The Downturn Is Good News
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Sometimes the
bad news is the good news. So it is with the report that retail
sales are down by 0.1 percent in July, the sharpest drop in many
months.
Why good news?
It means that consumers are starting to cut back. They could be
going into less debt. They might be saving more. They are being
more careful about long-term plans pending short-term trends.
These are all
preconditions for recovery. It’s only bad news if one adopts the
crude theory that economies are sustained by consumer spending.
The truth is nearly the opposite. Consumer spending is the final
payoff for the less visible foundation of growth, which is real
saving and investment – that is, making the choice for the future
over the present. What declines in retail spending indicate is a
coming to terms with reality.
I'll state
again what everyone familiar with the Mises-Hayek business cycle
knows: the downturn is a response to an artificially inflated economic
structure. Loose credit, courtesy of the Federal Reserve, has been
sucked into certain sectors and industries in a way that cannot
be sustained. The response of sell-offs and business failures represents
an injection of reality into an unreal bubble.
Far from being
something to regret, the economic downturn should cause us to breathe
a sigh of relief. And by the way, this is not new knowledge. F.A.
Hayek spelled all this out in his amazing writings between the wars,
now recently collected and available for the first time in decades
in a new book published by the Mises Institute: Prices
and Production and Other Works.
These
essays explain not only the Depression but also our current plight,
which stems from the same root in a Fed-driven banking system that
turns credit on and off like a monkey playing with a fire hydrant.
It does damage by sending false signals to investors. But the free
market will not be fooled in the long run. And what we are seeing
now is the market process.
Nonetheless,
the stock markets took the retail news as a bad sign that the stimulus
package you might have received a check in the mail didn't work.
Sure enough, the media are crowing that the rebate was a bust. Surely,
the economy would have bounced back by now if Bush had been right!
This kind of
commentary amounts to nothing but political one-upmanship. That
so-called stimulus is nothing compared with the vast reach of global
capital markets. This isn't the 20th century when small
decisions made in Washington have huge effects. For anyone to believe
that the pathetic stimulus can actually swing macroeconomic trends
is like believing that leaning this way or that on the Titanic would
cause it to sink or float.
In any case,
listen, folks: there are no controlled experiments in economics
and social science generally. We have no idea based on the evidence
alone whether the stimulus worked or didn't work. How much lower
might the economy have sunk without it? Or what if the economy had
bounced back due to some cause completely unrelated to the tax rebate?
It is not as
simple as it is in the natural sciences. You can't isolate a control
and then change one element to a duplicate and compare the results.
The issue is that human beings have volition. They are not atoms,
rocks, or planets. Given that there are so many of them moving and
choosing at once, there is zero chance that you can empirically
isolate the factors that go into events in a way that teases out
the cause of anything.
Brush away
all the econometric modeling and you end up with the real basis
for why people conclude this or that policy "worked" or "didn't
work." It comes down to politics. This is one reason we should resist
any government program no matter how much we think it will or won't
work. In the end, we can't really know the relationship of cause
and effect.
So how can
we know what is true and what is not in the social sciences? You
have to use your noggin. There is a long tradition of economics
that argues that the way to economic truth comes via deductive logic
that is then applied to the real world.
This
is precisely the path that Hayek took in his writings. And this
is why his model continues to apply to the world around us. He wasn't
arguing that loose credit caused only one cycle in one country.
He was arguing that whenever and wherever credit is expanded beyond
market dictates by a central bank, the result will be economic distortion.
In the end, reading his book will profit you more than reading all
the ridiculous business-page speculations about the political cause
of trends.
Once you understand
this, you too will see that what appears to be bad news is often
good news. The opposite is also true. So-called good news can foreshadow
worsening times. The only way to really discern the difference is
to study, think, and pay very little attention to the numbskulls
who give running commentary on the government statistics of the
day.
August
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
Lew
Rockwell Archives
|