The
Great Credit-Crunch Hoax of 2008
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
Remember the
credit crunch? Of course, you do. We'd never seen anything like
it, or so the highest financial authorities and their lapdogs in
the news media told us – not in a cool, calm, and collected way,
either, but in a breathless delivery that suggested imminent economic
doom unless the government immediately undertook to "do something."
Which it did, of course, on a scale never before witnessed in U.S.
history.
So, looking
back, as people are prone to do at this time of year, we can clearly
see the telltale signs of the financial disaster that struck the
financial markets last autumn: the terrible credit crunch, the "frozen"
credit that portended a complete economic "meltdown" unless the
government took drastic measures to head it off. (The government's
spokespersons and the media's talking heads never got straight whether
the thing was very cold or very hot, as they reached for horrifying
metaphors in all directions at once.)
But, wait,
something is terribly wrong in the statistical record! The devastating
credit crunch, the greatest threat to this country since the Russians
exploded an H-bomb, the most menacing economic event since the stock-market
crash of 1929, the . . . (sputter) . . . (sputter) . . . (words
fail me in the face of such terrors as it evoked in the minds of
government ministers and financial titans of all stripes) . . .
. Well, I am rather embarrassed, on behalf of all these giants of
the ruling elite, to inform you that in retrospect the Monster from
Lack-of-Liquidity Lagoon doesn't really show up as such in the most
relevant statistical series.
Probably the
most important measure of credit-market conditions is the amount
of commercial-bank credit outstanding. These figures
show that although the middle part of 2008 does stand out in the
long view, it does so not by virtue of credit's frightening contraction,
but only by virtue of its hitting a six-month
plateau from April through September.

At no time
during that interval, however, did the amount of commercial-bank
credit outstanding fall below the amount outstanding at the beginning
of the year. In short, credit was actually ample, indeed, at an
all-time high; it simply stopped growing as usual for six months,
stuck at about $9.4 trillion, while one Wall Street wizard after
another told NPR that "no money is moving, the credit market is
completely shut down" or some such cock-and-bull story.
After
the six-month pause, commercial-bank credit zipped upward again,
so that by the end of the year, the amount outstanding stood more
than 8 percent higher than it had a year earlier. Some credit crunch!
Année terrible, indeed.
But don't write
off this silly little hoax too fast, because, however baseless it
might have been in economic reality, it was manifestly good enough
for government work. And that work has now placed U.S. taxpayers
on the hook for trillions of dollars of additional Treasury
commitments and put all holders of U.S.
dollars and other dollar-denominated assets at risk of tremendous
losses of their money's purchasing power.
The beauty
of the Great Hoax of 2008, from the perspective of the ruling class,
is that is was also a Great Scare, and such scares invariably serve
as pretexts
for the rulers' most audacious assaults on the peasants' lives,
liberties, and purses. You'd almost have to admire the elite's ability
to spook the rest of us into blind, unreasoning panic on such a
flimsy basis, if it weren't for the fact that after the episode
has passed, we find ourselves enormously worse off, our economic
prospects diminished greatly and our liberties throttled more tightly
by an even bigger Leviathan, with nothing to show for it on the
upside but the further enrichment of a handful of big bankers and
other malefactors of great wealth and power.
Speaking as
a self-appointed representative of the peasantry, I'd say that notwithstanding
the thrills and chills we got out of it – the terrific excitement
it brought to the Boob Tube while it lasted – the whole shebang
now seems hardly worth the trouble it's caused us, not to speak
of the trouble it holds in store for us as its consequences play
out over the years to come.
January
6, 2009
Robert
Higgs [send him mail] is
senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute and editor of The
Independent Review. He
is also a columnist for LewRockwell.com. His
most recent book is Neither
Liberty Nor Safety: Fear, Ideology, and the Growth of Government.
He is also the author of Depression,
War, and Cold War: Studies in Political Economy, Resurgence
of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11 and Against
Leviathan: Government Power and a Free Society.
Copyright
© 2009 Robert Higgs
Robert
Higgs Archives
|