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© 2001
WorldNetDaily.com
Sometimes it's painful to read
the business press, and never more so than during an economic
slump. Reporters flail about for explanations. They quote
stock analysts, politicians, day traders, other journalists,
and even, from time to time, academic economists. But they
never seem to arrive at anything approaching an explanation.
If you are purporting to
examine the merit of various anti-recession measures, you
surely need some explanation of the recession's cause. The
most common attempt at a theory has something to do with
consumer confidence. The press likes this one this year,
because this is the Clinton administration's theory as to why,
day by day, the economy becomes weaker.
You see, Clinton's spokesmen
have repeatedly said that the incoming regime is threatening
recession by the mere fact that Bush and Cheney are talking
about it. Remarkable. Bush isn't even president yet, and the
Clinton crew is blaming him for the economic conditions of the
past two quarters!
The idea is this. If consumers
believe the economy is headed down, they might save instead of
spend. The business sector, afflicted with the same fears,
doesn't invest. The two forces merge to create a decline in
overall demand for goods and services, and, next thing you
know, it's straight into the economic gutter.
So is there anything to the
"talk theory" of recession? As Frank
Shostak has pointed out, this theory implies that
underlying economic reality has no meaning. Whether we are
rich or poor depends on our collective state of mind. A
recession becomes nothing but a national bad mood.
On the same theory, you could
also claim that the economic boom of the 1990s was a result of
happy talk from government officials. And maybe, based on this
idea, the best way to avoid recession is to turn off our
radios, televisions, and computers. We should just sit back
and meditate on government press releases. That'll keep the
boom going.
Gosh, maybe we can talk our way
into perpetual prosperity. If only we knew the magic words, we
could print them in a book and ship it to the developing world
where they can all talk their way into prosperity, too. Maybe
there should be jail sentences for naysayers, who, after all,
threaten the national well-being.
Does it sound absurd? Of
course. But the business press, woefully uneducated in
economic theory and relentlessly biased, reports it straight,
as if those pushing the talk theory of the business cycle
might not have a political purpose in mind. And that purpose
is obvious: deny the reality of the situation and promote an
illusion of truth. That's the Clinton way.
Another theory going the rounds
is that business cycles are like Clemenza's theory of familial
war from "Godfather I": "This thing's gotta
happen every five years or so -- 10 years -- helps to get rid
of the bad blood." And sometimes there seems to be a
superficial plausibility to the idea. But to say something
happens in cycles is not to explain it; it is only to observe
the obvious.
Business cycle theories are
legion and they come and go. But the only explanation that has
stood the test of time was first advanced in 1912, in Ludwig
von Mises's masterwork, "The Theory of Money and
Credit." Elaborations on the theory, by Mises and his
student Hayek in the 1930s, culminated in the Austrian theory
of the business cycle.
The theory begins by observing
the profound effect that interest rates have on investment
decisions. Left to the market, interest rates are determined
by the supply of credit (a mirror of the savings rate) and the
willingness to take risks in the market (a mirror of the
return on capital). What throws this out of whack is
manipulation by the central bank.
When the Fed feeds artificial
credit into the economy by lowering interest rates, it spurs
investments in projects that eventually don't pan out. For
example, the high-tech and dot-com manias resulted from a
decade of sustained money growth via lower interest rates.
When the Fed stepped on the brakes to prevent prices from
rising, it prompted a sell-off, and hence a downturn.
What's tricky to understand is
what can't be seen. Just because prices aren't going up
doesn't mean the money supply is in check. Just because people
in some sectors are getting rich doesn't mean that the
prosperity is on solid ground. Just because the stock market
is going up doesn't mean that the architecture of investment
(to use James Grant's phrase) is in good working order.
Right now, conventional wisdom
says that the Fed needs to flood the economy with money and
credit. But as we can see, it is precisely this path that
created the problems to begin with. Besides, Japan tried this
trick in the 1990s, even lowering interest rates to zero,
without effect. No Austrian economist was surprised when the
Fed's dramatic intervention this month produced no lasting
effect on the markets. Clemenza is correct to this extent:
there is bad blood in the economy, and it needs to be drained.
There are ways to make
recessions easier to endure. Cutting taxes is one of them.
Getting rid of regulations that hinder enterprise is another.
The outrageous hounding of Microsoft among many others facing
the antitrust guillotine, as well as the many trumped-up suits
against businesses for "racism," must stop. These
are prosperity killers. The purpose of freeing the market is
not to stimulate demand (as Bush's advisers seem to think) but
to unshackle entrepreneurship and permit the consuming public
more choice in using their money.
As you can see, this theory is
at once too sophisticated and too clear for most business
reporters to grasp. They aren't interested in reading a dusty
old treatise on monetary theory. Neither, I'm afraid, are
Bush's economic advisers. But at least Bush's intuitions are
on track. A big, immediate tax cut won't stop the slide, but
it will cushion a hard landing.
Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr. is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. He also edits a
daily news site, LewRockwell.com.
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