The Government Wrecks the Economy
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
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At this point
it is just a waiting game for the National Bureau of Economic Research
to declare that we have been in recession. Of course they work from
past data; we all do. But the data will show what has been true
for months. Investment is falling. Unemployment is rising. The trends
are consistent with every single recession on record.
All that is
bad enough. Maybe your job is secure. Maybe you are out of the stock
market. Maybe you aren’t waiting for a return on some real estate
investment. The problem that hits everyone is inflation, which is
roaring out of control in all the sectors we care about. We have
entered the double digits, and if producer prices forecast consumer
prices, we are in for tougher times ahead.
So what does
Washington do? In an act of incredible stupidity, Congress has passed
an extension of unemployment
benefits. The old rule remains true: if you subsidize something,
you get more of it. So this will give us more unemployment. No question
about that. It will thereby worsen and prolong the problem.
It takes only
a second of economic logic to see why. In a recessionary environment,
we need freer, not more socialized, labor markets. Business needs
to be able to hire workers at lower prices. You don’t want to increase
the cost of hiring; you want to reduce it, especially with unemployment
rising. Instead, Congress loots the workers of this country in order
to prevent people from entering the job market.
This is not
only stupid; it is highly dangerous. Britain tried this in the 1930s,
and more than any other action, this contributed to the high unemployment
rates that fueled socialist political movements, which led to the
destruction of that economy. It could do the same here in the United
States.
Moving on to
the Fed, here we see a cabal of obsessives that believes that the
greatest threat to the country right now is falling prices. And
they are wholly dedicated to preventing this from happening – precisely
at the time when falling prices would be the best thing that could
happen to the country.
And what generates
this obsession? A faulty understanding of the Great Depression.
Like FDR and his advisors, this bunch is convinced that what caused
the downturn was the fall in price of everything. This is what bad
economic thinking generates. Low prices were the best thing the
1930s had to offer. Imagine that same depression occurring with
inflation roaring! The people’s sufferings would have been immeasurably
worse.
So leave it
to Washington to make sure that the next experience with any economic
phenomenon will always be worse than the last. They are trying to
give us the Great Depression with an even worse trend: falling production,
rising unemployment, plus soaring prices! (If you haven’t
read it yet, please pick up a copy of Rothbard’s America’s
Great Depression. Send a few copies to the Fed while you
are at it.)
Bernanke’s
view of the Great Depression makes no sense of course. But it’s
the only explanation I can come up with for why the Fed is doing
its best to pump up the economy by inventing ever more tricky ways
of getting banks to lend money, as if money and credit will save
the world. You might think they would take a look at the economic
plight of many African nations with inflation running in the many
thousands of percent. Their economies are not performing well. But
a person like Bernanke is capable of looking at a place like Zimbabwe
and pointing out that at least it is not plagued with deflation!
At this stage
in the debate over what to do about the recession, the Bush administration
and the Republicans look pretty good by comparison to the Democrats.
It is easy to forget that Bush bears most of the direct responsibility
for this fiasco. His war has drained the capital stock, diminished
oil supplies, and crowded out private investment. He has done nothing
to keep gas prices low and specifically rejected proposals early
on to try to reduce prices.
He has egged
on the Fed with its inflation, by putting a priority on his military
adventures over sound economic policies. It is a crude simplification,
but it still contains truth: Bush’s warfare state is the cause of
this recession. It is simplified in the sense that it would not
have happened but for the money machine down the street from the
White House that he has demanded go into overdrive.
What is the
right response to a recession? The first rule must be to do no harm.
When it comes to government, that is asking a lot and enough. Beyond
that, in an ideal world, we would shut down the Fed, reduce the
cost of employment, reduce taxes, zap environmental controls on
exploring for and refining oil – this would be a good beginning.
We could expect the recession to last less than a year under these
policies. As it is, we could be in for a very long and deep recession.
June
14, 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.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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