The
Frightful Face of Stimulus
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Among businesspeople,
bankers, and investors, there is a growing fear that the economy
is headed towards recession or already in one. But that alone is
not the source of worry. After all, an economy if left alone to
function in freedom can recover. The real problem has to do with
the political response. There is every indication that no matter
who comes to be in charge in November, we face a future of massive
spending, inflating, and regulating.
And here is
the real danger. One only needs to look at such preposterous measures
as the "stimulus package" that congress passed to much fanfare.
Dumping money into consumers' hands, drawn from wherever they can
get it, is the only means these guys can dream up to shore up prosperity.
That only proves that they don't know what brings about prosperity
in the first place, which is not congress but free enterprise.
Economist Robert
Higgs compares a "stimulus package" to getting water out of the
deep end of the swimming pool and dumping in the shallow end – all
with the expectation that the water level will rise. As he emphasizes,
economists should never tire of asking where the money for stimulus
is going to come from. Mankind has yet to invent a machine to create
it out of nothing: it's either taxing, inflating, or going into
debt that has to be paid later (and crowds out capital creation
now). There is no other way.
Then we face
the frightening prospect of a Bernanke-driven inflation. His entire
public career has one theme only: the merits of credit expansion
without limit. Alan Greenspan at least had some intellectual conviction,
way back in his personal history, that there is a downside to printing
money without limit. Bernanke seems to think that the printing press
he now runs is the Holy Grail of economic recovery.
He never speaks
without insinuating that more credit expansion is on the way. He
somehow believes that offering this will spread relief and even
glee, as if he alone has his hands on the machine that will solve
all the world's problems, and he alone knows how to work it. I tell
you, it's creepy. What's more, he seems to be the only one who truly
believes it.
And consider
the way Washington has handled the subprime mortgage crisis and
what that portends for our future. Throughout the 1990s, especially
after a now-discredited Federal Reserve Bank of Boston propaganda
study, banks were hounded by federal regulators to end "discrimination"
against people with either poor or no credit ratings. In practice
this meant that banks were threatened into giving loans to people
regardless of their ability to pay them back. The lending standards
that have been an essential part of banking practice from time immemorial
were repealed.
Now the same
banks are under fire for having granted mortgages to those who can
least afford them, even as Washington again considers legislation
that would mandate that banks take on less risk in the future. So
we have here a politically created problem that is followed by a
politically generated non-solution to the problem. It's as if Washington
will consider any trick to patch up problems of its own making other
than simply letting the market work.
In a very strange
way, we find ourselves in a position similar to that of 1932, when
the United States was in a depression, people were crying out for
answers, and free market logic was ignored or denounced. To be sure,
today there is a vast class of pundits, teachers, and other intellectuals
who understand, and are constantly aghast at the old-style Keynesianism
that is driving public debate. But bridging the gap between private
opinion and official policy will require nothing short of a miracle.
One need look no further than the presidential election, which could
easily be confused for a dictator election.
| |
 |
| |
|
| |
|
It is indisputable
that, given the state of things, bad economic times will be a forerunner
to bad and worse economic policy. The Democrats will give us more
spending, regulating, war, and inflation. And this is despite all
promises they will give us before the election. Recall that FDR
himself ran on a platform of balancing the budget and letting private
enterprise cure economic crisis, as John T. Flynn's Roosevelt
Myth shows.
And the Republicans,
absent Ron Paul, will give us, well, the same thing. All these people
need to look around at what private markets are doing today. Instead
of destroying other people's wealth, they are cooperating with all
nations of the world, serving the consumer, and finding innovative
and better ways to feed, clothe, house, heal, and entertain us.
And what has Washington done? Rob us, badger us, and take us to
war.
To be sure,
Washington does have obligations. Cutting spending and taxes is
a great start. Abolishing agencies that inhibit recovery is essential,
starting with the egregious Transportation Security Administration
that has done so much to destroy airline travel in this country
over the last seven years. It is a Bush-created agency, and one
of the great policy errors of the last, well, seven years.
It's true that
confidence in the economy is waning. But the response by Washington
so far has done nothing to inspire optimism. The more they do, the
greater the fears grow. There is a Victorian story about a creature
who wonders why everyone is running from him, until he sees a reflection
of his own frightful face. It is time for the whole of Washington
to look in the mirror.
February
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
|