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KEYNESIAN
CHICKENS COMING HOME
by Nelson
Hultberg
Americans
for a Free Republic
January 29, 2008
Chicago's
irreverent financial commentator, Bill King, wrote last week in The
King Report that, "The Fed's panic intervention yesterday --
rate cuts before the open -- is 'rank amateur' intervention." He
goes on to observe that Bank of America economist, Mickey Levy, made one
of the most astonishing comments he's heard in a long time: "The
Fed knows its credibility would be damaged if the economy slipped into
recession." King's response is: "When did recession become an
abhorrent, avoid-at-all-costs phenomenon?"
Bull's-eye! When
indeed did a recession become something that we absolutely must avoid?
What is it that the Fed, for the past decade, has feared about a
recession? Recessions have been common throughout our history, and the
country has always ridden them out because its political and economic
leaders understood that such a "riding out" was necessary to
purge the system of its excesses and thus be able to return to real
growth again. What is different about this time that would make the Fed
so desperate to avoid going through this healthy purging?
Here is the
difference. What is unfolding around us (and actually has been unfolding
since 2000) is that the Keynesian chickens set loose in 1936 are coming
home to roost. Long term consequences are upon us, and they are bad
consequences that have their roots in the fallacy of Keynesianism as a
legitimate doctrine of economic thought.
This illegitimacy of
Keynesian thought is partly tied up in its irresponsibly truncated sense
of history. It's intellectual and political leaders throughout the West
have, for the past 72 years, defaulted upon the most important
responsibility they possess as leaders -- the necessity to think
long range. John Maynard Keynes set the tone for this terrible
default in the 1930s. In response to his critics' concern over what
effect his inflationary economics would have in the long run, he
scornfully replied, "In the long run, we're all dead." And
unfortunately such an outrageous irrationality sufficed for the modern
punditry so in search of a world in which they could have their cake and
eat it.
This Keynesian
pseudo-wisdom allowed the pundits of the West to believe that shrinking
one's sense of history and responsibility down to one's own lifespan
was, in some way, now permissible. It allowed Western punditry to blank
out on the future -- which is one of the perennial and predominant sins
of humankind. As a result, we today have to suffer an ever-increasing
boom-bust economy because, of course, we're not all dead. The Keynesian
generation's children and their children ad infinitum continue on.
There's a thing called posterity.
From its start in the
30s, Keynesian economics was a brazen, short range endeavor in seeking
something for nothing mingled with embarrassing self-delusion. Why it all sounds absolutely marvelous, one can imagine FDR replying
to his Brain Trust when informed of the wonders to be worked with
Keynes' "new economics." If capitalism has reached its
mature stage and can no longer produce enough purchasing power, then we
in Washington must step in and get the system going again. If
people don't have enough money, then all we have to do is print up more
and our problems will be solved. It's really all very simple, isn't it?
Our growth can actually be as great as we want it to be. Our wealth will
be unlimited. We will usher in the millennium. Oh, happy day! How
could we not have thought of this before?
Stripped
of all the eloquent conceptualizations and slick technical jargon, this
was the great "innovation," the great "revolutionary
insight" of Keynes: If we want to become wealthier as a
nation and avoid economic recessions, then all we need to do is print up more money.
Today's
financial tremors erupting throughout the world's economies are trying
to tell us that this Keynesian paradigm is, like all huckster schemes of
"easy wealth," a fraud. Sadly only those discerning few, who
understand that there are rules to the Universe and its bounty, are
listening. Thus big trouble now lies ahead, and this coming trouble is a
result of over 70 years of Keynes' disciples printing up more money to
somehow make us all more "prosperous." As a result, the grand
Keynesian theoretical flaw is now manifesting in our lives, which is as
follows:
Central
bank credit expansion ultimately leads to massive "debt
saturation" and "malinvestment"
throughout the economy, which reverses the boom that the credit expansion was meant to perpetuate. Ultimately,
the system must not just disinflate
via Fed interest rate maneuvering; it must go through a severe
purging so as to eliminate the monster levels of debt and malinvestment before a genuine
growth cycle can be reignited. Such a purging leads to a mega-crisis
that brings on a depression, a
runaway inflation, or a
combination of the two that is called stagflation. Which
one of the three occurs will depend upon how the political and monetary
authorities in charge at the time react to the events that unfold.
Debt
Saturation Is the Problem
This then is what is
different this time, and it is what the Fed fears. In the early stages
of all credit expansions, businesses flourish, and the Fed is able to
manipulate the expansion's boom-bust nature in
a tolerable way. But once an economy becomes "debt
saturated" from the massive injections of credit over time,
borrowing and confidence drop off. This causes the rate of money supply
growth to decline by negating the central bank's power to pyramid credit, which brings
severe disinflationary pressures no matter what the Fed does with
interest rates. If the preceding build-up of debt is severe and the
resultant decrease of confidence widespread, such pressures then morph
into a far more serious crisis.
Down
deep, the Fed and its circle of monetary bureaucrats fear that this time
the fundamental buoys of the economy could indeed collapse and usher in
a dreadful credit deflation that would suck America and the world into
the vortex of Depression. It is this dread that is undoubtedly keeping
Bernanke awake at night.
In all the
recessions since World War II, the Fed has been able to maneuver
economic forces in America to induce recovery. The prior inflationary
booms were not outrageous, the nation was a solid creditor in the world,
there was a substantial cache of savings among the people, etc. It was a
matter only of squeezing the speculative excesses out of the system.
Some prolonged pain was required, but nothing that could not be endured
by men and women who had a "life is tough" philosophy
instilled into them in their youth.
This time it is all
very different. The prior boom has been quite egregious, America is no
longer a creditor nation, there are no savings left in the mattresses of
the people, and the Age of Aquarius generation is not very appreciative
of the "life is tough" adages of its parents. It subscribes to
the code of immediacy instead. "We want what we want, and we want
it right now," is the popular phrasing.
In 1980, Paul Volker
broke the back of the 70s stagflation by raising interest rates to 18%.
This restored credibility to the dollar, choked off inflation, and threw
the economy into a vicious recession. But it also allowed the economy to
purge large amounts of the debt and malinvestment stultifying it, which
allowed us to eventually return to health and REAL growth. This is the
role of a recession. It is a beneficial housecleaning. Unfortunately Ben
Bernanke will not be able to clean today's house as Volker did in 1980.
Far too much debt and malinvestment have accumulated. Far too many other
nations are implicated. Far too little savings and mental toughness
remain.
This bodes very
badly for us as a nation. As Bill King puts it, "Recession has
become dreadful because of the amount of debt, dubious investments,
derivatives and crappy paper that infests the U.S. financial system.
Fear is high that any debt and consumer retrenchment, which are both
natural and NECESSARY (for long-term health), will quickly chain react
into the dreaded debt deflation and system implosion."
"System
implosion!" This is what gnaws at the back of the brains of
Bernanke's Boys. Our debt and derivatives monsters are gargantuan. The
daisy chain of banks, caught up in becoming 21st century casinos instead
of prudent portfolio managers, is ominous. There are thousands of
explosive mines planted into our economy by seven decades of power
lusting political regimes and corporate cavaliers brandishing a
know-nothing regard for the next generation. Any one of these mines
could begin the chain reaction into the vortex. So Bernanke's Boys are
living life on the edge of their seats right now. Humans in these kinds
of predicaments are prone to panic, and that is what it appears the Fed
has just done, and will surely do again several times before the
recessionary cycle of stagflation and pseudo-growth we are entering
plays itself out.
Will a depression
come? If it does, it will not be the kind of depression we have
experienced in the past. The Fed does have the power to inject
liquidity, and unlike in the 30s, it will do so lavishly. But such
liquidity injections cannot solve the underlying problem, which is
pervasive debt and malinvestment. Thus the Fed cannot avoid a severe
crisis; it can only change the nature of the crisis with its
intervention. In this writer's opinion, what is coming during the next
10-15 years is a highly exacerbated version of the 1970s -- escalating
prices, diminishing real growth, more and more government manipulation,
controls, wars, and taxation. Massive stagflation with no Volckerian
rescue possible because no Fed Chairman and no political administration
will have the courage to allow the necessary debt housecleaning to take
place. And even if such men should arise, the virulent outrage from Wall
Street and Main Street would quickly force a reassessment on their part
as to what is needed for the economy.
The
Soros "Answer"
What then is the
answer to this wild and treacherous boom-bust system that Keynesianism
has given us? If we are to believe George Soros, the answer is to bring
about even more government intervention into the economy and its
monetary system. In a recent Financial
Times article on January 22, 2008, he castigates the political
administrations of the eighties for their naïve belief in Ronald
Reagan's "magic of the marketplace." This is what Soros calls
market fundamentalism.
"Fundamentalists,"
he schools us, "believe that markets tend towards equilibrium and
the common interest is best served by allowing participants to pursue
their self-interest. It is an obvious misconception, because it was the
intervention of the authorities that prevented financial markets from
breaking down, not the markets themselves."
On the contrary,
Soros is the victim of misconception here. And his error can be traced
back to the original sin discussed above about not thinking
long range. It is his revered "government intervention"
that brings on the crisis in the first place when the Federal Reserve
intervenes to manipulate interest rates lower, which then causes the
inflationary boom, which then requires more intervention to fix. He is
not carrying the cause and effect relationship back far enough. The bust
period only comes about because there is first an inordinate boom
period. And the boom period only becomes inordinate because government
central banks intervene to inflate the currency of the country involved
at a faster rate than goods and services are growing, which brings on
chronic price inflation. This chronic price inflation becomes possible
only because we have allowed the Federal Reserve to have arbitrary power
over the money supply, which began in 1913, was furthered when FDR took
us off the domestic gold standard, and then finalized in 1971 when Nixon
took us off the international gold standard.
None of the
"breakdown problems" that Soros attributes to the free-market
are due to the nature of capitalism, or any of the forces that enable
capitalism as a system to work. It is not the free-market, but government
intervention into the
free-market that has caused the economic instability and social turmoil
we endure today. All the so called evils that are attributed to the
system of capitalism actually belong to the system of
"interventionism" that Soros advocates. Free enterprise works
very nicely if left alone.
Not
that a free-market is perfect. It is, however, the least imperfect of
all political-economic forms of organization. But in order to understand
this, one must think long range. This is why the most grievous sin of
all socialists and Keynesians is the shrinking of their sense of time
and history. As the economist Henry Hazlitt observed long ago, "The
art of economics consists in looking not merely at the immediate but at
the longer effects of any act or policy; it consists in tracing the
consequences of that policy not merely for one group but for all
groups."
Soros
is not digging deep enough, not tracing back far enough. He is observing
only the immediate events, and therefore cannot grasp that it is his
intervention in the first place that brings on the breakdown that he
then uses as an excuse for further intervention. Because all government
interventions cause economic dislocations that demand further
interventions, we then become embroiled in a continual chain of
interventions until the system is so mangled in manipulatory controls
that it collapses into stultification. Enter the socialist then to
prescribe total control.
The
answer to all this is not to enter into the process of
"intervention" at all. When Jean Baptiste Colbert, the finance
minister for King Louis XIV of France in the 17th century (who was a
fanatic government intervener under the Mercantilist economic
philosophy), asked a group of businessmen of his day what he and the
King could do for them and their industries, they vehemently replied,
"Laissez-nous faire!" Leave us alone!
This
advice is just as appropriate today. True, as Soros claims, a
laissez-faire economy does not tend toward equilibrium. But then no
economy ever does. Such a thing exists only in textbooks, never in the
real world. What a free-market economy does tend toward is relentless
growth through what Joseph Schumpeter called "creative
destruction." Because Keynesians and socialists believe that this
creative process is nefarious, they insist that we must use government
to control and manipulate it. They thus fall prey to the error that a
utopian economy can be planned into being that will give us growth and
prosperity absent the requisites of growth and prosperity (which are
freedom and non-interventionist government).
This
type of utopian thinking must be rejected. Smooth and pleasant growth
does not exist in any society, and it never will. The free-market is not
nefarious as Ludwig von Mises masterfully demonstrates in Human
Action, for it has many natural laws (such as supply and demand,
action and reaction, etc.) that always work to bring about realignment
when things get out of whack. And they do so far better than any gaggle
of bureaucrats in Washington ever could. A free-market
is, however, messy. And it requires self-reliant toughness. But if
it is left free from government manipulation, it will produce a
spectacular tide of wealth that will lift all its boats into prosperity.
Not equal prosperity, but certainly definitive prosperity for all.
Bernanke's
Worst Nightmare
What
is the lesson to be learned here? Those who hop onto the monetary
inflation tiger in pursuit of more wealth than they are willing to
"produce" must pay for their indiscretion eventually with a
severe and protracted economic crisis, i.e., depression, runaway
inflation, or stagflation.
Mountainous loads of
debt and malinvestment are now overwhelming us. Much of this burden must
be liquidated before genuine demand and growth can be restored, which
will require extensive, radical reform if we are to minimize the
hardship.
As the renowned
Mises warned us decades ago,
"There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom
brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the
crisis should come sooner as the result of a voluntary abandonment of
further credit expansion, or later as a final and total
catastrophe of the currency system involved."
This is Bernanke's
worst nightmare -- that Mises ends up just as right in his analysis of
expansionary credit policy by a government's central bank as he was in
his analysis of the inevitable collapse of socialism as an economic
system.
The sun is now
setting on the Keynesian / Soros / Bernanke paradigm. But it has a way
to go yet. Major paradigms of history change laboriously over long
stretches of time. And this one will be no different. People like Soros
and the statist entourage around them still maintain much power over our
lives. But it is a fading power, and the next 10-15 years hopefully will
pound the final nails into their ideological coffin. The Fed will be
injecting massive liquidity into the economy in an effort to avoid the
debt purge necessary to heal the economy, which will create heavy
stagflation and pseudo-growth. If enough of the country's intelligentsia
can be reached during this time with the truth about how the Fed's use
of fiat money is the cause of the boom-bust cycle and the immense
stagflation stultifying the country, then we may have a chance to
restore a free and stable country again -- based upon gold money and
objective law.
If such a
restoration is to come about, it will be because small groups of
contrarian thinkers have (during the latter half of the 20th century and
into the first decades of the 21st) persisted heroically in the face of
relentless ridicule and ostracism to hammer home the eternal truths of
gold, human nature, and government power lust. This is the true role of
any man who claims the mantle of "intellectual" -- to think
long range, to fight for objective law, to insist on real money, to pass
on to his children a system of freedom, order and justice. The
collectivists have defaulted on this role. We in the freedom movement
are the only ones who can assume it.
© 2008 Nelson Hultberg
Americans for a Free Republic
Email
Author l Editorial
Archive & Bio l Website
Nelson
Hultberg is a freelance writer in Dallas, Texas and the Executive
Director of Americans for a Free Republic www.afr.org.
His articles have appeared in such publications as The Dallas Morning
News, the San Antonio Express-News, Insight, The Freeman, Liberty, and
The Social Critic, as well as
on numerous Internet sites. He is the
author of Breaking
the Demopublican Monopoly (2004),
and he has a forthcoming book on political philosophy entitled The Golden Mean: The Case
for Libertarian Politics and Conservative Values.
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