If you like economic depression, Obama is your man. The stock market
is shouting this message loudly and clearly. The S & P 500 (measured
by the security SPY) made a little high at 100.41 on November 4, 2008.
The election was the next day. It has been downhill ever since. The
close on March 2, 2009 was 70.60. This 30 percent decline qualifies
as what used to be an ordinary bear market!
Congress and the President could not construct better measures, proposed
and enacted, to deepen this depression if they tried. Congressional
Democrats intend to ensconce Democrats as the majority party for the
next 25 years or so. Their chosen method is wasteful pork sold as
rational investment. But by gilding the nests of their chosen constituencies
and supporters with huge taxpayer-funded giveaways, they will deepen
and lengthen the depression.
The stock market tells us this, but it is easy for stimulus supporters
to explain away the stock market’s drop in other ways. Obama
supporters are likely to extol the good things that his program is
doing to revive spending in the economy, and to regard the stock market
as an aberrant den of gamblers and thieves who deserve their Bush-induced
fate.
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Very few men on the street, including my doctor, understand that
spending, whether private or government, does not get rid of economic
depression; and the lack of spending does not cause it. They do not
fathom that government spending, borrowing, and taxing will further
gash the sinking economy below the water line and send it to its watery
grave. They are more inclined to believe, along with prominent economists,
that government spending should be increased by trillions more. There
cannot be too much of a good thing.
People automatically think that if everyone does not spend, then
how can businesses keep going and hire people? How can the economy
work? Then they think, if people only have money, then they can spend.
If the government spending will only put that money into their hands,
this will cause people to spend. It will jump start the economy, restore
business confidence, and all will be well.
This story has a firm hold on the public imagination, but things
don’t work that way. People in the aggregate can only earn money
to spend by working productively. Money still doesn’t grow on
trees.
The government doesn’t have a money tree either. Without resorting
to inflation, it can only shift money around. America’s federal
government is a group of Americans who are empowered to tax the rest
of us and borrow from anyone in the world. This money is collected
from you, me, and others. We then have less to spend. Shifting money
from the left pocket to the right pocket doesn’t enhance the
total amount.
Americans are not unwise enough to accept government money that is
rolled off a printing press with absolutely nothing to back it up.
Our government does not do things so crudely. Its money is printed
up for it only after it issues government bonds that promise to pay
interest. For all practical purposes, these bonds are perpetuities
on which the promise is made to pay interest forever. There is no
government money tree in this process because the government taxes
Americans to pay the interest. If the government borrows from us and
spends more now, we have less to spend now. The money goes from one
pocket to another with no aggregate gain.
The government has another way to borrow. The central bank (the FED)
can take the bonds and credit the government’s bank account.
This exchanges one credit for another credit. The taxpayer must still
pay interest. The credit created for the government has not directly
diminished the taxpayer’s wealth on his personal account. There
has been no money transferred from taxpayer to government. The taxpayers
have a new liability, nonetheless. They will be made to pay the present
value of the interest payments, which is the value of the bonds. This
may or may not crimp their spending. It probably will not. They are
unlikely at first to realize that they owe this money. As time goes
on and they have to pay higher taxes, they might realize it. When
the government relieves many people of direct taxes, it hides this
burden of the debt for as long as it can.
So what do we have? The government can get money from the FED and
spend it. It will seem to many people like money that grows on trees
because they do not see the eventual taxes or the current hidden taxes.
The government can spend this money. It will stimulate people into
working at various government-selected projects. There is, however,
no such thing as a free lunch. If people do not value these projects
(which is usually the case) or the projects lose money (which they
usually do), the welfare of people does not go up. It goes down, for
they are paying for useless work. Furthermore, the government spending
raises costs and prices by bidding labor and materials away from others.
And this prevents those prices from adjusting to levels that make
it profitable for businesses to employ people in making stuff that
people really want.
There are those who contest the notion that government spending is
largely waste. They imagine brand new bridges, newly-paved roads,
and intercity rail transport. Even if these projects paid off, they
are a tiny fraction of all government spending. And most of these
do not pay off. Government spending only creates wealth if it spends
money on things whose return exceeds the cost of the capital used.
The government’s own operating costs are so high that, viewed
as a business, it gets a return on its investments that fall far short
of its capital costs. In other words, the government is like a gigantic
money-losing business. One reason for this is that interest groups
get the money. The image of public-minded officials dispersing the
money efficiently is unreal.
Everyone who has spent any time at all looking into the matter of
government spending, all regular readers of LRC, all readers of Ideas
in Liberty, all readers of the publications of the Independent Institute,
etc., and all those who have not looked into it, but have merely had
experience with government, take it for granted that every $1 spent
by government costs the taxpayer $1.25 or more. Governments routinely
destroy wealth. The case is so overwhelming that anyone who believes
otherwise can only be willfully ignorant or blinding himself. One
scholar (Martin J. Bailey), who was far from a radical anti-government
person, but who spent many years studying government and trying to
write an improved Constitution to mitigate problems with representative
government, wrote as follows:
It helps the cause of liberty when polite and well-mannered experts,
people who have studied the matter for years and speak in restrained
tones, inform us that politicians cater to interest groups and not
the public welfare, that they routinely lie, that they organize interest
groups and shake them down, that even if they wanted to, they could
not serve the public interest, and that our representative government
is wildly dysfunctional.
The image of government restoring confidence by raising and spending
money could not be more mistaken. This is the fantasy of Keynes. It
is the rhetoric of FDR ("the only thing we have to fear is fear
itself"). If business confidence depended on government spending,
there would not have occurred any of the last 5 recessions in the
U.S., for government spending rose both before and during these recessions.
And there would have been a recession during the Clinton years when
government spending moderated. The confidence of a businessman depends
on the anticipated demand for his goods and services. He does not
invest in plant and hire labor on the basis that the government is
spending money on its favorite interest groups.
There are unemployed resources in a depression. Doesn’t the
government improve matters by putting these to work? There is a large
vacant building for lease in a nearby commercial strip. It used to
be a shoe store. At the same time, there are unemployed men and women
in the area. So far, no business has seen fit to rent the building.
Does the government have a viable business in view? This is highly
doubtful. It is not how the government operates. If it directly hires
the building, the chances are that it will hire people to do make-work.
The operation will run a loss, paid for by taxpayers. Why should they
be taxed to pay the unemployed and lose money in the process? Nothing
is accomplished but a transfer of wealth from taxpayers to the unemployed
and an additional loss. Meanwhile, when business recovers and seeks
to satisfy needs of consumers, it finds that its costs are higher
because the government has rented the building and hired labor. The
government’s actions inhibit recovery. Why should wealth be
taken from taxpayers? If they would have spent the money on goods,
they no longer can. If they would have invested it, that too is no
longer possible.
Meanwhile, there is another effect of government borrowing from the
FED. When the FED credits the government, it creates bank reserves.
This typically sets off a multiple credit expansion among banks. This
stimulates business, but it is a process of credit inflation that
leads to a recession or worse. Ordinarily, business demand for labor
and materials is constrained and rationed by the supply of savings.
The FED’s credit creation, however, causes a lowering of the
interest rate. That relaxes the constraint. The stimulation causes
economic distortions and imbalances and eventual recession.
Imagine that IBM is induced to borrow and to produce a new supercomputer
because it thinks that its cost of capital is lower. It hires people,
builds a new production line, and starts churning out new supercomputers.
Other businesses do the same. But their planned selling prices and
costs are predicated on spending, saving, and hiring patterns that
no longer exist – the credit inflation changes all of that.
The business activity that comes into the economy affects particular
people first and not others, and their spending and saving behavior
is not what would have occurred had they not been employed and paid
in this new activity. Furthermore, people change their economic behavior
when they observe the activities of others and experience price changes.
The result is that somewhere along the way, some businesses find
that their costs are rising beyond what they planned and expected.
Some businesses also find that people are not buying the newly-produced
items in the anticipated volume. The costs are rising because IBM
is competing with Apple and many others to hire factors of production.
Some products are not selling because the stimulus is uneven or not
neutral in its effects. To sell their products, some firms have to
lower their prices. Since they still have to pay their debts, they
find themselves caught in a squeeze. This leads to cutbacks. This
affects other firms. A recession or depression starts.
Government credit inflation is not a free lunch. The Obamaniacs are
not overtly promising more depression via increased government spending,
but that is inherent in their program. If they borrow from the public,
it has no net stimulating effect. If they borrow from the FED, it
produces temporary stimulation and inflation and then further depression.
Credit creation through the central bank ultimately sends the economy
on a downward course.
The stimulus story is that if people only can get money, they can
spend and the economy will rise. People only can earn money by working.
They earn money by providing something of value to others, like their
labor or a good or service. The money they get entitles them to cash
in on the value of their service by choosing to buy the goods or assets
that others make available.
The image of money making the wheels of commerce turn is misleading.
The money is a counter, a ticket that allows one to buy an array of
goods. Money is a chit or a voucher. Money is a credit that can be
cashed in against society’s goods and services; it is a credit
that you can use up as you choose. When you make money, that money
measures something else that is more basic, which is that you have
supplied a valuable service or good. The money is an option to get
goods in return at a later time and place of your choosing.
Money is not the problem. We do not have a depression for lack of
money. The official M1 money supply at this time is almost $1.6 trillion.
It was $1.4 trillion when the depression began. The problem is much
more subtle. It has to do with prices and the price system. It has
to do with overcoming problems caused by bad credits that arose when
the price system was distorted by inflation. We have a depression
because of the distortions and imbalances in the economy that arose
over many years when too many people were induced by the FED to borrow
too many credits and use them to buy and produce goods and services.
The image of government spending putting money into people’s
hands is misleading. When the federal government spends money on windmills,
it has to get that money from taxes or borrowing. When it borrows
from the public, it has to raise taxes to pay the costs of the debt.
So we may as well say that all the federal spending is paid for with
taxes. This takes money out of the hands of those who might otherwise
spend it or invest it. The government isn’t jump-starting anything.
If people want to trade goods and do not have enough money to carry
out their exchanges, they can always create more. Money itself is
not the problem, as the spending and stimulus story suggests. What
you spend is what you produce. You can only spend what you produce.
(If you borrow and spend, you must eventually pay that back with your
production.) If Iowa corn farmers want to buy Chinese pots and pans,
they have to produce corn. If the Chinese want to buy Iowa corn, they
have to produce pots and pans. They don’t want our dollars to
eat anymore than we want their yuan to cook with; these currencies
are only media of exchange. We can always arrange means of paying
each other. The real problem is that the production of goods has been
dis-arranged and that many firms have to restructure. Many will go
bankrupt and liquidate. Many will lay off workers. The adjustments
take time. This is not now a problem of money and credit, although
it was brought about by central banking’s excessive money and
credit. It is now a problem of real production being interrupted because
it is not geared to producing what people want to and can buy at current
prices. When a lot of us do not have the means to spend, it is because
we are not producing enough product that others want at prices they
are willing to pay. That happens because inflation has distorted the
price system and production.
In this situation, government spending does not restore the production
system to one that caters to people’s wants and demands. Government
spending does the opposite. It induces men and materials into work
that is not in demand. This lengthens the period of adjustment back
to normal production. It causes even more distortion by bidding labor
and materials away from businesses and into lines of work promoted
by government. It creates a new inflation and price distortions that
must cause more depression. Furthermore, as we know, the government
spending itself is on wasteful activities.
The government spending under Bush and Obama is piling up immense
new liabilities and debts. Americans are trying to save more. The
data on their private account show this clearly. The personal savings
rate in January of this year is 5 percent. From 2005 to April of 2008,
it averaged just under 0.5 percent. Meanwhile their government is
frustrating their actions by incurring immense new debts.
Sadly, spending is not the end of the story of the Obama administration.
Its tax and regulatory policies are equally destructive. It is certain
that higher capital gains taxes, estate taxes, income taxes, and carbon
taxes will provide new depressing effects on the American economy.
The federal government’s projects now include a growing array
of wealth-destroying investments that include AIG, Citigroup, Fannie
Mae, Freddie Mac, the auto industry, and other major banks.
Since the Democrat victory in November, the stock market has been
discounting these negatives. It will continue to do so as long as
these negatives continue and worsen. At present, the Obama administration
is still serving up a daily diet of negative shocks to the economy
and the stock market. It is frustrating the recuperative powers of
Americans, just as it is frustrating their attempts to save and put
the American house in order. If this is not an example of the evils
of our federal government and of our form of representative constitutional
government, I don’t know what is.