Bernie
Madoff Was Only a Petty Crook Compared with Uncle Sam
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
Recently by Robert Higgs:
Flag Waving
Is Not My Kind of Patriotism
Bernard Madoff
was in the news again today. I quote here from a CNBC
report, adding my own commentary to put the report into perspective.
Disgraced
financier Bernard Madoff has arrived at federal prison in Butner,
North Carolina, CNBC has learned, though it is still not clear
if that will be his permanent home.
President Barack
Obama and the sitting members of Congress have not been charged,
much less convicted and sentenced, for crimes that make Bernie Madoffs
look like childs play. Note well: I am referring here not
to the assorted murders, assaults, and batteries for which these
men and women are manifestly guilty I say guilty because
they not only admit these crimes, but proudly take public credit
for them but to certain of their strictly financial crimes.
Madoff,
71, was sentenced last month to 150 years in prison after pleading
guilty in March to charges that his investment advisory business
was a multibillion-dollar scheme that wiped out thousands of investors
and ruined charities.
Madoff caused
people to lose billions of dollars. The U.S. government has caused
people to lose trillions of dollars, and its not finished
yet. The publics losses mount during every minute of every
day. By its effects in discouraging work, saving, and investment,
and thereby reducing capital accumulation, the U.S. Social Security
system has caused the nations gross domestic product to fall
significantly below the levels it would otherwise have reached.
According to Professor Edgar
K. Browning, a leading researcher in this field, the available
evidence suggests that Social Security has reduced [current] GDP
by 5 to 10 percent. Ten percent of GDP is now approximately
$1.4 trillion or about 28 times the maximum amount Madoff
is believed to have cost his clients. Moreover, Madoffs harm
is a one-shot loss, whereas the U.S. governments Social Security
harm is an ongoing loss that grows annually. In the future, the
annual loss will be even greater than the currently estimated $1.4
trillion or so.
Authorities
said Madoff had carried out the fraud for at least two decades
before confessing to his sons in December that his investment
business was a fraud and that he had lost as much as $50 billion.
The leaders
of the U.S. government have carried out their Social Security fraud
essentially a Ponzi scheme, in substance exactly the same
as Madoffs scheme since 1935, and they have yet to
confess to their crimes, unless their family members have been told
and have kept the confession to themselves.
Madoff, in
contrast to the government, carried out his fraud in a civilized
way: he merely misrepresented what he was doing, purporting to invest
his clients money and to obtain a high rate of return on these
investments. People dealt with him voluntarily. Those who suspected
something was fishy did not do business with him, and some people
went so far as to give substantial information to the SEC to show
that Madoffs business had to be fraudulent (which information
the SEC ignored for years on end, of course).
The U.S. government,
however, does not bother to claim any prowess in investing the money
it forces people to surrender to its scheme. It admits that the
clients return is now close to zero (varying a
bit according to the clients age and other factors). Nor does
it carry out its admitted Ponzi scheme in a civilized way. Not only
is participation in the scheme involuntary, but the government threatens
violence against anyone who fails to participate as it commands
him. Thus, the government operates its Ponzi scheme in a markedly
more thuggish manner than Bernie would ever have dreamed of. He
might have been a crook, but he was not a thug.
Everyone (including
Bernie himself) agrees that Bernie Madoff was a crook. What is the
correct term for the U.S. government, or does the word government
tell us everything we need to know about the honesty, humanity,
and justice of its actions?
This first
appeared in The Beacon.
July
16, 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
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