The Myth of Good Government
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
One of the
great and most persistent errors of classical liberals is to believe
in "good government," a government that does "what it is supposed
to do."
There is nothing
the state can do, which society needs done, that cannot be done
far better by the market. Another point that is just as telling:
no state empowered to do what is supposedly necessary will restrain
itself to those things. It will expand as much as public opinion
will tolerate.
Sometimes the
point is easier to see when looking at foreign governments, such
as the tragic case of China. The government is embarking on an explosive
venture to dump $586 billion into "infrastructure" over two years.
The reason is the classic Keynesian excuse: the spending is needed
to stimulate investment. Never mind that this trick has never worked
in all of human history. This is instead a grand plan to loot the
private sector on behalf of the Communist Party, which will then
spend the money bolstering its power.
No country
knows more about the failures of this type of central planning than
China. Every form of collectivism has been tried out on these poor
souls, and tens of millions lost their lives in the course of Mao's
insane collectivist experiments. That this new plan is being enacted
in the name of Lord Keynes rather than Karl Marx is irrelevant.
The effects are the same: expand power and reduce liberty.
China's recovery
from communism is one of the most inspiring stories in the history
of economic development. The country went from being a suffering
and impoverished land of catastrophe to being modernized in just
15 years. The state shrunk in scope nearly by default as the private
sector grew and grew. This wasn't the plan. It was the de facto
result of the new tolerance of free economic activity. The state
went into protective mode to keep its power, and did nothing to
stop the swell of private enterprise. The result was glorious.
Keep in mind
this critical point. China's restoration as a civilized society
came about not due to some central plan, but by its absence. The
fact that the state did not intervene led to prosperity. Again,
it wasn't a policy or a constitution or a law that made the difference.
There was no switch from a communist-style government to a night-watchman
state. Because the state abandoned its posts under public opposition
and contempt, society could flourish.
But the state
never went away. It's just that its depredations have been spotty
and unpredictable. Had history taken a better course, the central
state would have melted away completely, and law would have devolved
to the most local levels. Sadly for the Chinese, the state persisted
in its old structure, even as the private sector grew and grew.
The state still had its hand in the large industries such as steel
and energy, and, of course, it controlled the banking sector.
The government
never became good (an impossibility). It was and is bad. It was
just less bad than in the past because it did less. But all states
lie in wait for a crisis. The earthquake in the southwest provided
one great excuse for intervention. But nothing except war compares
with an economic crisis as a great excuse for state expansion. Chinese
officials can count on support from Western "experts" here, and
the thoroughly disgusting US response to our own economic downturn
has provided an awful model for the world. Think of it: the Communist
Party in China is now citing the US as the main reason for its plot
to loot the private sector and bolster its own power at the expense
of the country.
So much for
being a beacon of liberty in a dark world! Instead, the US is helping
to shut out the lights and bolster decrepit despotisms. This is
surely one of the great ironies of the current political moment.
Instead of teaching the world about liberty, the US’s newly empowered
unitary executive is christening various forms of dictatorship.
There can be
no question that China's spending will not improve economic growth.
It will instead extract $586 billion from the private sector and
spend on political priorities. Never forget that no government has
wealth of its own to spend. It must come from taxation, monetary
inflation, or debt expansion that must be paid later. And government’s
spending choices will always be uneconomic relative to how society
would use that wealth. That is to say, it will be wasted.
But won't the
spending spur investment? It can create local boomlets, but they
will be temporary. To the extent that the new spending causes a
spending response from investors and consumers, this is more evidence
of an uneconomic use of scarce resources. If the money is used to
prop up failing companies, that's particularly bad since it is an
attempt to override market realities, an attempt that is about as
successful as trying to repeal gravity by throwing things up in
the air.
The nature
of the state – and the core of its rationale for existence – is
the conviction that it stands apart from and above society, to correct
the failings of the market and individuals. A presumption of superiority
is at the very claim of the state, whether it is minimal or totalitarian.
Who is to say when and where it should intervene? Well, think about
it. If the state is inherently wiser than and superior to society,
standing in judgment over what is working and what is not working,
the state alone is also in a position to decide when it should intervene.
No
government is liberal by nature, said Ludwig von Mises. This is
the great lesson that people who advocate "limited government" have
never learned. If you give the government any jobs to do, it will
presume the right to police its own conduct and then inevitably
abuse its power. That is true in China and it is true in the US.
It was the
science of economics that first discovered the radical incapacity
of the state to make any improvements in the social order. It turns
science on its head to invoke economics as a reason for the government
to loot and pillage in the name of "stimulating investment." Stimulation
here, there, and everywhere amounts to a diminution of freedom,
security of property, and prosperity.
Keynes famously
praised Nazi economic policies in the introduction to the German
edition of his worst book, the General Theory. After a century of
horrors, free men and women, in China, the US, and the world surely
deserve better.
November
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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