A
Recipe for the Next Great Depression
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
DIGG THIS
Along
with the ascendancy of the Democratic Party to control of the executive
and legislative branches of government has come the repetition of
the tired, old mantra of an alleged need for a "new New Deal."
God help us. The original New Deal unequivocally made the Great
Depression much worse, and much longer-lasting, than it would otherwise
have been.
One of
the most readable expositions of why the New Deal was an economic
debacle is Jim Powell’s book, FDR’s
Folly. It summarizes more than a half century of economic
research on the actual effects of the New Deal and presents the
results in a very readable, conversational style that is suitable
to a general reading audience. And every bit of it is being studiously
ignored by the powers that be in Washington. After his voluminous
survey of the ill effects of New Deal interventionism Powell concludes
with "lessons for today." Every one of these lessons is
not only being ignored by Washington policymakers, but the policy
proposals coming out of Washington are ominously structured to do
exactly the opposite of what Powell suggests.
Lesson
Number One is that "the basic problem with central banks
is that like socialist economic planners, they can never have more
than a fraction of the vast knowledge needed to make a society work,
knowledge that is dispersed in the minds of millions of people.
In addition, when central bankers make mistakes – as they inevitably
will, since they’re human beings – these mistakes harm not just
the economy in a city or a region but the entire country. The Fed’s
response to the current economic crisis, which it created by creating
the housing bubble, has been to declare more and more central planning
powers for itself."
Lesson
Number Two is that "deposit insurance must be priced to
reflect the risks of the banks that buy it. Having the federal government
provide deposit insurance inevitably introduced political pressures
to offer deposit insurance at the same price for all banks, which
meant subsidized banks engaged in risky practices and contributed
to the instability of the banking system." The federal government
recently expanded the coverage of federal deposit insurance,
thereby guaranteeing more excessively risky lending in the future.
Lesson
Number Three is, "Especially because taxes are the biggest
burden millions of people face today, it’s crucial to cut taxes.
Tax cuts mean expanding economic liberty . . ." President-elect
Obama is promising punitive taxes on the most productive people
in America – higher income families and investors and savers, combined
with government handouts that he mislabels as "tax cuts"
for people who don’t even pay income taxes.
Lesson
Number Four is "efforts to ‘soak the rich’ will backfire,
because the investments of the rich are needed to create jobs."
If Obama’s campaign and, indeed, his entire political career, has
been about anything it has been about soaking the rich and "redistributing"
income and wealth through the tax system.
Lesson
Number Five is "public works and other ‘jobs’ programs
must be avoided because they increase the cost and burden of government,
making it more difficult for the private sector to function."
All of Washington is foaming at the mouth over the prospect of more
pork-barrel spending, laughingly labeled "stimulus package."
Lesson
Number Six is that "especially during a recession or depression,
the government must not enact laws preventing prices from adjusting
to circumstances. Prices are vital signals that help people decide
what to produce and consume." The government has been doing
exactly the opposite. Stopping prices from adjusting to realistic
levels is the whole intent of the Fed’s policies as well as the
Wall Street Plutocrat Bailout Bill.
Lesson
Number Seven is that "government must not enact laws preventing
wages from adjusting to circumstances . . . . Labor union monopolies
have been major obstacles to adjusting wages." One of the first
orders of business for the Obama administration will be to strengthen
labor union monopolies by passing a law that prohibits secret ballot
voting in union certification elections.
Lesson
Number Eight is, "only if investors feel private property
is secure will they be willing to make long-term financial commitments
needed to spur recovery and boost employment." The government
has been busy charging businesses that have simply gone bankrupt
with crimes, promising more of the same, placing price controls
on executive pay, increasing the taxation of investment with higher
capital gains taxes, and generally demonizing the entire American
capitalist system as a means of shifting the blame for the economic
crisis that its own stupid policies have created.
In other
words, everything going on in Washington today is a recipe for another
Great Depression.
November
11, 2008
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the
author of The
Real Lincoln; Lincoln
Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe
and How
Capitalism Saved America. His latest book, Hamilton’s
Curse: How Jefferson’s Archenemy Betrayed the American Revolution
– And What It Means for America Today, will be published
on October 21.
Copyright
© 2008 Ludwig von Mises Institute
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at LRC
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DiLorenzo Archives at Mises.org
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