Tooth Fairy Economics
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by
Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
So
the "stimulus" package, a dagger through the heart of
the economy, has passed. The geniuses who govern us, who insist
that seizing the produce of the voluntary economy and devoting it
to arbitrary projects will make us wealthy, have had their victory.
Much of the
debate turned, unfortunately, on how much "pork" was in
the bill. This or that spending program was silly or an obvious
waste of money, critics said. All too true, of course, but unless
we're looking to be hired by the Titanic's Department of Deck Chair
Rearrangement, we're missing the point with arguments like this.
The primary
fallacy of the tooth-fairy economics at the heart of the stimulus
is the very idea that economic health is the product of government
spending, which is financed either by borrowing (which leaves private
businesses with a smaller share of the pool of savings for them
to borrow from), printing money out of thin air, or direct seizure
from the population. Whatever government spends the money on is
necessarily arbitrary government lacks the profit-and-loss feedback
mechanism that keeps the private sector from squandering resources
and employing factors of production in ways that do not cater to
consumer wants. It can seize its resources from the people without
their consent, and it makes no difference to government whether
or not people actually want or wind up using the things it produces.
Meanwhile, the economy loses the goods that would have been produced
by the voluntary sector had the government not seized these resources
for its own use.
The more sophisticated
Keynesians, if that isn't an oxymoron, will come back with the argument
that while they really do agree with you in cases when the economy
is experiencing "full employment," your point doesn't
apply when there are "idle resources." In that case, we
can "stimulate" those idle resources into action without
drawing resources out of alternative employments. These resources
currently have no alternative employments.
Read
the rest of the article
February
20, 2009
Thomas
E. Woods, Jr. [send him
mail] is senior fellow in American history
at the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
He is the author of nine books, including the New York Times
bestseller The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History and, most
recently, Meltdown:
A Free-Market Look at Why the Stock Market Collapsed, the Economy
Tanked, and Government Bailouts Will Make Things Worse. Visit
his new website.
Copyright
© 2009 Campaign for
Liberty
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