Obama's
Fix-It Plans
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: The
Faith of Entrepreneurs
The entire
presumption of the Obama-proposed Consumer Financial Protection
Agency is that banks and mortgage companies are under-regulated
by the state. This is why the financial meltdown took place – never
mind that the federal regulatory Gosplan includes tens of thousands
of pages purporting to regulate the mortgage industry alone.
Let's leave
aside the unknown costs that will be associated with new regulations
– ever more hoops to jump through, more paperwork, more confusing
terms for lenders and borrowers alike, more government controls
that harm consumers as much as or more than producers. The core
problem here is that none of this rigmarole has anything to do with
the real reason for the meltdown.
The role that
legislation plays in sending signals to real-world market participants
is tiny by comparison to the role of market prices, among which
are the interest rate. Here is the signal that is organic to the
market economy, generated by the choices and values of all the people
in society.
Prices are
the market's intrinsic method for allocating resources according
to the priorities of individuals. These prices include the exchange
ratios for final products and prices all up and down the structure
of production. They also include wages, the market signal that regulates
relations between workers and employers.
But
for the investment sector, the critical price signal is the interest
rate. It is this which rewards and punishes investment decisions.
It conveys information about the capacity of consumers to purchase
in the future. A high interest rate indicates a lack of saving and
a shift toward more present-oriented economic decisions. Conversely,
a low interest rate tells lenders and borrowers that there is plenty
of spare saving to go around.
In the early
2000s, the Federal Reserve manipulated the interest rate in a downward
direction, one which was not justified by market realities. This
action misled consumers and producers to undertake investments that
were unsustainable. In particular, financial energy poured into
the housing market, a sector which had been a political priority
for successive presidential administrations.
To understand
the implications, imagine if a fine restaurant advertised a five-course
meal and French wine for all comers, at $1 each. Would the customers
be exuberant? You bet. They would be wild with anticipation, choosing
to stand in a line and hang out at the restaurant rather than do
other things with their time.
The restaurant
would be packed and happy, though of course it couldn't sustain
this in the long run, but the fun is great while it lasts. At some
point, reality kicks in. The manager notes that there are no more
tables and maybe no more food. The employees are exhausted. Moreover,
the balance sheets don't line up: they are losing money on every
meal they serve. At some point, the manager is going to have to
announce the bad news and everyone is going to have to go home.
This is roughly
what happened with the current boom and bust. Policy makers, however,
seem to be under the assumption that they can keep the boom going
on forever simply by dropping the interest rate ever lower. This
is something like a restaurant owner thinking that he can continue
to have people wait in line even though he has no tables or food
or servers remaining. It is a physical and economic impossibility
for him to make good on his promises.
At some point
in this process, people begin to drift away and go on to other things.
The manager can continue to advertise $1 meals in the hope of stimulating
his business but this is simply illusion. No one is buying it; even
if they did, the restaurant can't make the balance sheets work out.
We can venture a prediction here that this restaurant will not be
stimulated. It will enter into a prolonged period of inactivity
until nothing is left.
This is precisely
what the Obama administration is attempting to do. So you can see
that regulations in this climate mean absolutely nothing. You can
pass a regulation that says: "All customers must continue to wait
in line" or that "all meals that have been promised must be delivered"
or that "restaurants must keep stores of food and wine on hand for
high-traffic days" but none of them really apply because the core
problem has deeper roots. The regulations are even destructive,
because they end up applying to everyone alike, the good restaurants
that are telling the truth and the bad ones that continue to mislead
people.
Even the establishment
of a Restaurant Customer Protection Agency is not going to fix up
this situation, which is already hopeless. Creating an agency like
this only ends up mucking up a system that is otherwise self-correcting.
The Bush administration
began the ridiculous economic boom as a way of preventing a recession
that was underway already at the time of the 2001 terrorist attacks.
Creating funny money via low interest rates was the Bush way of
fighting back against the terrorists. Very stupid, because look
where it got us. We have experienced the worst financial panic on
record, which has devastated us economically far more than the terror
attacks.
This is why
Obama's fix-it plans are based on a denial of reality. The downturn
might eventually end, but with ever more regulations imposed on
the system, we might find ourselves never again living in a vibrant
and prosperous society.
Books
by Lew Rockwell
June
25, 2009
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and chairman of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author, most recently, of The
Left, The Right, and The State.
The
Best of Lew Rockwell
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