These are
times when you just feel like yelling at the people who write
the news, particular the business press. They are happy to report,
word for word, what the Fed and Treasury Department, and their
message is always the same: hey, it's not our fault; in fact,
we are fixing the problem!
We
are told that the economy has tanked because foreigners invested
too much in the US, that foreigners saved too much money,
that we all lived beyond our means, that greedy capitalists fed
our materialist instincts until we popped, or any combination
of the above. Or maybe business cycles are just like weather,
cold one season and hot the next. Regardless is the government
that must come to the rescue with the usual combination of cockamamie
schemes.
Discovering
the Austrian business cycle theory, then, is a revelation, because
through it, you learn how the whole business traces to loose money
and credit generated by the Fed. The money is pumped into the
capital-goods fashion of the day, in this case housing. The whole
sector becomes overbuilt and unsustainable and it turns, tanking
many other affected sectors. The only answer the problem is not
more of the poison that caused the problem but a real liquidation.
This time
around, the theory is more in circulation than ever before – thanks
to the Mises Institute – but you still don't see evidence of consciousness
on the part of "establishment" journalists.
It
turns out that this was also true at the onset of the Great Depression.
The cause of the crash of 1929 and its effects was not unknown
that generation either. There were people saying the right things.
It's just that the press and the establishment ignored them. Here's
the evidence: A
Bubble that Broke the World, by Garet Garrett, published
in 1932. Here he lays it all out.
"This is
a delusion about credit. And whereas from the nature of credit
it is to be expected that a certain line will divide the view
between creditor and debtor, the irrational fact in this case
is that for more than ten years debtors and creditors together
have pursued the same deceptions. In many ways, as will appear,
the folly of the lender has exceeded the extravagance of the borrower."
He goes on
to explain how the debt overhang of the first world war is the
root cause; how society came to accept the idea that if people
can't immediately afford stuff, government should provide it;
how government came to operate on a bankrupt system; how we came
to believe that prosperity came from credit rather than savings;
and how the Federal Reserve working with government is the root
source of the problem.
Beautiful.
Magnificently written, as only Garrett can. How could anyone have
missed it? He wasn't exactly obscure. He wrote for the Saturday
Evening Post. Incredibly, he chronicled the New Deal blow by blow
in the Saturday Evening Post, every rotten law, every goofy plan,
every attack on liberty, property, and economic sanity. There
was no mystery here. The proof: Salvos
Against the New Deal, an assembly of his best work from
this period.
In
other words, the cause, the effects, the folly, the power grabs
– it's all here, and all eerily similar to what we are experiencing
today. We call it the Great Depression. But had the politicians
not intervened, it would have been known at the 1929 crash, and
it might have been as memorable as many other crashes in American
history. The difference this time was the application of "modern
economic methods" to cure the thing, methods which only ended
up prolonging human suffering.
Let's talk
of two other cases in which the error was pointed out. Lord Lionel
Robbins wrote in 1934. His book called The
Great Depression, much more technical and scholarly than
Garrett's own, presents the Austrian theory in a very precise
way, and documents how the Fed and the Bank of England inflated
the money supply and loosened credit in the latter half of the
1920s, leading to the bust. His is a cautious treatise in some
way.
After
all, he was blaming the central bank – not exactly a position
that was politically wise – and we aren't just talking about the
equivalent of a blogger today. He was Lionel Robbins, the most
influential economist in Britain until Lord Keynes stole the show
with his whiz-bang policy ideas. And why? Robbins counseled letting
the bad investments wash out of the system. Keynes thought you
could use the state to rev the bad back to life.
By the way,
this is the first edition, and so it is replete with citations
to the Austrians such as Mises and Menger. A later second edition
was gutted and replaced with Keynesian and classical citations,
and this was before he later caved in to the Keynesian consensus
and repudiated the book altogether. The pressure was on!
As another
example, and really the definitive one, Ludwig von Mises himself
was writing all throughout the late twenties and early thirties
about the business cycle. He nails it all in essay after essay:
the credit expansion, the malinvestment, the folly of counter-cyclical
policy, the dangers of protectionism and reflation, and so much
more. These essays could all be written today, and what is also
impressive is Mises's focus on theory. He never makes empirical
claims that aren't backed up by an attempt to explain the theoretical
apparatus behind the analysis.
What's
tragic is that his work on business cycle theory – which inspired
Hayek's own – was not translated to English until the 1980s and,
even then, not distributed in a form that elicited much attention.
This is why The
Causes of the Economic Crisis is such an important book.
It collects all of Mises's essays in a single book that is beautifully
edited and bound. It shows who precisely was the great master
of economics in the 20th century.
All of this
leads up to Rothbard's America's
Great Depression, the book that is often cited as the
one to show that the episode was caused not by the market but
by the central bank. It is getting all new attention today. But
if you follow his citations, they lead right back to Garrett,
Robbins, and Mises – three of the observers of the time who saw
precisely what was happening. They had to be ignored by the New
Dealers, for they utterly demolish the case for stabilization
policy.