The
Dollar Crisis
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
No matter how
many warnings have been issued, an economic crisis always takes
a country by surprise. The most urgent task is to somehow prevent
policymakers from doing evil things to "correct" the crisis. Every
form of intervention can only make matters worse. The best policy
is to adopt a laissez-faire policy through regulatory cuts, sound
money, and eliminating legal restrictions on trade. The liquidation
must be allowed to happen on its own to provide a suitable foundation
for a future recovery.
How
can we help this happen? One way is to make sure that the right
books are front and center. We might start by reviewing the great
event that still inspires today's most fallacious countercyclical
policies: the Great Depression.
It turns out
that Ludwig von Mises was the great prophet of the event, with a
series of essays on the nature of the business cycle and the urgency
of sound money. After the Depression hit, he urged a free-market
policy for the world. These wonderful essays are collected in The
Causes of the Economic Crisis. It was a tragedy that it
took so long for them to appear in English. What they show is that
he, not Keynes, was the person who had it all figured out.
When I speak
of a laissez-faire policy, many people's first reaction is: that's
what Herbert Hoover did! But the truth is quite the opposite. Hoover
was actually the first New Dealer. He tried to reflate the economy
and attempted ill-fated jobs and spending programs. In fact, FDR's
presidential campaign of 1932 argued that Hoover was a big spender
who was driving up the debt and making matters worse through his
intervention!
Never
heard that before? Have a look at Murray Rothbard's America's
Great Depression, which remains the best overall account
of why the stock market crash happened and what Hoover did to make
everything worse. Murray shows that the depression was not a crisis
of capitalism but the result of a disastrously loose monetary policy
in the 1920s. A special treat of this book is how Rothbard takes
you through the theoretical underpinnings of the crisis, and shows
precisely how the central bank distorts the structure of production
and unbalances the relationship between consumption and investment.
Along
the same lines, we need to understand that the Great Depression
was hardly the first such crisis. In 1920 there was another, but
it was resolved rather quickly because the government stayed out
of the way. Moreover, banking panics occurred often in the 19th
century, and always because of the same factor: fractional-reserve
banking backed by a lender of last resort. Counterfeiting comes
to nothing but trouble. Rothbard reviews the whole of this history,
complete with an accounting of every crooked banker and every power-mad
politician, in A
History of Money and Banking in the United States.
How serious
do you want to get with your theoretical understanding? Do you find
yourself tripped up by inflationists throwing intellectual curveballs?
Maybe you should sit down with the great treatise on money and banking
in our time: Money,
Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles by Jesus Huerta de Soto.
Yes,
it is long. Yes, it has apparatus. But the scholarship is wholly
necessary for proving his radical thesis that fractional-reserve
banking constitutes an intervention in the market economy and is
the foundational reason for the business cycle. Through a close
examination of microeconomic law and economy, he finds a link to
macroeconomic effects. What we do in the micro-sphere echoes in
the macro-sphere.
De Soto goes
back to Roman law to show that bank deposits are rightly treated
like other forms of property subject to the usual standards of fraud.
He demonstrates how this standard was widely accepted until a change
in outlook in the high Middle Ages, when special interests prevailed
on legal regimes to have deposits treated as loans, with disastrous
effects. The debate on this subject has been around for many decades,
but no one has shed more light on this subject than De Soto. I fully
expect that this book will continue to be mandatory reading for
any banking scholar for decades ahead.
It
is the thesis of L. Albert Hahn, another forgotten anti-Keynesian,
that all excess money creates illusions of prosperity. He was once
an advocate of Keynesian-style economic management, but he saw the
error then wrote this fabulous and passionate attack on the whole
theoretical and political apparatus. Mises was a big advocate of
this book: The
Economics of Illusion.
It doesn't
say good things about our world where people in college read the
Keynesians, are taught that they were right about free markets,
but meanwhile truly great economists like Hahn are forgotten – forgotten
so much, in fact, that this book has been out of print for many
decades. The Mises Institute has made it available again. Isn't
it time we revise our sense of what ideas deserve study, and what
ideas deserve to truly drop down the memory hole?
Hahn was not
alone among the great economic thinkers of this age. The New
York Times employed one as its top editorialist: Henry Hazlitt.
He warned constantly about the dangers of the dollar creation. His
first great book against the Marshall Plan foreign aid was Will
Dollars Save the World?
Then
he turned his fire on the Bretton Woods agreement, and he was shot
down for it – forced out. But who was right? The agreement broke
down because it didn't allow dollar convertibility for American
citizens.
Here you can
read his analysis of not only Bretton Woods but the whole inflation
issue: What
You Should Know about Inflation. Here he lays out the entire
issue: what is money, what it does, what government does to money,
how the economy responds, what it means for your life, and what
to do about it. Hazlitt of course advocated the gold standard.
Since Ron Paul
has raised the issue of the gold standard, and is being treated
like some kind of visitor from Mars for having mentioned the subject
at all, we need to know more about the true American heritage of
the gold standard. This is why I'm personally very fired up that
the Mises Institute has brought back William Gouge's Short
History of Money and Banking which I first read while working
for Ron in his congressional office.
Gouge
lived from 1796 through 1863 and was involved in all the great debates
on banking in the 19th century. His book is a major attack
on all inflationary finance, and reading him underscores just how
universal are the lessons on money and banking – universal in the
sense that they apply in all times and all places.
Back in the
19th century, there were many people who wanted inflation:
bankers, debtors, and the government. What a surprise! Who has an
interest in sound money? Consumers, savers, and liberty-loving citizens.
This is the essential conflict. Are we going to have a monetary
regime rooted in robbery, or one rooted in honesty? Gouge was on
the side of honesty, and he inspires us today.
Coming
a few decades later, but along the same lines, is Charles Holt Carroll's
Organization
of Debt Into Currency. This is one of those books that develops
a hard-core cadre of fans. When we started reprinting these great
American economic classics, people began to ask us: what about Carroll?
Well, here it is, and once you get into the book, you realize why
Rothbard and George Reisman and so many others swear by it. He patiently
explains the difference between money and debt and how the government
goes about sowing confusion about what is what.
Now, Ron Paul
stands in this tradition of thinkers in every way. Even on the campaign
stump, he speaks about the evil of fiat money and Fed management
of the nation's money stock. In a true sense, he says, we've put
a cartelized gang of central planners in charge of the good that
constitutes half of every economic exchange, and we are paying the
price in terms of declining purchasing power, exchange-rate chaos,
rampant debt, and growing crises in sector after sector.
Is there a
way out? Most certainly! It goes by the name of gold. Make the dollar
as good as gold and you eliminate the inflation problem and the
business cycles that go along with it. Here is the great secret
of the gold standard. The problem is not that it is unviable from
the perspective of economics. The problem is that there are many
people allied against it: the big banks, the creditor class, and
government. You see, gold would provide a hard-core anchor for liberty.
Under the right form of the gold standard, government could no longer
spend with impunity or run up debt without limit. The resources
it spent would have to be raised the old-fashioned way.
It behooves
every American to read Ron's book, really his manifesto on the topic.
It is called The
Case for Gold. He covers 19th century monetary
history and discusses several plans for instituting a gold standard.
Note that I didn't say "going back" to a gold standard, because
if you look at past gold standards, there was always a flaw in the
form of government intervention.
There was the crazy system called bimetallism. There was the lack
of domestic convertibility after the New Deal. There were the guarantees
in the form of central bank backing. There were special privileges
in the law. The gold standard that Ron favors is not complicated:
it is the one that would emerge in a world of freedom, a free-market
money.
If his large
book seems like too much, have a look at this primer: Gold,
Peace, and Prosperity. You can read it in an hour. It explains
why you should care about these issues, and why the government doesn't
want you to care about them.
I never expected
that in my lifetime, the money issue would again become central
to politics, but Ron inspired by Mises and Rothbard has done it.
And why not? The topic was huge in the 19th century,
when people understood the dangers of putting the government in
charge of everything. Now we take the socialization of money and
credit for granted. It is time we rethink all this. The restoration
of sound money would be the greatest single stroke for liberty taken
in 100 years.
November
9, 2007
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
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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