Recession
or Depression?
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Many people
are finally saying the R word: Recession. The fundamentals don't
look good. The externals are even scarier: dollar and stocks skidding,
gold and other prices (particularly producer prices) rising. But
what has tipped the psychological scales is the statistic no one
has cared much about in many years: unemployment.
The actual
rate is very low by any historical standard: 5%. What matters here
is the direction of change. It jumped from 4.7%. In the old days,
unemployment rates of 5% and 6% were considered "full employment"
in the Keynesian models. If government attempted to push employment
below that level (and it is absurd to think that anyone in Washington
can control the economy in that way), it would risk setting off
inflation, or so it was believed.
If the actual
unemployment rate is low, why this wave of pessimism? All data in
the postwar period of American economic history consistently show
that an increase in the rate has coincided with the onset of recession.
The parallel between the two is the most consistent feature of the
business cycle. See the NBER
list: 2001, 1990–91, 1981–82, 1980, 1973–75, 1970, 1960–61,
1957–58, 1953–54, and so on. In each case, unemployment begins to
rise at the onset.
Now, keep in
mind that the link between rising unemployment and recession is
largely true by definition only. In other words, those charged with
defining what is and what isn't a recession put a huge weight on
rising unemployment. So of course it appears that weak labor markets
are what push an economy into recession.
This is sheer
fallacy, and a particularly dangerous one. Rising unemployment is
a symptom of a recession, not its cause. If the critical problem
of recession is unemployment, policy makers are tempted to address
this one area to the exclusion of everything else.
Already, Bush
administration spokesmen are talking about a "fiscal stimulus" to
counter this trend. But why isn't this laughable on its face? Perhaps
if Bush had been a famed penny pincher, you could see how a stimulus
would make some sense on the surface. But it is hard to imagine
a more fiscally profligate regime than the Bush administration.
We can confidently say that more spending is not the answer.
The view that
unemployment causes recession was one of the great errors of the
New Deal and the Great Depression. The government looted the private
sector and transferred it to visible jobs programs. It forced business
to maintain high wages precisely when the market was attempting
to equilibrate them downward. It increased the costs of hiring just
when the costs needed to be lower.
None of it
did any good; in fact, it delayed recovery for many years. Lionel
Robbins, in his classic book The
Great Depression, wrote this in 1934: "If it had not been
for the prevalence of the view that wage rates must at all costs
be maintained in order to maintain the purchasing power of the consumer,
the violence of the present depression and the magnitude of the
unemployment which has accompanied it would have been considerably
less…. A policy which holds wage rates rigid when the equilibrium
rate has altered, is a policy which creates unemployment."
Writing in
1931, in his book Causes
of the Economic Crisis, Ludwig von Mises explained that
there would be no involuntary unemployment in a free market. There
will always be some unemployment in a market in the same
way that there are houses that are empty and not selling and resources
that are not being used for production. This isn't due to market
failure but to individuals who have the freedom to lower their asking
price, provided they are permitted by policy to do so and businesses
are free to negotiate wages freely.
What, then,
is the solution to unemployment? "The determination of wage rates
must become free once again. The formation of wage rates should
be hampered neither by the clubs of striking pickets nor by government’s
apparatus of force. Only if the determination of wage rates is free,
will they be able to fulfill their function of bringing demand and
supply into balance on the labor market."
There is an
error even more fundamental than seeking an interventionist solution
to the problem of unemployment. It is the attempt to seek a solution
to the recession itself, as if it were the critical problem. Writing
all throughout the 1930s, both Mises and F.A. Hayek tried to explain
that the recession itself served a market purpose, in the same way
a correction to an inflated stock market serves a purpose. It re-coordinates
economic structures that have grown seriously out of balance.
In other words,
they urged that we look back before the recession, to the good old
days of economic boom, and realize the prosperity of the past was
a partial illusion. The recession is the way that the economy tells
the truth about the fundamentals. The illusion itself is caused
by errors in monetary policy. Interest rates are driven down by
the Fed, and this causes widespread errors in the investment sector.
These investments are unsustainable over the long term. The recession
is the time of cleansing out errors and reestablishing economic
soundness.
The housing
boom and bust is only a symptom of a wider problem. If the economy
has indeed fallen into recession, we can know with certainty that
recession is precisely what the economy needs the most. It is the
equivalent of the drunk who needs time on
the wagon.
The rap on
the Austrian School of the 1930s is that they counseled a do-nothing
policy on the depression. That is not true. There are many things
that government can do but they all amount to doing less, which
is a positive action of sorts. It must not attempt to prop up and
raise wages. It must stop taxing business so heavily and raising
the costs of investment. It must cut regulations that are hampering
recovery. It can cut spending dramatically as a way of returning
resources to the private sector where they can do some good.
What government
cannot do without causing even more problems is take positive action
against symptoms, such as falling stocks or housing prices, rising
unemployment, business failures, and falling incomes. This is precisely
what caused the Great Depression to get its name instead of being
called what it might have been called: the recession of 1929–1931.
January
10, 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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