Obama
and the Economy
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: Government
Creates Human Suffering
Travel with
me back to yesterday, the early days of the Reagan administration,
when taxes were being cut and spending increases were being curbed
(the actual cuts were few), and when journalists were losing their
heads about the supposedly catastrophic state of the economy.
The prevailing
ethos in those days in the White House was somewhat sensible. The
idea was that the recession had to be permitted to run its course.
The late 1970s inflation coupled with recession had wrought dollar
depreciation plus high unemployment and high interest rates. These
were part of the adjustment process. No one doubted it.
Now, there
was a time, only a few years earlier, when the Keynesian orthodoxy
claimed the power to control the economy the way we control our
cars. One could adjust the inflation up to drive unemployment down,
and adjust the inflation down and pay the price in higher unemployment.
It was a trade off, and the wise economists would decide what was
socially optimal.
One can only
marvel at the naïveté, but it all came crashing down with the advent
of the simultaneous appearance of both inflation and unemployment,
and Keynesian confidence was shaken to its core. The better members
of the Reagan team were more realistic. They believed that the goal
of government policy was to create the conditions for economic growth,
and if that meant letting bad policies wash themselves away during
the transition, so be it.
The journalistic
establishment at the time hated them and their free-enterprise ideas.
So, of course, all bad news was treated as not only worse than it
really was, it was also blamed on the Reagan administration, as
if it had the control over events that Keynesians imputed to government.
So, if times were bad, who were to blame but the people in control?
Every day the
headlines blasted away, as if the media establishment were trying
to whip the public up into a hysterical frenzy against tax cuts.
People were encouraged to blame That Man in the White House for
all existing evil, and the nightly newscasts were filled with furrow-browed
anchors doing stories on the poor suffering masses and their desperate
plight. Their political agenda was aggressively on display, brazen
beyond belief.
And then something
amazing happened. The economy began to recover. Unemployment fell,
inflation crashed, interest rates came down, and growth returned.
The criticism later changed: the Reagan administration was accused
of being too pro-growth and unleashing greed and "cowboy capitalism."
But it fell on deaf ears, and Reagan won a landslide reelection
in 1984.
Now, I'm not
saying that Reagan was laissez-faire or that the economic recovery
didn't owe something to a newly fashioned form of military Keynesianism.
Rather, my focus here is on the spin: the press hated him, and exaggerated
the failings of the economic structure in order to destroy policies
it hated.
The contrast
with the Obama administration can't be more stark. No one in these
ranks said that malinvestments have to be washed out of the system
and bankruptcies and unemployment must be tolerated for a time in
order to get back on a growth. Nay, nay, they pulled out the old
bag of tricks and claim that they only needed to loot the public
of hundreds of billions and spend it on building up government,
and then, wow, like magic, the entire economy would come back to
life.
But it hasn't.
The stock markets survive, but that's no indication. Stock markets
are never better performing than during a hyperinflation. Interest
rates are rock bottom, but only through artificial means. Gross
Private Domestic Investment is still falling off a cliff, having
already completely erased ten years of investment from the record
of history. Here is a fundamental factor that suggests that terrible
things are still to come our way. And I guess I'll have to put this
in italics because the point seems to be lost in the shuffle: unemployment
is still rising, even soaring straight to double digits!
The sociology
of this intrigues me to no end. Unemployment is one of the human
elements that journalists are supposed to glom onto. Oh, look at
poor Bob and Jane and how they lost their jobs and have nowhere
to go, etc., etc. Talk about human interest! Where are the weepy
stories about the plight of people wandering around with no work?
Instead, we get happy clappy stories about how things are not nearly
as bad as they might be had the great and powerful Obama of Oz not
appeared to save the day. There is also the remarkable spin that
things are getting worse, yes, but at a slower pace than before
an observation that might be most commonly heard in Hell.
Obama himself
has other lines.
"In the last
few months, the economy has done measurably better than expected."
Well, that
depends on your expectations, doesn't it? It is irrefutable. But
the press is glad to be the echo chamber. "Figures released last
week showed that the economy contracted more slowly in the second
quarter than many economists had expected."
And then there
are the benchmarks, and that might be the scariest part of all.
The Obama administration is convinced that we can have no real and
lasting recovery until homes go up in price. A top adviser said:
"until we see a robust recovery in housing markets, housing prices,
in jobs and family income, we’re not anywhere near out of the woods."
This
is precisely the same inanity that afflicted the Hoover and Roosevelt
administrations. They saw falling prices as the problem to be remedied
rather than the saving grace of an otherwise abysmal economic environment.
So they kept trying to stamp out good things thinking that they
were bad things, effectively burning the crops instead of killing
the rats that were poisoning the wheat following harvest.
We can fully
expect the mainline press not to understand economics. I can deal
with that. But not even to draw attention to the awful reality of
the current economic situation, simply because many members of the
mainstream press are sympathetic to the idea that the government
should be stealing ever more money from us for the state? Here is
where ideology leads to blindness, which leads to the worst form
of propaganda.
I suspect that
they will no more get away with this now than they did in the 1980s.
Books
by Lew Rockwell
August
6, 2009
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and chairman of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author, most recently, of The
Left, The Right, and The State.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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