The Supercharged Stock Market: An Object Lesson in the Perils of Coercion
by
Stefan Molyneux
by Stefan Molyneux
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Imagine that
a farmer comes to you for advice.
"My chickens
keep dying," he complains, "and I have no idea why!"
"What
do they die of?" you ask.
"Oh, the
usual – diseases spread like wildfire, and they often get crushed
to death – or just asphyxiate."
"Asphyxiate?"
you reply, rather startled. "How so?"
"Well,"
says the farmer, "they never seem to be able to get enough
air. I think that their lungs must be very weak."
"Where
do you keep them?" you ask.
"Oh, in
a shed of course. About 10’ x 10’."
"And how
many chickens are in the shed?"
"12,000."
Your jaw drops.
"12,000! How on earth do you get 12,000 chickens into a shed?"
"Oh, at
this point, I just jam them down the chimney, but it’s really full.
Nowadays, I have to use a broom stick."
"What?
Who on earth told you to put 12,000 chickens in a little shed?"
The farmer
blinks. "Oh, the guy who sells me the chickens, why?"
At this point,
it would be fair to say that the mystery was solved. Complex theories
about the lung capacity of chickens and the mystery of disease transmission
would be quite unnecessary.
This analogy
is very useful in helping understand one central reason why modern
stock markets tend towards instability.
We all know
how the government messes up the stock market through printing money,
inflation, hyper-regulation, controlling interest rates, defense
spending, deficit financing and so on – but there is another factor
at work that is less obvious.
The Causes
As we all know,
the stock market is designed to allow companies to raise money by
selling shares to individuals. Individuals should ideally only invest
in companies that they understand – investing in unknown companies
or markets is more appropriately termed "speculation"
rather than investment, and is generally indistinguishable from
gambling.
Of course,
there’s nothing wrong with gambling, as long as you risk your own
money, and at your own discretion. However, particularly since the
Second World War, governments around the world have been increasingly
forcing us at gunpoint to put our money into the stock market, much
to the delight of money managers, corporate executives, stockbrokers
– and politicians.
There are many
examples of how we end up being forced to speculate. 401(k) plans
only exempt current income from taxation if it ends up being invested
– putting the money into your bank account or under your mattress
will not save it from the tax man. The amount of money that 401(k)
plans have herded into the stock market is truly staggering – rising
from $105 billion in 1995 to over $14 trillion in 2005.
Of course,
some of that money would have been invested even without 401(k)
coercion, but how much? 10%? 20%? Half? Whatever the number, it
is far less than what is currently being forced into the stock market
through government regulation.
Let’s look
at some other sources. Hundreds of billions of dollars are currently
being invested by unions – particularly in the public sector. The
US teachers’ union, for example, along with other non-profit groups,
has an estimated $607 billion invested through 403(b) accounts.
The very existence of these unions would be questionable in a free-market
– there is almost no chance that they would end up as investment
vehicles for their members’ money. At present, however, trillions
of dollars of forced union dues in state-protected monopolies are
flooding into the stock market.
Let’s not forget
the surpluses of various government programs as well, such as unemployment
insurance and some pension plans. This surplus, which is stripped
from you at gunpoint, is also often invested in equities. Various
government agencies also directly invest in companies – in Canada,
the state agency HRDC recently had to write off over $5 billion
in bad investments, out of an annual budget of over $70 billion.
The Effects
Around the
world, governments are forcibly injecting trillions of dollars
into stock markets. What are the effects of this "supercharging"?
First and foremost,
it creates enormous instability in the stock market itself. Too
much money ends up chasing too few stocks, creating a subtle shift
in the concept of "value."
Ideally, "value"
represents an actual and potential demand for goods and services.
In a supercharged stock market, however, "value" tends
to devolve into "whatever I can sell the stock for," which
is a subtle but essential shift in perception. When the assessment
of price becomes more based on the demand for a company’s stock,
rather the market demand for a company’s products, a subtle
and corrosive corruption enters into the equation.
When too much
money sloshes around the stock market, chasing incremental and short-term
changes in stock prices, the focus of chief executives begins to
change. Rather than building corporate value for the long-term,
they end up chasing stock prices in the short term. Since excess
money jumps from stock to stock at a moment’s notice, the temptation
to misrepresent earnings and sales projections – as well as pursue
short-term "pump and dump" strategies – becomes far greater.
Executives who tell the truth about shortcomings often get punished;
those who cover them up are all too often rewarded.
Skilful manipulation
of a supercharged stock market thus creates rewards measured in
the billions. Since enormous "value" can be rapidly created
through the manipulation of perception, executives can become rich
in months or years, rather than decades. The long-term value of
"good character" thus goes down, while the short-term
value of flashy marketing goes up. Executive salaries continue to
rise, as the "value" they can provide increases. In 1970,
US CEOs were paid 28 times more than the average worker. By 2005,
this had jumped to 465
times more.
Ambitious executives
do not take very long to figure out that they are punished when
they tell the truth, and rewarded when they prevaricate. Since "speculation"
has largely displaced investment in the stock market, and the constant
supply of additional capital is guaranteed through government coercion,
an amoral feeding frenzy has taken over.
Naturally,
the problems which arise from coercion are inevitably ascribed to
voluntarism. State manipulation of the stock market is ignored;
the resulting instability is invariably blamed on the free market
– thus paving the way for additional (and ridiculous) regulations
such as Sarbanes-Oxley. Executives can now be sent to jail for a
single mistake by a single accountant – but no government executive
loses his job over the slaughter in Iraq!
One reason
that politicians like this setup so much is that it gives them enormous
power over the financial sector, which has become largely dependent
on the money that the government "sends" their way. If
the government were to abolish 401(k) plans, for instance, and simply
refrain from taxing the associated income, the financial services
industry – one of many that depends on this violence – would largely
collapse. Were we free to make our own investment decisions, the
landscape of what is now currently called "stock market"
would change almost beyond recognition.
Of
course, this is highly unlikely to occur. Governments almost never
reform themselves from within; they only change under the threat
of fiscal collapse.
In other words,
a whole lot more chickens will have to die before the farmer changes
his ways.
August
29, 2007
Stefan
Molyneux [send him mail]
is the host of Freedomain
Radio. He is also the author of On
Truth: The Tyranny of Illusion.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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