Before
the U.S. House of Representatives, July 9, 2002
It is now
commonplace and politically correct to blame what is referred
to as the excesses of capitalism for the economic problems we
face, and especially for the Wall Street fraud that dominates
the business news. Politicians are having a field day with demagoguing
the issue while, of course, failing to address the fraud and deceit
found in the budgetary shenanigans of the federal government
for which they are directly responsible. Instead, it gives the
Keynesian crowd that run the show a chance to attack free markets
and ignore the issue of sound money.
So once again
we hear the chant: "Capitalism has failed; we need more government
controls over the entire financial market." No one asks why the
billions that have been spent and thousands of pages of regulations
that have been written since the last major attack on capitalism
in the 1930s didn't prevent the fraud and deception of Enron,
WorldCom, and Global Crossings. That failure surely couldn't have
come from a dearth of regulations.
What is distinctively
absent is any mention that all financial bubbles are saturated
with excesses in hype, speculation, debt, greed, fraud, gross
errors in investment judgment, carelessness on the part of analysts
and investors, huge paper profits, conviction that a new era economy
has arrived and, above all else, pie-in-the-sky expectations.
When the
bubble is inflating, there are no complaints. When it bursts,
the blame game begins. This is especially true in the age of victimization,
and is done on a grand scale. It quickly becomes a philosophic,
partisan, class, generational, and even a racial issue. While
avoiding the real cause, all the finger pointing makes it difficult
to resolve the crisis and further undermines the principles upon
which freedom and prosperity rest.
Nixon was
right once when he declared "We're all Keynesians
now." All of Washington is in sync in declaring that too much
capitalism has brought us to where we are today. The only decision
now before the central planners in Washington is whose special
interests will continue to benefit from the coming pretense at
reform. The various special interests will be lobbying heavily
like the Wall Street investors, the corporations, the military-industrial
complex, the banks, the workers, the unions, the farmers, the
politicians, and everybody else.
But what
is not discussed is the actual cause and perpetration of the excesses
now unraveling at a frantic pace. This same response occurred
in the 1930s in the United States as our policymakers responded
to the very similar excesses that developed and collapsed in 1929.
Because of the failure to understand the problem then, the depression
was prolonged. These mistakes allowed our current problems to
develop to a much greater degree. Consider the failure to come
to grips with the cause of the 1980s bubble, as Japan's economy
continues to linger at no-growth and recession level, with their
stock market at approximately one-fourth of its peak 13 years
ago. If we're not careful and so far we've not been
we will make the same errors that will prevent the correction
needed before economic growth can be resumed.
In the 1930s,
it was quite popular to condemn the greed of capitalism, the gold
standard, lack of regulation, and a lack government insurance
on bank deposits for the disaster. Businessmen became the scapegoat.
Changes were made as a result, and the welfare/warfare state was
institutionalized. Easy credit became the holy grail of monetary
policy, especially under Alan Greenspan, "the ultimate Maestro."
Today, despite the presumed protection from these government programs
built into the system, we find ourselves in a bigger mess than
ever before. The bubble is bigger, the boom lasted longer, and
the gold price has been deliberately undermined as an economic
signal. Monetary inflation continues at a rate never seen before
in a frantic effort to prop up stock prices and continue the housing
bubble, while avoiding the consequences that inevitably come from
easy credit. This is all done because we are unwilling to acknowledge
that current policy is only setting the stage for a huge drop
in the value of the dollar. Everyone fears it, but no one wants
to deal with it.
Ignorance,
as well as disapproval for the natural restraints placed on market
excesses that capitalism and sound markets impose, cause our present
leaders to reject capitalism and blame it for all the problems
we face. If this fallacy is not corrected and capitalism is even
further undermined, the prosperity that the free market generates
will be destroyed.
Corruption
and fraud in the accounting practices of many companies are coming
to light. There are those who would have us believe this is an
integral part of free-market capitalism. If we did have free-market
capitalism, there would be no guarantees that some fraud wouldn't
occur. When it did, it would then be dealt with by local law-enforcement
authority and not by the politicians in Congress, who had their
chance to "prevent" such problems but chose instead to politicize
the issue, while using the opportunity to promote more Keynesian
useless regulations.
Capitalism
should not be condemned, since we haven't had capitalism. A system
of capitalism presumes sound money, not fiat money manipulated
by a central bank. Capitalism cherishes voluntary contracts and
interest rates that are determined by savings, not credit creation
by a central bank. It's not capitalism when the system is plagued
with incomprehensible rules regarding mergers, acquisitions, and
stock sales, along with wage controls, price controls, protectionism,
corporate subsidies, international management of trade, complex
and punishing corporate taxes, privileged government contracts
to the military-industrial complex, and a foreign policy controlled
by corporate interests and overseas investments. Add to this centralized
federal mismanagement of farming, education, medicine, insurance,
banking and welfare. This is not capitalism!
To
condemn free-market capitalism because of anything going on today
makes no sense. There is no evidence that capitalism exists today.
We are deeply involved in an interventionist-planned economy that
allows major benefits to accrue to the politically connected of
both political spectrums. One may condemn the fraud and the current
system, but it must be called by its proper names Keynesian
inflationism, interventionism, and corporatism.
What is not
discussed is that the current crop of bankruptcies reveals that
the blatant distortions and lies emanating from years of speculative
orgy were predictable.
First, Congress
should be investigating the federal government's fraud and deception
in accounting, especially in reporting future obligations such
as Social Security, and how the monetary system destroys wealth.
Those problems are bigger than anything in the corporate world
and are the responsibility of Congress. Besides, it's the standard
set by the government and the monetary system it operates that
are major contributing causes to all that's wrong on Wall Street
today. Where fraud does exist, it's a state rather than federal
matter, and state authorities can enforce these laws without any
help from Congress.
Second, we
do know why financial bubbles occur, and we know from history
that they are routinely associated with speculation, excessive
debt, wild promises, greed, lying, and cheating. These problems
were described by quite a few observers as the problems were developing
throughout the 90s, but the warnings were ignored for one reason.
Everybody was making a killing and no one cared, and those who
were reminded of history were reassured by the Fed Chairman that
"this time" a new economic era had arrived and not to worry. Productivity
increases, it was said, could explain it all.
But now we
know that's just not so. Speculative bubbles and all that we've
been witnessing are a consequence of huge amounts of easy credit,
created out of thin air by the Federal Reserve. We've had essentially
no savings, which is one of the most significant driving forces
in capitalism. The illusion created by low interest rates perpetuates
the bubble and all the bad stuff that goes along with it. And
that's not a fault of capitalism. We are dealing with a system
of inflationism and interventionism that always produces a bubble
economy that must end badly.
So far the
assessment made by the administration, Congress, and the Fed bodes
ill for our economic future. All they offer is more of the same,
which can't possibly help. All it will do is drive us closer to
national bankruptcy, a sharply lower dollar, and a lower standard
of living for most Americans, as well as less freedom for everyone.
This is a
bad scenario that need not happen. But preserving our system is
impossible if the critics are allowed to blame capitalism and
sound monetary policy is rejected. More spending, more debt, more
easy credit, more distortion of interest rates, more regulations
on everything, and more foreign meddling will soon force us into
the very uncomfortable position of deciding the fate of our entire
political system.
If
we were to choose freedom and capitalism, we would restore our
dollar to a commodity or a gold standard. Federal spending would
be reduced, income taxes would be lowered, and no taxes would
be levied upon savings, dividends, and capital gains. Regulations
would be reduced, special-interest subsidies would be stopped,
and no protectionist measures would be permitted. Our foreign
policy would change, and we would bring our troops home.
We cannot
depend on government to restore trust to the markets; only trustworthy
people can do that. Actually, the lack of trust in Wall Street
executives is healthy because it's deserved and prompts caution.
The same lack of trust in politicians, the budgetary process,
and the monetary system would serve as a healthy incentive for
the reform in government we need.
Markets regulate
better than governments can. Depending on government regulations
to protect us significantly contributes to the bubble mentality.
These moves
would produce the climate for releasing the creative energy necessary
to simply serve consumers, which is what capitalism is all about.
The system that inevitably breeds the corporate-government cronyism
that created our current ongoing disaster would end.
Capitalism
didn't give us this crisis of confidence now existing in the corporate
world. The lack of free markets and sound money did. Congress
does have a role to play, but it's not proactive. Congress' job
is to get out of the way.
See
the Ron Paul File