Spotlight
on Keynesian Economics
by
Murray
N. Rothbard
by Murray N. Rothbard
DIGG THIS
This report,
written in 1947, is published here
for the first time.
Its
Significance
Fifty years
ago, an exuberant American people knew little and cared less about
economics. They understood, however, the virtues of economic freedom,
and this understanding was shared by the economists, who supplemented
common sense with sharper tools of analysis.
At present,
economics seems to be the number one American and world problem.
The newspapers are filled with complex discussions of the budget,
wages and prices, foreign loans, and production. Present-day economists
greatly add to the confusion of the public. The eminent Professor
X says that his plan is the only cure for world economic evils;
the equally eminent Professor Y claims that this is nonsense
so whirls the merry-go-round.
However, one
school of thought the Keynesian has succeeded in capturing
the great majority of economists. Keynesian economics proudly
proclaiming itself as "modern," though with its roots deep in medieval
and mercantilist thought offers itself to the world as the
panacea for our economic troubles. Keynesians claim, with supreme
confidence, that they have "discovered" what determines the volume
of employment at any given time. They assert that unemployment can
be readily cured through governmental deficit spending, and that
inflation can be checked by means of government tax surpluses.
With great
intellectual arrogance, Keynesians brush aside all opposition as
being "reactionary," "old-fashioned," etc. They are extremely boastful
of having gained the allegiance of all the young economists
a claim that has, unfortunately, a good deal of truth. Keynesian
thinking has flourished in the New Deal, in the statements of President
Truman, his Council of Economic Advisers, Henry Wallace, labor unions,
most of the press, all foreign governments and United Nations committees,
and, to a surprising extent, among "enlightened businessmen" of
the Committee for Economic Development variety.
Against this
onslaught, many sincere liberal-minded citizens have been swayed
by the Keynesians particularly by their argument that the
wide governmental intervention they advocate will "solve the problem
of unemployment." The most dismaying aspect of the situation is
that the Keynesian arguments have not been countered effectively
by the liberal economists, who have generally been helpless in the
tidal wave. Liberal economists have confined their attacks to the
political program of the Keynesians they have not dealt adequately
with the economic theory on which this program is based. As a result,
the Keynesians' claim that their program will insure full employment
has largely gone unchallenged.
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John
Maynard Keynes
(1883–1946)
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The reason
for this weakness on the part of liberal economists is understandable.
They were brought up on "neoclassical economics," which is grounded
on careful analysis of economic realities and based on the actions
of individual units in the economic system. The Keynesian theory
is based on a model of the economic system a model
that drastically oversimplifies reality and yet is extremely complex
because of its abstract and mathematical nature. For this reason,
liberal economists found themselves confused and bewildered by this
"new" economics. Since Keynesians were the only economists equipped
to discuss their system, they were easily able to convince the younger
economists and students of its superiority.
To launch a
successful counterattack against the Keynesian invasion, therefore,
requires more than righteous indignation toward the proposals for
government action in the Keynesian program. It requires a well-informed
citizenry who thoroughly understand the Keynesian theory itself,
with its numerous fallacies, unrealistic assumptions, and faulty
concepts. For this reason it will be necessary to tread a difficult
path through a complex maze of technical jargon in order to examine
the Keynesian model in some detail.
Another difficulty
in the task of examining Keynesianism is the sharp difference of
opinion between various branches of the movement. All shades of
Keynesians, however, agree in sharing a common attitude towards
the function of the State, and all accept the Keynesian model as
a basis for analyzing the economic situation.
All Keynesians
conceive of the State as a great potential reservoir of benefits,
ready to be tapped. The prime concern for the Keynesian is to decide
on economic policy what should be the economic ends of the
State and what means should the State adopt to achieve them? The
State is, of course, always synonymous with "we": What should "we"
do to insure full employment? is a favorite query. (Whether the
"we" refers to the "people" or to the Keynesians themselves is never
quite made clear.)
In medieval
and early modern times, the ancestors of the Keynesians who advocated
similar policies also proclaimed that the State could do no wrong.
At that time, the king and his nobles were the rulers of the State.
Now we have the dubious privilege of periodically choosing our rulers
from two sets of power-thirsty aspirants. That makes it a "democracy."[1]
So, the rulers of the State, being "democratically elected" and
therefore representing the "people," are allegedly entitled to control
the economic system and coerce, cajole, "influence," and redistribute
the wealth of their reluctant subjects.
A recent important
illustration of Keynesian political thinking was the Truman message
vetoing income tax reduction. The main reason for the veto was that
high taxes are necessary to "check inflation," since a "boom" period
calls for a budget surplus to "drain off excess purchasing power."
Superficially,
this argument seems convincing, and it is supported by almost all
economists, including many non-Keynesian conservatives. They are
all very proud of the fact that they are opposing the "politically
easy" route of reducing taxes in the interests of scientific truth,
national welfare, and the "fight against inflation."
It is necessary,
however, to analyze the problem more closely. What is the essence
of inflation? It consists of rising prices some prices rising
more rapidly than others.[2]
What is a price? It is a sum of money (general purchasing
power) paid voluntarily by one individual to another in
exchange for a definite service rendered by the
second individual to the first. This service may be in the form
of a tangible commodity or an intangible benefit.
On the other
hand, what is a tax? A tax is the coercive expropriation
of the property of an individual by the rulers of the State. The
rulers use this property for whatever purposes they desire
usually the rulers will distribute it in such a manner as to insure
their continuance in office, i.e., by subsidizing favored groups.
In addition, the rulers decide which individuals will pay the taxes
the decision consisting of expropriating the property of
groups disliked by the rulers.
A price,
therefore, is a free act of voluntary exchange between two individuals,
both of whom benefit by the exchange (else the exchange would not
be made!). A tax is a compulsory act of expropriation,
with no benefit accruing to the individual (unless he happens to
be on the receiving end of property expropriated by the State from
someone else).
In the light
of this distinction, advocating high taxes to prevent high prices
is similar to a highway robber assuring the victim that his robbery
is checking inflation, since the robber doesn't intend on spending
the money for quite some time or that the robber might use it to
repay his own debts. When will the American people wake up to the
realization that robbery only benefits the robber, and that the
edict "thou shalt not steal" applies to rulers (and Keynesians)
as well as to anybody else?
The
Model Explained
The Keynesian
theory (or model) highly oversimplifies the real world by dealing
with a few large aggregates, lumping together the activity
of all individuals in a nation.
The basic concept
used is aggregate national income, which is defined as
equal to the money value of the national output of goods and services
during a given time period. It is also equal to the aggregate of
income received by individuals during the period (including undistributed
corporate profits).
Now, the fundamental
equation of the Keynesian system is aggregate income = aggregate
expenditures. The only way any individual can receive any money
income is for some other individual to spend an equal sum.
Conversely, every act of expenditure by an individual results in
an equivalent money income for someone else. This is obviously,
and always, true. Mr. Smith spends one dollar in Mr. Jones's grocery
this act results in one dollar of income for Mr. Jones. Mr.
Smith receives his annual income as a result of an act of expenditure
by the XYZ Company; the XYZ Company receives its annual income as
a result of expenditures made by all its customers, etc. In every
case, expenditures, and only expenditures, can create money income.
Aggregate
expenditures are classified into two basic types: (1) final
expenditure for goods and services that have been produced during
the period equals consumption, and (2) expenditure on the
means of production of these goods equals investment. Thus,
money income is created by decisions to spend, consisting of consumption
decisions and investment decisions.
Now, an individual,
upon receiving his income, divides it between consumption and saving.
Saving, in the Keynesian system, is defined simply as not spending
on consumption. A fundamental Keynesian tenet is that, for any particular
level of aggregate income, there is a certain definite, predictable
amount that will be consumed and a definite amount that will be
saved. This relationship between aggregate income and consumption
is considered to be stable, fixed by the habits of consumers.
In the mathematical Keynesian jargon, aggregate consumption (and
therefore aggregate savings) is a stable, passive function of income
(the famous consumption function). For example, we shall
use the consumption function: consumption = 90 percent of income.
(This is a highly simplified function, but it serves to illustrate
the basic principles of the Keynesian model.) In this case, the
savings function would be savings = 10 percent of income.
Consumption
expenditures are, therefore, passively determined by the
level of national income. Investment expenditures, however, are,
according to the Keynesians, effected independently of
the national income. At this stage, what determines investment is
not important the crucial point is that it is determined
independently of the income level.
We have left
out two factors that also determine the level of expenditures. If
exports are greater than imports, the total amount of expenditures
in a country is increased, hence national income increases. Also,
a government budget deficit increases aggregate expenditures and
income (provided that other types of expenditure can be assumed
to be constant). Setting aside the foreign trade problem, it is
obvious that government deficits or surpluses are, like investment,
decided independently of the level of national income.
Thus, income
= independent expenditures (private investment + government
deficit) + passive consumption expenditures. Using our
illustrative consumption function, income = independent expenditures
+ 90 percent of income. Now, by simple arithmetic, income equals
ten times independent expenditures. For every increase in independent
expenditures, there will be a ten-fold increase in income. Similarly,
a decrease in independent expenditures will lead to a ten-fold drop
in income. This "multiplier" effect on income will be achieved by
any type of independent expenditure whether private investment
or government deficit. Thus, in the Keynesian model, government
deficits and private investment have the same economic effect.
Let us now
examine in detail the process whereby an equilibrium income
is determined in the Keynesian model. The equilibrium level is the
level at which national income tends to settle.
Let us assume
that aggregate income = 100, consumption = 90, savings = 10, and
investment = 10. Also assume that there is no government deficit
or surplus. For the Keynesians, this situation is a position of
equilibrium income tends to remain at 100. A position of
equilibrium is reached because both main groups in the economy
business firms and consumers are satisfied. Business firms,
in the aggregate, pay out 100. Of this 100, 10 is invested
in capital and 90 is paid out while producing consumers' goods.
Aggregate business firms expect this 90 to be returned to them through
the sale of consumers' goods. The consumers fulfill the expectations
of business firms by dividing the income of 100 into consuming 90
and saving 10. Thus, aggregate business firms are just satisfied
with the situation, and aggregate consumers are satisfied because
they are consuming 90 percent of their income and saving 10 percent.
Now, let independent
expenditures increase to 20, either because of an increase in private
investment or because of a government deficit. Now, income payments
to consumers is 90 + 20 = 110. Consumers, receiving 110, will wish
to consume 90 percent of it, or 99, and save 11. Now, business firms,
who had expected a consumption of 90, are pleasantly surprised to
see consumers bidding up prices and reducing merchants' stocks in
an effort to consume 99. As a result, business firms expand their
output of consumer goods to 99 and pay out 99 + 20 = 119, expecting
a return of 99 in consumption sales. But again they are pleasantly
surprised, since consumers will wish to spend 90 percent of 119,
or 107. This process of expansion continues until income is again
equal to ten times investment when consumption is again equal
to 90 percent of income. The point will be reached when income =
200, investment = 20, consumption = 180, and saving = 20.
It is important
to notice that equilibrium was reached in both cases when aggregate
investment = aggregate saving. The above equilibrium
process can be described in terms of saving and investment: When
investment is greater than saving, the economy expands and national
income rises until aggregate saving equals aggregate investment.
Similarly, the economy contracts if investment is less than saving,
until they are again equal.
Note that two
very important things must remain constant in order that equilibrium
be reached. The consumption function (and therefore the savings
function) is assumed to be constant throughout while the level of
investment is constant at least until equilibrium is reached. The
question now arises: what is so important about aggregate money
income that it should be the continual focus of attention? Before
this question can be answered, it is necessary to make certain assumptions.
Assume that
the following things be considered as given (or constant):
the existing state of all techniques, the existing efficiency,
quantity, and distribution of all labor, the existing quantity and
quality of all equipment, the existing distribution of national
income, the existing structure of relative prices, the existing
money wage rates (!), and the existing structure of consumer tastes,
natural resources, and economic and political institutions.
Then, given
these assumptions, for every level of national money income, there
corresponds a unique, definite volume of employment. The higher
the national income, the greater will be the volume of employment,
until a state of "full employment" is reached. (We can define full
employment as simply a very low level of unemployment.) After the
full-employment level is reached, a higher money income will represent
only a rise in prices, with no rise in physical output (real income)
and employment.
Summing up
the above model, known as the Keynesian theory of underemployment
equilibrium: To each level of national income there corresponds
a unique level of employment. There is, therefore, a certain level
of income to which corresponds a state of full employment, without
a great rise in prices. An income below this "full-employment" income
will signify large-scale unemployment; an income above will mean
large price inflation.
The level of
income, in a private enterprise system, is determined by the level
of independent investment expenditures and consumption expenditures
that are a passive function of the income level. The resulting level
of income will tend to settle at the point where aggregate investment
equals aggregate saving.
Now (and here
is the grand Keynesian climax), there is no reason whatsoever to
assume that this equilibrium level of income determined in the free
market will coincide with the "full-employment" income level
it may be more or less.
This is the
model of the private economy accepted by all Keynesians. The State,
assert the Keynesians, has the responsibility of keeping the economic
system at the "full-employment" income level, since "we" cannot
depend on the private economy to do so.
The Keynesian
model furnishes the means by which the State can fulfill this task.
Since government deficits have the same effects on income as does
private investment, all that the State must do is to estimate the
expected equilibrium income level of the private economy. If it
is below the "full-employment" level, the State can engage in deficit
spending until the desired income level is reached. Similarly, if
it is above the desired level, the State can engage in budget surpluses
through high taxes. The State, if it so desires, can also stimulate
or discourage private investment or consumption via taxes and subsidies,
or impose tariffs if it desires to create an export surplus. The
favorite Keynesian prescription for stimulating consumption is progressive
income taxation, since the "rich" do most of the saving. The favorite
method of "encouraging private investment" is to subsidize "progressive"
and "enlightened" industrialists as against "Tory big business."
The
Model Criticized
We remember
that for the Keynesian model to be valid, the two basic determinants
of income, namely, the consumption function and independent investment,
must remain constant long enough for the equilibrium of income to
be reached and maintained. At the very least, it must be possible
for these two variables to remain constant, even if they are not
generally constant in actuality. The core of the basic fallacy of
the Keynesian system is, however, that it is impossible for these
variables to remain constant for the required length of time.
We recall that
when income = 100, consumption = 90, savings = 10, and investment
= 10, the system is supposed to be in equilibrium, because the aggregate
expectations of business firms and the public are fulfilled. In
the aggregate, both groups are just satisfied with the situation,
so that there is allegedly no tendency for the income level to change.
But aggregates are meaningful only in the world of arithmetic,
not in the real world. Business firms may receive in the aggregate
just what they had expected; but this does not mean that any single
firm is necessarily in an equilibrium position. Business firms do
not make earnings in the aggregate. Some firms may be making windfall
profits, while others may be making unexpected losses. Regardless
of the fact that, in the aggregate, these profits and losses may
cancel each other, and each firm will have to make its own adjustments
to its own particular experience. This adjustment will vary widely
from firm to firm and industry to industry. In this situation, the
level of investment cannot remain at 10, and the consumption function
will not remain fixed, so that the level of income must change.
Nothing in the Keynesian system, however, can tell us how far
or in what direction any of these variables will move.
Similarly,
in the Keynesian theory of the adjustment process toward the level
of equilibrium, if aggregate investment is greater than aggregate
saving, the economy is supposed to expand toward the level of income
where aggregate saving equals aggregate investment. In the very
process of expansion, however, the consumption (and savings) function
cannot remain constant. Windfall profits will be distributed
unevenly (and in an unknown fashion) among the numerous business
firms, thus leading to varying types of adjustments. These adjustments
may lead to an unknown increase in the volume of investment. Also,
under the impetus of expansion, new firms will enter the economic
system, thus changing the level of investment.
In addition,
as income expands, the distribution of income among individuals
in the economic system necessarily changes. It is an important fact,
usually overlooked, that the Keynesian assumption of a rigid consumption
function assumes a given distribution of income. Therefore,
the change in the distribution of income will cause change of unknown
direction and magnitude in the consumption function. Furthermore,
the undoubted emergence of capital gains will change the consumption
function.
Thus, since
the basic Keynesian determinants of income the consumption
function and the level of investment cannot remain constant,
they cannot determine any equilibrium level of income, even approximately.
There is no point toward which income will move or at which it will
tend to remain. All we can say is that there will be a complex movement
in the variables of an unknown direction and degree.
This failure
of the Keynesian model is a direct result of misleading aggregative
concepts. Consumption is not just a function of income; it depends,
in a complex fashion, on the level of past income, expected future
income, the phase of the business cycle, the length of the time
period under discussion, on prices of commodities, on capital gains
or losses, and on the cash balances of consumers.
Furthermore,
the breakdown of the economic system into a few aggregates assumes
that these aggregates are independent of each other, that they are
determined independently and can change independently. This overlooks
the great amount of interdependence and interaction among the aggregates.
Thus, saving is not independent of investment; most of it, particularly
business saving, is made in anticipation of future investment. Therefore,
a change in the prospects for profitable investment will have a
great influence on the savings function, and hence on the consumption
function. Similarly, investment is influenced by the level of income,
by the expected course of future income, by anticipated consumption,
and by the flow of savings. For example, a fall in savings will
mean a cut in the funds available for investment, thus restricting
investment.
A further illustration
of the fallacy of aggregates is the Keynesian assumption that the
State can simply add or subtract its expenditures from that of the
private economy. This assumes that private investment decisions
remain constant, unaffected by government deficits or surpluses.
There is no basis whatsoever for this assumption. In addition, progressive
income taxation, which is designed to encourage consumption, is
assumed to have no effect on private investment. This cannot be
true, since, as we have already noted, a restriction of savings
will reduce investment.
Thus, aggregative
economics is a drastic misrepresentation of reality. The aggregates
are merely an arithmetic cloak over the real world, where multitudes
of firms and individuals react and interact in a highly complex
manner. The alleged "basic determinants" of the Keynesian system
are themselves determined by complex interactions within and between
these aggregates.
Our analysis
is confirmed by the fact that the Keynesians have been completely
unsuccessful in their attempts to establish an actual, stable consumption
function. Statistics bear out the fact that the consumption function
shifts considerably with the month of the year, the phase of the
business cycle, and over the long run. Consumer habits have definitely
changed over the years. In the short run, a change in family income
will only lead to a change in consumption after a lag of a certain
period of time. In other cases, changes in consumption may be induced
by expected changes in income (e.g., consumer credit). This instability
of the consumption function eliminates the possibility of any validity
of the Keynesian model.
Still another
fundamental fallacy in the Keynesian system is the assumed unique
relation between income and employment. This relation depends, as
we have noted above, upon the assumption that techniques, the quantity
and quality of equipment, and the efficiency and wage rate of labor
are fixed. This assumption leaves out factors of basic importance
in economic life and can only be true over an extremely short period.
Keynesians, however, attempt to use this relation over long periods
as a basis for predicting the volume of employment. One direct result
was the Keynesian fiasco of predicting eight million unemployed
after the end of the war.
The most important
device that insures the unique relation between income and employment
is the assumption of constant money wage rates. This means that
in the Keynesian model, an increase in expenditures can only increase
employment if money wage rates do not rise. In other words, employment
can only increase if real wage rates fall (wage rates relative
to prices and to profits). Also, there cannot be an equilibrium
level of large-scale unemployment in the Keynesian model unless
money wage rates are rigid and are not free to fall.
This result
is extremely interesting, since classical economists have always
maintained that employment will only increase if real wage rates
fall, and that large-scale unemployment can only persist if wage
rates are prevented from falling by monopolistic interference in
the labor market. Both Keynesians and liberal economists recognize
that money wage rates, particularly since the advent of the New
Deal, are no longer free to fall due to monopolistic governmental
and trade-union control of the labor market.
Keynesians
would remedy this situation by deceiving unions into accepting lower
real wage rates, while prices and profits rise via government deficit
spending. They propose to accomplish this feat by relying on trade-union
ignorance, coupled with frequent appeals to a "sense of responsibility
by the labor leadership." In these days when unions emit cries of
anguish and threaten to strike at every sign of higher prices or
larger profits, such an attitude is incredibly naïve. Far from having
a sense of responsibility, the aim of most unions seems to be wage
rates that increase rapidly and continuously, lower prices, and
nonexistent profits.
It is evident
that the liberal solution of reestablishing a freely competitive
labor market through the elimination of union monopolies and governmental
interference is an essential requisite for the rapid disappearance
of unemployment as it arises in the economic system.
Keynesians,
particularly those who are rabid partisans of the "liberal-labor
movement," attempt to refute this solution by contending that cuts
in money wage rates would not 1ead to a reduction of unemployment.
They claim that wage-incomes would be reduced, thereby reducing
consumer demand, and lowering prices, leaving real wage rates at
their previous level.
This argument
rests on a confusion between wage rates and wage incomes. A reduction
in money wage rates, particularly in industries where wage rates
have been most rigid, will lead immediately to an increase in hours
worked and the number of men employed. (Of course, the amount of
the increase will vary from industry to industry.) In this way,
the total payroll is increased, thus increasing wage incomes and
consumer demand. A fall in money wage rates will have an especially
favorable employment effect in the construction and capital-goods
industries. It is just these industries that now have the strongest
unions.
Furthermore,
if wage incomes are reduced, then the incomes of entrepreneurs and
others will be increased and total "purchasing power" in the community
will not decline.
The
"Mature Economy"
It is important
to recall that Keynesianism was born and was able to capture its
widespread following under the impetus of the Great Depression of
the thirties, a depression unique in its length and severity, and,
especially, in the persistence of large-scale unemployment. It was
its attempt to furnish an explanation for the events of the thirties
that gained Keynesianism its popular following. Using a model with
assumptions that restrict its application to a very short period
of time, and completely fallacious in its dependence on simple aggregates,
all Keynesians confidently ordered government deficits as the cure.
In interpreting
the significance of the Depression, however, Keynesians part company.
"Moderates" maintain that it was simply a severe depression in the
familiar round of business cycles. "Radical" Keynesians, headed
by Professor Hansen of Harvard, assert that the thirties ushered
in an era in the United States of "secular (long-run) stagnation."
They claim that the American economy is now mature, that opportunities
for investment and expansion are largely ended, so that the level
of investment expenditures can be expected to remain at a permanently
low level, at a level too low to ever provide full employment. The
cure for this situation, according to the Keynes-Hansenites, is
a permanent government program of deficit expenditures on long-range
projects, and heavy progressive income taxation to permanently increase
consumption and discourage savings.
Where the Hansen
stagnation thesis goes beyond the Keynesian model is in its attempt
to explain the determinants of the level of investment. Investment
is supposed to be determined by the "extent of investment opportunities"
that are, in turn, determined by (1) technological improvement,
(2) the rate of population growth, and (3) the opening of new territory.
The Hansenites go on to draw a gloomy picture of private investment
opportunities in the modern world.
The decade
of the thirties was the first in American history with a decline
in population growth, and there is no new territory to develop
the "frontier" is closed. Consequently, we can rely only on technological
progress to provide investment opportunities, opportunities that
have to be much greater than in the past to "make up" for the unfavorable
changes in the other two factors. As for technological progress,
that too is slowing down. After all, the railroads have already
been built and the automobile industry has reached maturity. Whatever
minor improvements there might be will probably be withheld by "reactionary
monopolists," etc.
Let us examine
each of Hansen's alleged determinants of investment. The gloom concerning
the lack of new lands to develop the vanishing of the "frontier"
can be dispelled quickly. The frontier disappeared in 1890
without appreciably affecting the rapid progress and prosperity
of America; obviously it can be no source of trouble now. This is
borne out by the fact that, since 1890, investment per head in the
older sections of America has been greater than in the recent frontier
sections.
It is difficult
to see how a decline in population growth can adversely affect investment.
Population growth does not provide an independent source of investment
opportunity. A fall in the rate of population growth can only affect
investment adversely if
-
All the
wants of existing consumers are completely satisfied. In that
case, population growth would be the only additional source
of consumer demand. This situation clearly does not exist; there
are an infinite number of unsatisfied wants.
-
The decline
would lead to reduced consumer demand. There is no reason why
this should be the case. Will not families use the money that
they otherwise would have spent on their children for other
types of expenditures?
In particular,
Hansen claims that the catastrophic drop in construction in the
thirties was caused by the decline in population growth, which reduced
the demand for new housing. The relevant factor in this connection,
however, is the rate of growth in the number of families; this did
not decline in the thirties. Furthermore, Manhattan has had a declining
total population (not merely the rate of growth) since 1911, yet
in the 1920s Manhattan had the biggest residential building boom
in its history.
Finally, if
our malady is underpopulation, why has no one suggested subsidizing
immigration to cure unemployment? This would have the same effect
as a rise in the rate of growth of population. The fact that not
even Hansen has suggested this solution is a final demonstration
of the absurdity of the "population growth" argument.
The third factor,
technological progress, is certainly an important one; it is one
of the main dynamic features of a free economy. Technological progress,
however, is a decidedly favorable factor. It is proceeding now at
a faster rate than ever before, with industries spending unprecedented
sums on research and development of new techniques. New industries
loom on the horizon. Certainly there is every reason to be exuberant
rather than gloomy about the possibilities of technological progress.
So much for
the threat of the mature economy. We have seen that of the three
alleged determinants of investment, only one is relevant, and its
prospects are very favorable. The Hansen mature-economy thesis is
at least as worthless an explanation of economic reality as the
rest of the Keynesian apparatus.
So ends our
lengthy analysis of the most successful and pernicious hoax in the
history of economic thought Keynesianism. All of Keynesian
thinking is a tissue of distortions, fallacies, and drastically
unrealistic assumptions. The vicious political effects of the Keynesian
program have only been briefly considered. They are only too obvious:
the rulers of the State engaging in direct robbery through "progressive"
taxation, creating and spending new money in competition with individuals,
directing investment, "influencing" consumption the State
all-powerful, the individual helpless and throttled under the yoke.
All this is in the name of "saving free enterprise." (Rare
is the Keynesian who admits to being a socialist.) This is the price
we are asked to pay in order to put a completely fallacious theory
into effect!
The problem
of the explanation of the Great Depression, however, still remains.
It is a problem that needs thorough and careful investigation; in
this context, we can only indicate briefly what appear to be promising
lines of inquiry. Here are some of the facts: during the decade
of the thirties, new investment fell sharply (particularly in construction);
consumer expenditures rose; tariffs were at a record high; unemployment
remained at an abnormally high level throughout the decade; commodity
prices fell; wage rates rose (particularly in construction);
income taxes rose greatly and became much more sharply progressive;
strikes and trade-union membership increased greatly, especially
in the capital-goods industries. There was also a huge growth of
federal bureaucracy, burdensome "social legislation," and the extremely
hostile antibusiness attitude of the New Deal government.
These facts
indicate that the Depression was not the result of an economy that
had suddenly become "mature," but of the policies of the New Deal.
A free economy cannot successfully function under the constant attacks
of a coercive police power. Investment is not decided according
to some mystical "opportunity." It is determined by the prospects
for profit and the prospects of keeping that profit. Prospects for
profit depend on costs being low in relation to expected prices,
and the prospects for retaining the profit depend on the lowest
possible level of taxation.
The effect
of the New Deal was to drastically increase costs through building
up a monopoly union movement, which led directly to increasing wage
rates (even when prices were low and falling) and to lowered efficiency
via "make-work," slowdowns, strikes, seniority rules, etc. Security
of property was jeopardized by the continual onslaughts of the New
Deal government, especially by the confiscatory taxation that dried
up the needed flow of savings and left no incentive to invest productively
the savings that remained. These savings, instead, found their way
into purchasing government bonds to finance all types of boondoggling
projects.
Economic
well-being, therefore, as well as the basic principles of morality
and justice, lead to the same necessary political goal: the reestablishment
of the security of private property from all forms of coercion,
without which there can be no individual freedom and no lasting
economic prosperity and progress.
Notes
[1]
This does not imply that democracy is evil. It means that democracy
should be considered as a desirable technique for choosing rulers
competitively, so long as the power of these rulers is strictly
limited.
[2]
The cause of rising prices is generally an abundance of fiat money
created by past or present government deficits.
Murray
N. Rothbard (19261995) was the author of Man,
Economy, and State, Conceived
in Liberty, What
Has Government Done to Our Money, For
a New Liberty, The
Case Against the Fed, and many
other books and articles. He was
also the editor with Lew Rockwell of The
Rothbard-Rockwell Report, and academic vice president of
the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
Copyright
© 2008 Ludwig von Mises Institute
All rights reserved.
Murray
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