Measurable
Improvements
by
Bill Bonner
Daily
Reckoning
Recently
by Bill Bonner: Nazi
Economics
What exactly
went wrong in Germany? Thomas Jefferson had been dead for 150 years
when Adolf Hitler came to power. But he would have recognized the
broad outlines of the problem. Jefferson: My reading of
history convinces me that most bad government results from too much
government.
Too much security
turned out to be as deadly to the people who created it as to those
who fought against it. Even after the Germans had surrendered, the
dying continued. The Allies turned their heads as 13 million Germans
were expelled from Prussia, Poland, Hungary, Rumania, Czechoslovakia,
and other nations in Eastern Europe. It was not a pretty sight.
The Germans call it die Flucht
the biggest ethnic
cleansing in all history. Hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions
mostly women, children and old men died en route.
That too, was part of the cost of Germanys too much
reliance on military power. Once the downside began
it was
a long way down.
But suppose
the government had confined its activism to helping people rather
than killing them? Suppose Heinrich Himmler put flowers in his hair
and Adolf Hitler went to anger management sessions. Suppose they
turned their energies from mass murder abroad to making a
difference at home?
Is there any
limit to the good works they might have realized? Could the world
ever have too much improvement? Wheres the downside?
You fill the
tank of your car. Minutes go by as the big tank fills, with a deep
gurgling sound coming from the mouth of the tank. It gets fuller
and fuller, better and better. Then, you hear a different sound.
The tone changes as the neck of the tank fills quickly. It is time
to click the nozzle and stop.
How much gasoline
has been spilled on the ground by people who failed to stop when
they should have? The problem has been greatly alleviated by the
invention of the automatic nozzle, which closes when it senses a
back-up. What a shame similar devices have not been developed to
stop people from overdoing it in other ways! How many desserts have
been consumed by people who passed the point of diminishing returns
at the starter course? How much money has been wasted on investments
whose rates of return sank to zero
and kept declining? How
many couples should have kissed and made up at the breakfast table
rather than continue their argument through dinner? And how many
armies should have called a halt at their own borders?
Here we examine
a well-known, but little studied, phenomenon what happens
AFTER you have gone too far
and what you get after declining
marginal utility has turned into negative utility. Calories that
shouldnt be eaten
money that shouldnt be spent
things
that shouldnt be said and wars that sensible people shouldnt
fight they are all part of The Downside, where every success
is measured in red and every step forward is a march to hell.
So, let us
turn away from the warfare state to the welfare state. Surely, you
cant over-do it when youre trying to help people, can
you? Which brings us back to the world, and specifically, the United
States of America, circa 2012. Never before in the history of the
world have so many people devoted their lives to trying to the make
the world a better place. What is government if not an organization
that works to improve the lives of its citizens? Surely, every one
of its employees strives to make a difference in a positive
way.
The baker may
be said to improve the lives of his clients, but he does so unintentionally,
almost accidentally. He is just trying to support himself. If anyone
else gets a benefit out of his actions it is purely coincidental.
And the auto mechanic too. And even the psychiatrist. Each looks
after his own. Any improvement in the lot of mankind is offset by
the money each charges. In theory, the world comes out even, exchanging
one resource for another. That is how the market system works. A
buyer exchanges with a seller. One gives up something; one gets
an equal value in return. Even Steven.
But in the
year of our lord 2012, 2.65 million people work apart from the market
system. They are the employees of the US government whose purpose
is not to render any service nor produce any manufactured good in
an even exchange for money. Instead, the GS 1s through GS
12s have a more important and more general mission.
If the bakers
and auto mechanics only got back from government what they actually
paid for they would have no reason to go to government at all. They
can get what they pay for in the private sector. They must get something
more from government. Or something different. Something not available
in the market.
The people
on the federal government payroll, if they thought about it at all,
would probably think that they were hired to increase the sum of
human happiness by correcting the failures, oversights and shortcomings
of the market system. If they labor for the SEC, they believe they
improve the way securities are bought and sold. If they draw their
pay from the Department of Education or one of its many subsidiaries
or any of the institutions of higher or lower learning supported
in part or in whole by the feds, they believe they provide some
fillip to the educational process that is beyond the reach of the
free enterprise system. As for the central bankers, who knows what
they really think? But to the outside world they maintain that they
can do a better job of selecting the interest rates paid on short
term notes than the buyers and sellers of the notes themselves.
As mentioned
earlier, a similar conceit has taken over almost the entire economics
profession. The world created by able buyers and willing sellers
isnt good enough for them. They aim for a better one. And
they believe their professional training gives them the tools needed
to improve it.
Without coming
to any conclusion about how good their training was
or how
well they are able to accomplish the enormous task in front of them
let
us merely look at the tools themselves. Whereas the classical economist,
before Keynes and econometrics, was a patient, neutral observer,
the modern, post-Keynes economist has ants in his pants and help
in his heart. He cannot sit idly watching his flock, like a philosopher
studying a group of sinners
or a botanist watching plants.
Instead, he comes on the job, opens his tool chest, and gets to
work. But what tools does he work with? Numbers.
If you are
going to improve something you must be able to measure it. Otherwise
how do you know that you have made an improvement? How do you know
there is any improvement to be made? But there is the problem right
there. How do you measure economic performance?
You need numbers.
But when we look carefully at the basic numbers used by economists
we find that they are fishy
if not outright fraudulent. These
numbers claim to have meaning. They claim to be specific, scientific
and precise. They are the evidence and the proof that led to thousands
of Ph.D. awards, thousands of grants, scholarships and academic
tenure decisions. More than a few Nobel Prize winners also trace
their success to numbers. They are also the basis of weighty decisions
and far-reaching policies that change the lives of millions of people.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
There are only
9 cardinal numbers. The rest are derivative. These numbers are useful.
In the hands of ordinary people they mean something. Three tomatoes
is different from 5 tomatoes. Three buckets of 5 tomatoes each is
15 tomatoes.
In the hands
of scientists and engineers they are indispensable. Careful calculations
allow them to send a spacecraft to Mars
and then drive around
on the Red Planet.
But a useful
tool for one profession may be a danger in the hands of another.
Put a hairdresser at the controls of a 747
or let a pilot cook
your canard a lorange
and youre asking for trouble.
So too, when an economist gets fancy with numbers, the results can
be catastrophic.
The old, classical
economists were suspicious of numbers. They were not bean
counters or mechanics. They were observers. By watching what
people did and how economies actually worked they
induced laws or principles that helped them
understand what was happening and predict what would happen next.
There was, for example, the law of supply and demand.
Or the aforementioned law of declining marginal utility.
Economists back then did not earn much money. So they took their
recompense in other forms, often by naming one of these newly discovered
laws after themselves. Jean Baptiste Say discovered
that products are paid for with products not merely
with money. (He meant that you needed to produce things to buy things
you
could not just produce money.) It is today called Says
Law.
Gresham noticed
that if people had two different kinds of money available to them,
they would spend the weakest of them first, and keep the good money
in storage.
Were
not above eponymous vanity either. So we give you Bonners
Law: In the hands of economists, the more precise the number, the
bigger the lie.
An article
appeared in the press on Oct. 4, 2012. Health care as income
for the poor. The New York Times reported that the Congressional
Budget Office had decided to include governments health care
spending, dollar for dollar, as income to American families. In
the wink of an eye, the numbers boys at the CBO increased the household
income of the bottom 5th of the population by $4,600 per household
thus
lifting hundreds of thousands up above the poverty line.
The government
does indeed spend nearly $8,000 on the average Medicaid beneficiary
per year. As for the average Medicare recipient, the total rises
to $12,000. So, the quants seem to be on solid ground in adding
this money to the income of the people who receive it.
The NYT is
much too earnest a journal to mention it, but this opens up vast
new possibilities for the number crunchers. Do the poor not also
receive their share of other spending? Their children are educated,
almost entirely at the expense of the government. Take the median
number of children. Take the cost of a private school education.
Add that to the typical low-income household. Presto! Theyre
now a middle-income household. No kidding. Do the math. Or make
it easier. Take educational spending, $809 billion. Add it to household
income. You just increased the average household income of the lowest
fifth of the population by $7,000.
And what about
security? Dont American households benefit from US security
spending? If they dont, why do we spend the money? The feds
spend about $800 billion on security. And if you added
in all the crackpot spending justified in the name of security
such as building a US embassy in Baghdad that can withstand a nuclear
attack the total is closer to $1.2 trillion. Divide that
by 114 million households. Now, you can add another $11,000.
In fact, what
is the entire US federal budget not to mention state and
local budgets if not a benefit to the citizens, residents,
and illegal immigrants of the United States of America? So, take
the whole damned budget and divide it up. And now we have the poorest
people in America with household income of about $55,000. Voila,
we have won the war on poverty without firing a shot.
October
12,
2012
Bill
Bonner is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
The New Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis
and the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007). His
latest book is Dice
Have No Memory.
Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force
behind The Daily Reckoning.
Copyright
© 2012 Daily Reckoning
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