Can
President Obama’s Policies Heal the US Economy?
by Frank Shostak
by
Frank Shostak
In his interview
with the New York Times on May 3, 2009, President Obama said,
I know how
to ask good questions of my doctor. But ultimately, he's the guy
with the medical degree. So, if he tells me, you know what, you've
got such-and-such and you need to take such-and-such, I don't
go around arguing with him or go online to see if I can find a
better opinion than his.
We suspect
that President Obama has adopted the same approach with respect
to managing the US economy. In fact, in the same interview he said
that he is very much influenced by the ideas of Joseph Stiglitz,
Larry Summers, and Paul Volcker.
During the
interview he also expressed his admiration for Robert Reich and
Paul Krugman. Although he didn't say it, we suggest that the US
president is also greatly influenced by the ideas of Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke.
All these famous
personalities derive their way of thinking from the writings of
John Maynard Keynes and endorse heavy government involvement in
the economy.
The influence
of these personalities on the mindset of the US president is vividly
revealed in his economy speech at Georgetown University on April
15, 2009. According to the president,
Recessions
are not uncommon. Markets and economies naturally ebb and flow,
as we have seen many times in our history. But this recession
is different. This recession was not caused by a normal downturn
in the business cycle. It was caused by a perfect storm of irresponsibility
and poor decision-making that stretched from Wall Street to Washington
to Main Street. As has been widely reported, it started in the
housing market
. Everybody was making record profits
except the wealth created was real only on paper. And as the bubble
grew, there was almost no accountability or oversight from anyone
in Washington. Then the housing bubble burst. Home prices fell.
People began defaulting on their subprime mortgages. The value
of these loans and securities plummeted. Banks and investors couldn't
find anyone to buy them. Greed gave way to fear. Investors pulled
their money out of the market. Large financial institutions that
didn't have enough money on hand to pay off all their obligations
collapsed. Other banks held on tight to the money they did have
and simply stopped lending.
Note that not
even a word is mentioned about the possible responsibility of the
Fed for the present economic crisis. This omission is puzzling.
Recall that
the president suggested that he knows how to ask good questions.
And yet it seems that when it comes to the world of economics, he
has lost this skill and is not asking the relevant questions. He
is not arguing with the experts.
In a typical
Keynesian way, the US president argues that the crisis in the financial
markets started to spread to the real economy. Consequently, all
this has undermined overall demand in the economy. To prevent further
deterioration, the Obama administration introduced measures to counter
the economic slide.
The first
step was to fight a severe shortage of demand in the economy.
The Federal Reserve did this by dramatically lowering interest
rates last year in order to boost investment. And my administration
and Congress boosted demand by passing the largest recovery plan
in our nation's history.
There is, however,
no such thing as a shortage of demand. In fact, individuals' demand
is unlimited. What is scarce is not demand but rather individuals'
ability to fund the demand.
For instance,
an individual might have a demand for a Mercedes 600, but only have
the funding for a bicycle.
In order to
be able to fund a Mercedes, our individual must produce enough goods
to enable him to secure the car.
A dramatic
lowering of interest rates and massive government spending cannot
improve the bottom line of the economy (the individual's ability
to produce more and better-quality goods). Such policies can only
redistribute real wealth from wealth producers to wealth consumers.
For instance,
in an economy comprised of a baker, a shoemaker, and a tomato grower,
imagine that another individual enters the scene. This individual
is an enforcer who is exercising his demand for goods by means of
force. Can such demand give rise to more output, as the popular
thinking has it? On the contrary, it will only impoverish producers.
The baker, the shoemaker, and the farmer will be forced to part
with their product in exchange for nothing, and this, in turn, will
weaken the flow of production of final consumer goods. According
to Mises,
there is
need to emphasize the truism that a government can spend or invest
only what it takes away from its citizens and that its additional
spending and investment curtails the citizens' spending and investment
to the full extent of its quantity. (Human Action, p. 737)
This, however,
is not what the president believes. He is of the view that during
the current crisis government should increase and not cut its expenditure.
To begin
with, economists on both left and right agree that the last thing
a government should do in the middle of a recession is to cut
back on spending. You see, when this recession began, many families
sat around their kitchen table and tried to figure out where they
could cut back. So do many businesses. That is completely responsible
and understandable reaction. But if every family in America cuts
back, then no one is spending any money, which means there are
more layoffs, and the economy gets even worse, that's why the
government has to step in and temporarily boost spending in order
to stimulate demand. And that's exactly what we're doing right
now.
Here Obama
accepts the terrible advice of his economists that savings is bad
for the economy. If he had spent some time pondering this issue,
he would have reached the conclusion that what is good for the individual
is also good for the economy.
He would have
discovered that the key for funding is real savings. He would have
also discovered that real savings cannot be replaced with money
and government outlays. It must be appreciated that government is
not a wealth generator it is a wealth consumer. The government
is completely dependent on the wealth of the private sector. Hence
the more government spends, the less is left for wealth generators
and the weaker the economy gets.
This means
that only wealth generators and not the government and the
central bank can generate funding.
President Obama
would have discovered that, unlike what his advisers are telling
him, it is not possible to create something out of nothing. In order
to be able to consume, individuals first must produce useful things.
After suggesting
that savings is bad, the president goes on to argue that it is necessary
to provide assistance to banks in order to revive credit.
The heart
of this financial crisis is that too many banks and other financial
institutions simply stopped lending money. In a climate of fear,
banks were unable to replace their losses by raising new capital
on their own, and they were unwilling to lend the money they did
have because they were afraid that no one would pay it back. It
is for this reason that the last administration used the Troubled
Asset Relief Program, or TARP, to provide these banks with temporary
financial assistance in order to get them lending again. No, I
don't agree with some of the ways the TARP program was managed,
but I do agree with the broader rationale that we must provide
banks with the capital and the confidence necessary to start lending
again.
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No, the heart
of the current financial crisis is the boom-bust policies of the
Fed. It is these policies that caused massive real-wealth destruction
and hence weakened the economy's ability to generate real savings.
Note that it is real savings that funds economic activity.
Once the process
of real-funding formation comes under pressure, obviously banks'
ability to lend follows suit. After all, banks are just intermediaries;
they help to facilitate real savings, but they cannot generate real
savings. Although banks are still reluctant to lend, they are quite
happy to lend to viable borrowers. The fact that bank credit is
still tight raises the likelihood that the pool of real savings
is still under pressure.
The US president
is of the view that somehow he could make the banks lend regardless
of real savings. The only expansion of lending that the president
could enforce upon banks is lending "out of thin air."
This type of lending amounts to the creation of money "out
of thin air" the key factor behind the present economic
crisis. To justify his policies, the US president maintains,
Of course,
there are some who argue that the government should stand back
and simply let these banks fail especially since in many
cases it was their bad decisions that helped create the crisis
in the first place. But whether we like it or not, history has
repeatedly shown that when nations do not take early and aggressive
action to get credit flowing again, they have crises that last
years and years instead of months and months years of low
growth, low job creation, and low investment that cost those nations
far more than a course of bold, upfront action.
Again, the
president must appreciate that without the expansion of the pool
of real savings it is not possible to make banks expand credit.
The only credit that they can expand is "out of thin air."
This type of credit can only further weaken the bottom line of the
economy.
Contrary to
the advice the president was given probably by Fed Chairman
Bernanke we can suggest that the more government tries to
fix the banking sector, the worse things are likely to be. Also,
contrary to Bernanke's views, it is the Fed's tampering with the
US economy during the 1930s that transformed a recession into a
depression.
Similarly,
almost twenty years of aggressive tampering with the economy by
the Japanese government and central bank has failed to meaningfully
revive the Japanese economy. (This tampering has only weakened the
bottom line of the Japanese economy.)
After assuring
the US public that he knows how to counter the economic crisis,
the president said,
But even
as we continue to clear away the wreckage and address the immediate
crisis, it is my firm belief that our next task is to make sure
such a crisis never happens again
. We cannot rebuild this
economy on the same pile of sand. We must build our house upon
a rock.
His intentions
are good. However, his actions have already laid the foundation
for a gigantic bubble and a further weakening of economic fundamentals.
This article
originally appeared on Mises.org.
May
21, 2009
Frank
Shostak [send him
mail] is an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute and a frequent
contributor to Mises.org. He is chief
economist of M.F. Global.
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