The Social Imperative of Sound Money
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
This past week,
the government announced that it would take Freddie Mac and Fannie
Mae, the mortgage giants, under conservatorship, which is a nice
way of saying that they will be nationalized.
We don't use
the word nationalize any more. We can try an experiment and read
the new term "conservatorship" back into history. In fact, we might
say that Stalin and Lenin put Russia's industries under a kind of
conservatorship. Or we might say that Mao pushed a kind of land
conservatorship, or that Hitler's policy was one of national conservatorship.
Marx's little book could be re-titled: The Conservatorship Manifesto.
You see, the
government keeps having to make up new names for these things because
the old policies, which were not that different in content, failed
so miserably. The old terms become discredited and new terms become
necessary, in an effort to fool the public.
It's as if
a restaurant served a shrimp dish that gave all the customers food
poisoning, and so each night it decides to serve the same shrimp
but name the dish something new: crangon cocktail, prawn pasta,
scampi salad, or what have you. But no matter what they call it,
it is still poison.
Such a restaurant
would be out of business in a matter of days. People would not be
fooled. But the government gets away with it mainly because we have
no real choice about the matter, and because people are predisposed
to believe the government far more than they should. It doesn't
help that the media are willing to echo the government line on this,
adopting every new phrase as if it were the gospel.
Hence the same
is true of the word bailout, which you might consider unexceptionally
descriptive of this move by the government to protect Freddie and
Fannie from further losses. No, that word is not allowed either.
President Bush told Fox the other day, ''I wouldn't call it a bailout.
I'd call it a stabilization.''
We will soon
put out a new edition of Mises's 1922 book Socialism.
Maybe to keep up with the time we should call it Stabilizing Conservatorship.
What I also
find striking is the way in which this move was announced. Let me
read to you from the New York Times: "The Bush administration
seized control of the nation’s two largest mortgage finance companies
on Sunday…. It could become one of the most expensive financial
bailouts in American history."
Even the most
sophisticated observers of our present scene had to blink their
eyes in reading such words. Without debate, without votes, without
anything other than an executive fiat, the White House just decided,
on its own, to seize the mortgage market. Harry Truman, who seized
the steel industry, would be proud. Actually, this is an action
to excuse dictators the world over, past, present, and future.
This sort of
thing makes a mockery of the Constitution and the very idea of freedom
and the free market, to say nothing of the idea that we have a limited
government. What's more, if we can believe press reports, President
Bush had very little to do with the decision. It was the work of
Henry Paulson, the secretary of the Treasury and former head of
Goldman Sachs, working on behalf of the nation's most well-connected
financial elites. Nobody elected this guy. Most Americans don't
even know his name.
And look at
how he throws around trillions of our money. The New York Times
says that this is expensive. That's one way to put it. It makes
the S&L bailout look like the warm-up.
Freddie and
Fannie carry about $5.3 trillion in mortgage commitments and another
$2.4 trillion in financial exposure. The total cost of this operation
is unknown; it could reach to $2 trillion, with untold amounts of
future exposure.
These two New
Deal institutions were founded to speed up the home ownership process
for people that banks would otherwise consider unqualified. In time,
under LBJ and Nixon, they were given legal permission to expand
without limit, in the name of privatization, of all things.
The motive
was a classic bipartisan effort: universal home ownership. The left
favored the redistribution. The right favored the supposed moral
virtue associated with the nuclear family and its suburban abode.
Thus was born the greatest wealth transfer in American history outside
Social Security and the warfare state.
In a free market
with sound money, borrowing is connected with the ability to pay.
At first, this is only available to the rich. As prosperity spreads,
so does credit worthiness. Any government intervention designed
to inject steroids in this process is going to end in what Rothbard
called a cluster of errors.
It is completely
disingenuous that so many people are today decrying the banking
system's failure to discriminate between those who should and should
not be carrying a mortgage. The banking system in a free market
handles this just fine. Ferreting out the difference between those
who can handle loans and those who cannot is a main job of the competitive
system. The market precisely calibrates this. If one lender fails
in its assessments of borrowers, another is there to correct the
problem.
If you rush
the process of prosperity, and insist that everyone who wants a
loan should get one, you set up a situation in which there will
be problems down the line. That is precisely what the regime has
done. It created Freddie and Fannie to subsidize loans. It engaged
in a phony privatization that secretly socialized losses. The legal
status of these privately owned, publicly traded, and government-protected
agencies was always unclear, but the markets had long assumed that
they would be bailed out.
There was a
moral hazard at the heart of this policy. But the real point is
that the free market judgment about who should get what was being
over-ridden. Surely, that is not a problem when it comes to promoting
the alleged American dream! In fact, we are paying for this mistake
a half century after the policy became a national priority. As the
evangelical ministers like to say, the wheels of justice grind slowly,
but they grind mighty fine.
There is only
one problem with applying the principle to this case. There will
be no justice. If justice prevailed, the losses would be borne directly
by those responsible.
If we pursued
a free-market policy from here on, the answer would not be complicated.
The assets and liabilities of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae would be
auctioned today in the free market. It's true that many loans would
be defaulted on.
What level
of crisis would be precipitated by such a genuine privatization
policy? It's true that the press would be screaming bloody murder,
and the big players in finance would suffer. But in time, the markets
would revalue the resources and an important lesson would be learned.
Sound loans would be picked up by financially responsible firms
and carried to term. Home values would fall and many people would
have to move to cheaper homes. We would then be back on sound footing
again.
From an administration
that purports to favor free markets, this possible solution was
not even considered. Instead, they proclaimed their regrets that
they would have to spread the costs of this error over the entire
population. Instead of fixing the problem, however, they only worsen
it, underscoring the principle that America will not tolerate failure
in business, and the bigger the failure, the more likely it is to
be bailed out.
Note that this
socialistic bailout and nationalization to use two forbidden words were
enacted by a Republican administration. Isn't it ironic that when
you look back at the big upticks in government intervention over
the economy, you often find Republicans at the helm.
As for McCain
and Palin, they wrote in the Wall Street Journal that this
bailout is "sadly necessarily" even as they promise reforms that
will "require the highest standards of accounting, reporting and
transparency ever demanded in government." Well, here's the thing:
no one demands higher standards than the market itself, but you
have to turn these institutions over to the market in order to elicit
such standards.
Congress's
role has been and will be to yammer. Only Ron Paul of Texas will
have anything sensible to say about this fiasco. In fact, it was
more than five years ago that Ron said the following: "If Fannie
and Freddie were not underwritten by the federal government, investors
would demand Fannie and Freddie provide assurance that they follow
accepted management and accounting practices…. By transferring the
risk of a widespread mortgage default, the government increases
the likelihood of a painful crash in the housing market. This is
because the special privileges granted to Fannie and Freddie have
distorted the housing market by allowing them to attract capital
they could not attract under pure market conditions. As a result,
capital is diverted from its most productive use into housing. This
reduces the efficacy of the entire market and thus reduces the standard
of living of all Americans."
It’s remarkable
to observe that hardly anyone dares be against this policy. On the
day following the nationalization, a day that will live in infamy,
the Wall Street Journal editorialized against the Democrats
and their reform efforts, but didn't actually oppose the bailout.
The New York Times called it "a reasonable and reassuring
move." The Los Angeles Times wrote that the bailout was "inevitable."
Steve Forbes in his magazine wrote that "drastic action" had to
be taken because a default would "have trigged the worst financial
meltdown since the Great Depression."
It's interesting,
isn't it, that all these people believe that waving the magic money
wand can make reality just go away. That incredible superstition
seems to be the official position of the entire US establishment.
And we like to flatter ourselves into believing that we live in
an age without illusions!
As for those
who should know better, Greg Mankiw, author of the leading economics
textbook, writes that because "it was likely to happen eventually"
it is "better to get on with it." The supposedly free-market economics
blog Marginal Revolution warns that without the bailout, "most of
the U.S. banking system would be insolvent," failing to point out
that a system that needs a bailout with fiat money is already insolvent.
Econlog had lots of good thoughts, but didn't actually oppose the
bailout.
The Cato Institute
agrees that the Treasury had to bail out the mortgage industry because
it "was forced to do so," and that Fannie and Freddie
are indeed "too big to fail." The Heritage Foundation
agrees that it was a "necessary step" and a "vital
move toward reform."
Sure, these
people have plenty of recommendations about what should have been
done in the past, and lots of ideas about what should be done in
the future. As for the present, they are ready to propagandize for
the largest socialist operation in American history. In all of these
latter cases, we are looking not at a problem of economic education
but rather the courage to stand up to the state when it is needed
most. They didn’t do so after 9/11. And now they have caved again.
Part of the
problem is the belief in the great myth propagated by Milton Friedman.
As good as he was on many issues, he was not correct on his specialty
of American monetary history. His view was that the Depression was
caused by a Fed that failed to fully bail out the banking system.
Ben Bernanke and many others are pleased to accept this view of
history, and they are determined not to let it happen again. In
fact, the Fed did attempt to bail out the banks, and was far too
successful. This is the basis of the problem.
In the end,
we are talking about a price system that has rendered a verdict
on the housing market. Prices don't lie and there is nothing we
can do to reverse them. Even the most powerful government in the
world cannot do so. The attempt causes calamity. The Austrians understand
this, whereas it seems as if hardly anyone else does.
Pretty much
alone in both predicting the calamity and actually opposing the
bailout are those who have learned from the Misesian tradition,
who have said plainly and clearly that this is a dreadful error,
one that makes the US more socialistic than China.
Let us address
this claim that not bailing out the system, and not nationalizing
the mortgage market, would lead to a financial meltdown on the level
of the Great Depression. People talk as if the Depression were some
sort of natural disaster that the government had to fight. In fact,
it was the very fighting of the Depression that deepened it and
caused it to last all the way through World War II. We have to understand
that if we are to understand the real lesson of the Depression.
Instead of letting prices fall and letting the bad investments wash
out of the system, the government tried for years and years to keep
prices high, employ people in make-work programs, and generally
centrally plan the economy.
In 1920 through
1922, we had a financial meltdown just as bracing and systematic
as the one in 1929. The difference was that the government didn't
do anything to try to fix it. As a result, it solved itself and
it is a forgotten event. Hoover and FDR, in contrast, attempted
to use their power over the economy and monetary system to try to
keep prices floating high and to keep liquidity in the banking system
precisely as everyone is attempting now. The result was to
forestall the inevitable readjustment process.
They believed
that the low prices were the cause and not the effect of the recession.
Does that error sound familiar? In other words, the Great Depression
only became the Great Depression because the government followed
exactly the same policies that the Bush administration is following
now with regard to the mortgage market.
It makes no
sense to warn that we will repeat the past if we do the same things
that actually made the past as bad as it was. To avoid another Depression-sized
downturn, we need to avoid the mistakes of the past, among which
were the policies that attempted to keep failing firms and industries
afloat in difficult economic times.
What should
have happened in 1929 is precisely what should happen now. The government
should completely remove itself and let the market reevaluate resource
values. That means bankruptcies, yes. That means bank closures,
yes. But these are part of the capitalistic system. They are part
of the free-market economy. What is regrettable is not the readjustment
process, but that the process was ever made necessary by the preceding
central bank and other interventions.
Let me state
this very plainly: I do not believe for one second that if the government
fails to nationalize Freddie and Fannie that the world as we know
it will come to an end. Those who are saying that are trying to
scare the population, the same as with every other major demand
by the regime. It was the same with Nafta, the WTO, the war on terror,
the war on bird flu, the nationalization of airport security, and
everything else.
If the government
did nothing but sell off the assets of the mortgage giants, we do
not know for sure what would happen, but the market has a way of
finding value and readjusting. I would expect about 18 months of
difficulties. Banks would fail just as many businesses in the free
market fail every day. Housing prices would fall more, just as all
market prices are subject to change. But the process of readjustment
would be smooth and rational. And we would all stop living a lie
and believing an illusion.
Contrary to
what the blogging heads say, there is nothing that makes this nationalization
inevitable. If we had leaders who had courage, who understood economics,
who could think about the long run, we would let the market handle
the entire process, come what may. I guarantee that this solution
is a better one than creating another trillion or so to bail out
failing enterprises.
And yet this
is not just another longing for courageous leaders. We can't hope
for that. We need a guarantee. We need a system that would make
it impossible for government to do these things even if it wants
to. That system is called sound money. Think about the preconditions
that made it possible for the Bush administration to decide one
evening to dump a trillion plus to guarantee three-quarters of the
home mortgages in this country. It is a system that is premised
on the government's capacity to print unlimited amounts of money.
If it could
not do that, no one would be talking about conservatorship. No one
would be talking about guaranteeing the liabilities of the automotive
industry either. War on Afghanistan, on Iraq, on Russia, and troops
in another 100 plus countries, would be out of the question. These
wouldn't be issues. If government had to tax people directly for
all its spending priorities, we would see Washington's ambitions
in every area scaled back dramatically. Every suggestion of a new
program would be met with the demand as to how it would be funded.
Fiat money
with central banking, on the other hand, tempts corrupt politicians
and bureaucrats, and it also further corrupts them. It is the great
occasion of sin of our public life. The tragedy is that their use
of the printing press not only corrupts them; it imposes dreadful
and intolerable costs on the rest of society, in the form of price
inflation and business cycles.
We’ve seen
the corruption grow worse over time. We are living now in the 37th
year of fully fiat money with central banking. The politicians of
the past were a bit reticent to use all the power they had. They
are becoming ever more brazen. The sense of shame seems to be gone
forever, their consciousness completely papered over by the ominous
power they possess. The pundit class is following them, believing
that there are no limits.
In truth, all
these bills must be paid. To realize that is to realize the necessity
of radical reform. It can be overwhelming to contemplate the glorious
results of a full gold standard reform. Inflation would stop eating
away our purchasing power. The business cycle would be tamed. International
trade would not be disrupted by wild swings in currency values.
But of all the benefits, this one is the greatest: it would stop
arbitrary rule, dead in its tracks. It would force the government
to curb its ways. It would shore up our freedoms.
For this reason,
the policy of sound money is very much linked with morality. The
Hebrew scriptures, in the nineteenth chapter of the book of Leviticus,
warns "you shall have just balances, just weights…" The twenty-fifth
chapter of Deuteronomy issues a similar warning: "You shall not
have in your bag differing weights, a large and a small." Proverbs
says the same: "A false balance is abomination to the LORD: but
a just weight is his delight." Another passage says: "Diverse weights,
and diverse measures, both of them are alike abomination to the
LORD."
All
of these relate in some degree to the need for sound money and condemn
the act of fraud and monetary debasement. The consequences of monetary
sin cannot be contained to the sinners only. They are spread out
all over the whole of society, destroying its economic basis and
corrupting the morals of society. They foster crazed illusions that
we can magically generate wealth through the act of printing money,
and the attempt to do so has catastrophic consequences. As Mises
wrote: "Inflation is the fiscal complement of statism and arbitrary
government. It is a cog in the complex of policies and institutions
which gradually lead toward totalitarianism."
I find it sickening
that there are so few voices outside the Austrian School that will
stand up to this policy. And I fear that the consequences of this
policy will be felt for many decades into the future. There is still
time to reverse course. There is nothing inevitable about despotism.
We are not being forced down this road. We can embrace freedom.
If we understand that freedom is inseparable from sound money, we
can embrace that too. Until then, we will continue to place our
trust in the political establishment to do what is right. Call me
a gold bug if you will, but I trust hard money far more than our
rulers. And that, ultimately, is the choice we must make.
This talk
was delivered on September 13, 2008, at the Vancouver
Mises Circle.
September
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
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