Are
Consumers Driving Us into Recession?
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
With recession
looming or already here, the time has arrived for finding scapegoats.
Expect a long list of these. Here is the target of the day: tightfisted
consumers. A decline in personal consumption, writes the New
York Times, "would be the first since 1991, and it would
almost certainly push the entire economy into a recession in the
middle of an election year."
This recalls
Bush's advice after 9-11, when he assumed the mantle of the nation's
personal financial planner. He told everyone to go out and spend
money so the economy could avoid recession. Even then, there was
confusion about whether he was right or wrong. Some sensible voices
pointed out that economic expansion is based not on spending but
on capital expansion rooted in savings. That is to say, the only
path to future prosperity is delaying current consumption in favor
of future investment.
One only needs
to think of the household budget here to see the point. If you are
planning for the future for your family, what is the wisest course?
Does one go into debt as much as possible, buy the largest house
and the biggest car, throw lavish parties, hand out all existing
liquid funds to friends and strangers? Based on the view that consumption
is the way to avoid economic problems, this would indeed be the
right course.
But this also
defies everything we know about family finance. The path to a secure
prosperity is delaying consumption. One should spend as little as
possible and save as much as possible for the future, and let that
money be used in the service of investments that yield a solid rate
of return. Those who have chosen a different path now see the folly:
they are being burned in the soft housing market, for example.
The lesson
is also true for the nation at large, because the logic doesn't
magically change when moving from the family budget to the national
stage. Just because something involves "macroeconomics" doesn't
mean that we should throw out all good sense. But that is precisely
what people have done with regard to the economy, since J.M. Keynes
somehow convinced the world that up is down and left is right.
In a recession
or a crisis, the right approach for individuals is to save. So too
for the national economy. A looming recession will prompt a pullback
in consumer spending as a rational response to the perception of
economic troubles. This action does not cause the economy to fall
into recession any more than more spending can save it from recession.
The downturn is a fact that cannot be avoided. We don't blame umbrellas
for floods, and, in the same way, we shouldn't blame tightfisted
consumers for recessions.
There is no
question that this is what is happening. American Express reports
that the rate of spending by its cardholders fell 4% in December.
Surveys of consumer satisfaction with the economy report a 15-year
low. Retailers report that December was a "bloodbath" (NYT's words)
for them, with sales growing at the slowest rate in seven years.
Market watchers are mostly concerned that high-income buyers are
bailing out.
Again, it is
critical to keep cause and effect in mind. The pullback on spending
is not going to cause a recession. If we think about the long term,
this is not a dangerous trend but a hopeful one. The more people
pull back and save, the more the foundation is laid for a recovery
after the current correction takes its course.
To see that
requires that we take a long view. Government, however, seems constitutionally
incapable of seeing the long term, much less doing the right thing
to prepare for it. Making matters worse, this is that dreaded event
called an election year. Prettying things up to make the economy
palatable to voters is priority number one.
What does this
mean? More monetary expansion. More government spending. We can
fully expect that the Bush administration could resort to its old
program of sending checks out to every American family with the
proviso that the money has to be spent, not saved.
No doubt that
many people would be thrilled by this. But look beneath the surface.
Government has no money to spend on anything that it doesn't extract
from the pockets of you and me and the whole American public. This
is easy enough to see concerning taxes. It is not so easy to see
when the government runs up debt that is guaranteed by the printing
presses.
The monetary
issue can be understood by analogy to orange juice. The more water
you add, the less substance it has. If you keep adding, eventually
you come to the point when you can no longer tell that it was ever
orange. This is the same with money. If you print enough – literally
or electronically through the credit markets – it will continue
to lose value. If money grew on trees, it would be about as valuable
as autumn leaves.
So long as
we have a central bank, government will be tempted to take the easy
path of easy money. There do not need to be any secret phone calls
from the White House to the Fed. The culture of policymaking itself
is capable of broadcasting the right signals to all important players.
In any case,
it is a myth that the Fed makes policy independent of political
pressure. It is subject to the screams and hollers for looser credit
in the same way that bureaucracies are responsive to demands for
more regulation. It is what it is most suited to do in any case.
Yes, government
can increase consumption, but by doing so it does nothing to care
for the long term. The long-term health of a nation is not different
from that of a household budget. Tough times require cutbacks and
a beefing up of savings.
So let's not
demonize the consuming public for doing what it should be doing.
It's a good rule of thumb that when the government tells you to
spend money, close your wallet.
January
15, 2008
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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