The Greatness of the Market in a Crisis
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
If you are
glued to the evening news or the radio, you might believe that the
whole nation is waiting in suspense to see how our leaders are going
to deal with the economic challenges of our day: recession, inflation,
unemployment, bank runs, etc. There are proposed laws, bills flying
everywhere, candidates promising this and that, press conferences,
debates, op-eds, talking heads, regulations, investigations, proposals,
and policies.
Then there
is the real world.
The real world
is the market economy. It is making a trillion decisions every hour.
The decisions are dramatic, decisive, and life changing. They deal
with real stuff, not vapid promises. We see this in a crisis more
than ever: the takeovers, production shifts, whole industries rising
and falling, patterns of imports and exports reversing themselves,
jobs changing, with tens of billions of dollars changing hands minute
by minute.
Here is the
pith of life. The rest of what people think matters is just white
noise.
An interesting
case is how production in some sectors is increasing in the midst
of an economic slowdown. Cars, computers, and steel – important
aspects of industrial production – actually experienced a marginal
boost in June. Why might this be? The declining value of the dollar
on international exchange has made imports more expensive, and made
domestic production more appealing. This complex activity – a signal
of bad economic times but a praiseworthy response to massive shifts
in the investment environment – is driven by nothing less than loss
avoidance strategies by entrepreneurs.
No one needed
to issue a command to make sure this happened. There were no debates
or polls. No regulator had to issue a press release. It happens
because considerations of profit and loss provide the right signals
to entrepreneurs. The entrepreneurs saw the new conditions and acted
on them. And why? To do what they always do: try to stay out of
loss-imposing lines of production and find profitable ones.
Another dimension
of this is the industrial takeover. InBev SA of Belgium has taken
over Anheuser-Busch in the hope that it can make the company profitable.
This is partly a response to the falling dollar but also a handoff
to a management team that might do a better job at doing what the
company is supposed to be doing. Concerning the nativists who say
that only Americans should own beer companies in America, consider
that the foreigners are doing us a favor: taking over one line of
production to free up domestic resources to help dig out of recession.
Oh – and beer from Belgium is far superior to any Bud.
Earlier this
year, the Royal Bank of Canada, from its US headquarters in North
Carolina, swept in and took over First American Bank and nine other
banks in Alabama, Florida, and Georgia. In bank after bank, they
close on Friday and reopen on Monday with a completely new name
and face. Nothing in politics happens this fast. It is all to the
good for everyone, since it puts the banks on a more profitable
path. Historically, by the way, Canadian banks are far more prudent
than their US competition, so as a customer, I can only say: Hooray!
Again, the
motivation is the same: loss avoidance and profit seeking, which
is just another way of saying that these are efforts to make sure
that society's resources are used in the most efficient (least wasteful)
way. A recession makes this approach all the more critical. But
what is really impressive is the way in which markets respond to
dramatic change. Resources move and shift in a manner that makes
economizing part of the very structure of life itself.
Another example
is oil. The prices at the pump reflect not only existing supply
and demand conditions but also the best possible guesses about future
conditions, discounted to the present. The prices reflect what producers
believe to be profitable and they also serve to bring about the
best possible conditions for economizing. Should prices go up or
go down? We are fortunate that this doesn't have to be decided by
a government committee. It is a matter worked out by billions of
real trades around the world within the global market framework.
The response time to new information is mind-boggling. Prices soar
for months and then suddenly plummet based on changing conditions.
Everything is constantly in flux, with present prices representing
the best possible guess concerning the least wasteful use of resources.
Every business
in America right now is in the position of having to assess how
it does business, what it pays its workers, how much to invest for
the future, whether to cut back on some lines of production now,
how and whether to advertise, when and how to raise prices in response
to increased costs of doing business. Again, no one waits for an
order from Washington. The orders are issued by balance sheets at
the end of the day. A company must stay in the black or else shut
its doors.
Consumers too
participate in these large movements of resources. We see prices
going up in all goods and services, but some more than others. We
shift to substitutes, we consider more carefully what we buy, we
think hard about alternative ways of stretching the value of declining
dollars. In this way, we reward producers who best adapt to the
changing environment, and best serve our needs.
Finally, consider
the fate of mortgage lenders and homeowners. The markets became
wise to the fact that loose credit led to a fantastic bubble and
that trillions in traded mortgages might not be serviceable in an
environment of downward price pressure. Companies that once were
seen as valuable and liquid are suddenly seen as unstable and wasteful.
Their stocks are shorted by sellers. Their price crashes. Reality
is revealed.
This is not
an attack. It is not a result of malign "rumor mongering." It is
not even regrettable from an economic point of view. Truth is a
precondition for economic recovery. Bad investments need to be avoided.
Good ones need to replace them. That is the very core of what all
this economic activity is about. If the informed guesses of traders
turn out to be wrong, there is a profitable opportunity for other
traders to guess more accurately. To dampen this spirit is to do
nothing but prop up illusions and perpetuate error.
What can the
State contribute to this cause? It can get out of the way. It is
not necessary to somehow demonstrate the superiority of markets
over state planning. This is demonstrated every single second of
every day. The politicians blather while the markets act with confidence
and wisdom to achieve real results. The only positive contribution
that politicians can make is to make the market a freer environment
for resources to travel to their most profitable production lines.
People
say that markets are not democratic. In fact, what we have here
is the ultimate economic democracy, one in which all of us as individuals
vote in the use of our time and resources, as William
H. Peterson argues. We determine, through our buying and selling
decisions, which lines of production succeed and which ones fail.
But if the critics mean that markets are not politically democratic,
they are precisely right, and it is a good thing too. The price
system is a system of action, not words. It is decisive and takes
responsibility. Where political democracy ignores those without
power, market democracy collects and uses all available information
for the benefit of everyone.
Markets are
beautiful in good times, but especially impressive in bad. There
is no better occasion than a crisis of this size and scale to marvel
at how the institutions of private enterprise can cope better than
any political leader, or all of them put together.
July
18, 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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