The
Many Collapses of Keynesianism
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: Day
of Reckoning
It should be
obvious to everyone but the most dedicated adherent of Keynesianism
that the stimulus did not accomplish its end. The combination of
outright spending by Congress, the desperate schemes to reflate
the housing market, the attempt to transfuse bleeding firms with
other people’s money, and the creation of trillions in artificial
money, has not done a thing to lift the US economy.
Actually, the
reverse has been true. All these efforts have prevented the adjustment
of economic forces to the post-boom world. And all the resources
that the stimulus consumed were extracted from the private sector,
for we must always remember that government has no resources of
its own. Everything it does must come from the hides of private
producers and the citizenry in general, in the future if not immediately.
It’s tedious
that we had to learn this lesson yet again, for it was only 38 years
ago that we experienced yet another collapse of the Keynesian paradigm.
The color of the theory was a bit different in those days. The fine-tuning
operations of the government were supposed to operate according
to a fixed model in which there was a tradeoff between inflation
and recessionary unemployment. If unemployment got too high due
to slow economic growth, their solution was said to be simple: reflate
and deal with the costs. If unemployment then became too low in
recovery leading to an "overheating," as the parlance
of the time put it, the answer was to deflate.
The point of
this simple trade-off was to boil down the opaque notions of Lord
Keynes to their central-planning essence, and to avoid the endless
legislative tangles that plagued the New Deal years. The Keynesians
had claimed that FDR’s experiment in countercyclical policy was
not well planned and not scientifically administered, which is why
it didn’t go as planned. Thanks to the postwar clarity of the new,
simple model, Keynesians would get it right this time.
They certainly
got their way in terms of policy. In 1971, Richard Nixon had abolished
the last vestiges of the gold standard, finally untying the dollar
from any relationship to physical gold and setting it loose to float
like a kite on a string or maybe without the string. It was supposed
to be the Keynesian ideal. No more fetters. No more of the barbarous
relic. No more limitations on what the scientific planners in government
could or could not do. Now they could act to bring about the socially
optimal combination of inflation and unemployment. Nirvana!
Now keep in
mind, here, that this was a testable proposition. If there was a
trade-off at work here that the government could manage, what we
would not see would be, for example, unemployment increasing at
the same time as inflation. Mostly we had not seen this in the past,
it is true. During the Great Depression, prices kept falling (and
thank goodness for that, for this was the only saving grace of the
entire period). There was a slight uptick of inflation in the mid-1950s
but it wasn’t enough to set off alarm bells.
Then came 1973-1974.
Unemployment was high and rising from 4 to 6 percent from the recession
lows and, yes, that was considered high in those days. At
the very same time, inflation rocketed upward into the double digits.
Thus was born the inflationary recession. This was an animal that
was not supposed to exist, according to the model as understood
at the time.
Writing in
an essay now featured in his giant collection Economic
Controversies, Murray Rothbard explained:
This curious
phenomenon of a vaunting inflation occurring at the same time
as a steep recession was simply not supposed to happen in the
Keynesian view of the world. Economists had always known that
either the economy is in a boom period, in which case prices are
rising, or else the economy is in a recession or depression marked
by high unemployment, in which case prices are falling. In the
boom, the Keynesian government was supposed to "sop up excess
purchasing power" by increasing taxes, according to the Keynesian
prescription – that is, it was supposed to take spending out of
the economy; in the recession, on the other hand, the government
was supposed to increase its spending and its deficits, in order
to pump spending into the economy. But if the economy should be
in an inflation and a recession with heavy unemployment at the
same time, what in the world was government supposed to do? How
could it step on the economic accelerator and brake at the same
time?
The
answer, of course, was that government and its policymakers could
do no such thing. This was when panic set in, and every cockamamie
theory known to man was employed to reduce unemployment and inflation
at once. But there was a problem. The policy makers are always and
everywhere loath to admit fault for anything. Surely it is not monetary
policy that is to blame, they said. Instead, it was the greed of
businessmen, the voraciousness of the consumer class, the panic
of the general population anything and everything was at
fault except the government itself.
So
while the Keynesian paradigm had obviously failed, who in government
was willing to take responsibility for this failure? No one. Therefore
matters only became worse, and the inflationary recession became
a way of life for Americans, all the way to the outrages of the
late 1970s that finally swept Ronald Reagan into office.
Reagan campaigned
on an anti-Keynesian platform. He even talked about re-instituting
a gold standard. He said he would cut taxes and let the economy
work. Those promises amounted to nothing, but there did seem to
be some consciousness at the time that government was not capable
of forever leaning against the market winds. The real credit, of
course, goes to Carter-appointee Paul Volcker. As head of the Fed,
he engineered an actual reduction in the money supply, and broke
the back of the crisis. Think of him as the anti-Greenspan or the
anti-Bernanke.
Greenspanism-Bernankeism
reigns today, and that is the true tragedy of our times. The Fed,
the Treasury, the president, the regulators, and the Congress have
done everything possible to reflate, stimulate, stabilize, and counter
market forces. As expected, they have lost the battle. Unemployment
is still outrageously high, and inflation is working its way up
yet again. But there is an even more serious problem. In the course
of stimulating the economy, the Fed has created incredible amounts
of fake money that it has stuffed in the vaults of its best friends
in the banking industry. And those phony reserves seem now to be
leaking out to cause horrific waves of price inflation.
Those
who blame Obama for this might consider whether any Republican but
Ron Paul would not have done exactly the same thing. The Obama prescription
for economic recovery was actually started under George Bush
in exactly the same way that Hoover was the first New Dealer. The
problem is the man in the White House, to be sure, but he is not
the only problem. The core issue is that 1) we have a monetary and
banking system that is socialistic and therefore used by the power
elite to enrich themselves at our expense, and 2) the policy elite
clings to the Keynesian pretense that government is capable of waging
a war against market forces. That, and the fact that Keynesianism
empowers the elite, is why this pathetic and dangerous history keeps
repeating itself.
In the market
economy, there is a long-run tendency for errors to be corrected
and replaced by different practices that uplift the people. In government,
there is a long-run tendency to keep trying the same thing again
and again, no matter how often or how badly it fails. Keynesianism
is, after all, as Joseph Salerno points out, the "economics
of state power." And that guides us to the foundational problem:
the monopoly entity that rules and devastates society for its own
benefit.
August
27, 2011
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail], former editorial assistant to Ludwig von Mises and congressional
chief of staff to Ron Paul, is founder and chairman of the Mises
Institute, executor for the estate of Murray N. Rothbard, and
editor of LewRockwell.com.
See his
books.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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