Now It’s Jobs
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
The downturn
is following a path so predictable, day by day, that people who
comprehend the business cycle don’t even need to read the news.
You can intuit what will happen next because it’s happening like
a textbook case – even as it is reported with a continued sense
of surprise.
Press reporting
on the downturn has been like reports from a committee that knows
nothing about gravity, but which has nonetheless been assigned to
watch what happens when you drop objects from high places.
They keep filing
surprised reports about how the objects fall – what a bizarre and
unwelcome turn of events – and then they conjure up ways to keep
this from happening through some outside intervention. They recommend
bailouts, spending, programs, controls, and inflation.
You just want
to get their attention and explain: what you are observing is part
of the structure of reality itself, and there is nothing you can
do to stop it. You can cover your eyes, put up fancy mirrors, turn
somersaults, speculate and talk and decry all you want. But in the
end, the downturn is a necessary and inevitable response to the
previous boom. It must be allowed to continue on its course.
Most recently,
for example, we have seen an uptick in the unemployment rate, now
at 6.7% according to official statistics. Here we have the human
face of recession. It is also the inevitable response to the boom.
The people over-employed in bubbled-up industries are led from failing
sectors into viable ones – with a serious transition cost. Wages
adjust downward and people move from uneconomic undertakings to
more economically viable ones.
What is enough
to make a person crazy is how all this is reported as something
correctable, as if they all constituted marching orders for Washington.
A bank is failing? Someone had better bail it out! Home prices are
falling? Spend trillions to boost them. People are losing jobs?
Make work for them or subsidize their unemployment to make it last
longer.
On unemployment
in particular, this is the issue that led to many calamities in
the 20th century. The problem itself is largely artificial
in the sense that it has been created by the boom-bust cycle, which
itself is a consequence of the central bank’s loose money policy.
In every society with sound money, there is no problem with unemployment.
This is because, as Mises wrote, in a free market, all unemployment
is purely voluntary.
What do we
mean by this? It is a feature of the world itself. We live in a
world of scarcity so there is always and everywhere work to do.
Economically useful work pays a return of wages and salaries, which
act as compensation for the opportunity costs of work over leisure
and reflect the value of the work to overall output. Because there
is always work to do at some price, unemployment is not a feature
of the market economy, and this is one reason we only begin to note
the existence of long periods of unemployment in the 20th
century. The attempt to "cure" the problem has only reinforced
it.
But in economies
with business cycles, it is not only capital that is misdirected
toward sectors where it doesn’t belong. Labor chases bubbles created
by subsidized credit. When those bubbles pop, the jobs are eliminated.
There are ripple effects too that flow from sector to sector. A
widespread shifting takes places.
There is no
reason to assume that labor is less able than capital to shift from
one production line to another. But when there are labor unions,
minimum wage floors, mandated benefits, and other interventions,
these shifts can take longer than they should, and that’s when we
begin to see high unemployment that lasts and lasts.
The surest
way to guarantee that the problem grows worse is to attempt to fix
it by means of unemployment insurance, government spending, jobs
programs, and the like. All of these interventions delay the necessary
adjustment and prolong the crisis.
Vedder
and Gallaway devoted many years of study to questions of unemployment
in the 20th century, and ended up proving with a mass
of historical detail that the entire problem is due to the attempt
to fix the problem. Their results are reported in their book Out
of Work – a work which should have put an end to labor-based
interventions forever.
Sadly, the
political class cares nothing about facts and logic, so they barrel
ahead with the cheers of the media to repeat all the mistakes of
the past. The bottom line is that these people can create all the
unemployment they want so long as they continue to try to "do
something" about it. The public goes along because the entire
subject is among the most alarming and scary of all economic concerns.
Surely there is something that the political class can do!
If we are really
sincere about not wanting to repeat the 1930s, the political classes
should do nothing but cut taxes and free the labor market, but otherwise
do nothing to "help" the problem. Just as objects fall
when you drop them, so markets must adjust during recessions.
December
9, 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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