
that of people asked in 27 countries only 11% thought capitalism
was working properly now. We're surprised that anyone thought so.
With so much finagling by the feds, it's a wonder that it works
at all.
But even among
the complainers, few suggest a return to the policies that wrecked
East Germany between 1949 and 1989. Instead, what they want is a
kinder, gentler form of capitalism with the state as a benevolent
partner. Full employment, with Audis. Guaranteed health and retirement
benefits, with Wi-Fi and cappuccinos. Unlimited government bailouts,
but without state bankruptcy.
Alas, the lumpen
are worse at rigging the game than they are at playing it. The elites
are better; that's why they're the elite. They use corrections the
way a general uses a cease fire to strengthen their positions.
They connive with the government for more regulations to keep out
competitors, bailouts to protect them from their mistakes, and handouts
to enhance their status. That's why, scarcely a year after they
were all on the edge of insolvency, the world's big financial firms
are paying the biggest bonuses ever.
Does rigging
the system like this make people better off? Many thanks to those
teuton guinea pigs again! They conducted another test. After the
wall came down, the Federal Republic in Bonn decided to intervene
in the Eastern states in order to lift the ossies out of poverty
and put them on a level playing field with the West. Beginning in
1991, the West transferred an amount equal to 4% of GDP each year
to the East. Public works. Public health. Public education. Welfare!
Handouts! Bailouts!
Unwittingly,
which is the only way to do this sort of thing, they were merely
adding to the test data. For next door was the Czech Republic, which
also suffered under the Soviet boot, also engaged in absurd and
counterproductive policies, and also flew the coop as soon as the
Soviets dropped their guard. The Czechs had no rich relatives. They
had no source of free money. They had no booming economy that they
could join. No money. No port. Not even a language anyone else could
speak.
Well, guess
who won that race? The Czechs, of course. GDP growth rates in the
Czech Republic pulled ahead of those in East Germany in the early
'90s; since then, they've been pulling farther and farther ahead
each year.
November
18,
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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