The news media are in the
process of creating a great new
historical myth. This is the
myth that our present financial
crisis is the result of economic
freedom and laissez-faire
capitalism.
The attempt to place the blame
on laissez faire is readily
confirmed by a Google search
under the terms “crisis +
laissez faire.” On the first
page of the results that come
up, or in the web entries to
which those results refer,
statements of the following kind
appear:
“The mortgage crisis is
laissez-faire gone wrong.”
“Sarkozy [Nicolas Sarkozy, the
President of France] said
`laissez-faire’ economics,
`self-regulation’ and the view
that `the all-powerful market’
always knows best are finished.”
“`America’s laissez-faire
ideology, as practiced during
the subprime crisis, was as
simplistic as it was dangerous,’
chipped in Peer Steinbrück, the
German finance minister.”
“Paulson brings laissez-faire
approach on financial crisis….”
“It’s au revoir to the days of
laissez faire.”[1]
Recent articles in The New
York Times provide further
confirmation. Thus one article
declares, “The United States has
a culture that celebrates
laissez-faire capitalism as the
economic ideal….”[2]
Another article tells us, “For
30 years, the nation’s political
system has been tilted in favor
of business deregulation and
against new rules.”[3]
In a third article, a pair of
reporters assert, “Since 1997,
Mr. Brown [the British Prime
Minister] has been a powerful
voice behind the Labor Party’s
embrace of an American-style
economic philosophy that was
light on regulation. The
laissez-faire approach
encouraged the country’s banks
to expand internationally and
chase returns in areas far
afield of their core mission of
attracting deposits.”[4]
Thus even Great Britain is
described as having a
“laissez-faire approach.”
The mentality displayed in these
statements is so completely and
utterly at odds with the actual
meaning of laissez faire that it
would be capable of describing
the economic policy of the old
Soviet Union as one of laissez
faire in its last decades. By
its logic, that is how it would
have to describe the policy of
Brezhnev and his successors of
allowing workers on collective
farms to cultivate plots of land
of up to one acre in size on
their own account and sell the
produce in farmers’ markets in
Soviet cities. According to the
logic of the media, that too
would be “laissez faire”—at
least compared to the time of
Stalin.
Laissez-faire capitalism has a
definite meaning, which is
totally ignored, contradicted,
and downright defiled by such
statements as those quoted
above. Laissez-faire capitalism
is a politico-economic
system based on private
ownership of the means of
production and in which the
powers of the state are limited
to the protection of the
individual’s rights against the
initiation of physical force.
This protection applies to the
initiation of physical force by
other private individuals, by
foreign governments, and, most
importantly, by the individual’s
own government. This last is
accomplished by such means as a
written constitution, a system
of division of powers and checks
and balances, an explicit bill
of rights, and eternal vigilance
on the part of a citizenry with
the right to keep and bear arms.
Under laissez-faire capitalism,
the state consists essentially
just of a police force, law
courts, and a national defense
establishment, which deter and
combat those who initiate the
use of physical force. And
nothing more.
The utter absurdity of
statements claiming that the
present political-economic
environment of the United States
in some sense represents
laissez-faire capitalism becomes
as glaringly obvious as anything
can be when one keeps in mind
the extremely limited role of
government under laissez-faire
and then considers the following
facts about the present-day
United States.
1) Government spending in the
United States currently equals
more than forty percent of
national income, i.e., the sum
of all wages and salaries and
profits and interest earned in
the country. This is without
counting any of the massive
off-budget spending such as that
on account of the government
enterprises Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac. Nor does it count
any of the recent spending on
assorted “bailouts.” What this
means is that substantially more
than forty dollars of every one
hundred dollars of output are
appropriated by the government
against the will of the
individual citizens who produce
that output. The money and the
goods involved are turned over
to the government only because
the individual citizens wish to
stay out of jail. Their freedom
to dispose of their own incomes
and output is thus violated on a
colossal scale. In contrast,
under laissez-faire capitalism,
government spending would be on
such a modest scale that a mere
revenue tariff might be
sufficient to support it. The
corporate and individual income
taxes, inheritance and capital
gains taxes, and social security
and Medicare taxes would not
exist.
2) There are presently fifteen
federal cabinet departments,
nine of which exist for the very
purpose of respectively
interfering with housing,
transportation, healthcare,
education, energy, mining,
agriculture, labor, and
commerce, and virtually all of
which nowadays routinely ride
roughshod over one or more
important aspects of the
economic freedom of the
individual. Under laissez faire
capitalism, eleven of the
fifteen cabinet departments
would cease to exist and only
the departments of justice,
defense, state, and treasury
would remain. Within those
departments, moreover, further
reductions would be made, such
as the abolition of the IRS in
the Treasury Department and the
Antitrust Division in the
Department of Justice.
3) The economic interference of
today’s cabinet departments is
reinforced and amplified by more
than one hundred federal
agencies and commissions, the
most well-known of which
include, besides the IRS, the
FRB and FDIC, the FBI and CIA,
the EPA, FDA, SEC, CFTC, NLRB,
FTC, FCC, FERC, FEMA, FAA, CAA,
INS, OHSA, CPSC, NHTSA, EEOC,
BATF, DEA, NIH, and NASA. Under
laissez-faire capitalism, all
such agencies and commissions
would be done away with, with
the exception of the FBI, which
would be reduced to the
legitimate functions of
counterespionage and combating
crimes against person or
property that take place across
state lines.
4) To complete this catalog of
government interference and its
trampling of any vestige of
laissez faire, as of the end of
2007, the last full year for
which data are available, the
Federal Register
contained fully
seventy-three thousand pages
of detailed government
regulations. This is an increase
of more than ten thousand pages
since 1978, the very years
during which our system,
according to one of The New
York Times articles quoted
above, has been “tilted in favor
of business deregulation and
against new rules.” Under
laissez-faire capitalism, there
would be no Federal Register.
The activities of the remaining
government departments and their
subdivisions would be controlled
exclusively by duly enacted
legislation, not the rule-making
of unelected government
officials.
5) And, of course, to all of
this must be added the further
massive apparatus of laws,
departments, agencies, and
regulations at the state and
local level. Under laissez-faire
capitalism, these too for the
most part would be completely
abolished and what remained
would reflect the same kind of
radical reductions in the size
and scope of government activity
as those carried out on the
federal level.
What this brief account has
shown is that the
politico-economic system of the
United States today is so far
removed from laissez-faire
capitalism that it is closer to
the system of a police state
than to laissez-faire
capitalism. The ability of the
media to ignore all of the
massive government interference
that exists today and to
characterize our present
economic system as one of
laissez-faire and economic
freedom marks it as, if not
profoundly dishonest, then as
nothing less than delusional.
Government
Intervention Actually
Responsible for the Crisis
Beyond all this is the further
fact that the actual
responsibility for our financial
crisis lies precisely with
massive government intervention,
above all the intervention of
the Federal Reserve System in
attempting to create capital out
of thin air, in the belief that
the mere creation of money and
its being made available in the
loan market is a substitute for
capital created by producing and
saving. This is a policy it has
pursued since its founding, but
with exceptional vigor since
2001, in its efforts to overcome
the collapse of the stock market
bubble whose creation it had
previously inspired.
The Federal Reserve and other
portions of the government
pursue the policy of money and
credit creation in everything
they do that encourages and
protects private banks in the
attempt to cheat reality by
making it appear that one can
keep one’s money and lend it out
too, both at the same time. This
duplicity occurs when
individuals or business firms
deposit cash in banks, which
they can continue to use to make
purchases and pay bills by means
of writing checks rather than
using currency. To the extent
that the banks are then enabled
and encouraged to lend out the
funds that have been deposited
in this way (usually by the
creation of new and additional
checking deposits rather than
the lending of currency), they
are engaged in the creation of
new and additional money. The
depositors continue to have
their money and borrowers now
have the bulk of the funds
deposited. In recent years, the
Federal Reserve has so
encouraged this process, that
checking deposits have been
created equal to fifty times the
actual cash reserves of the
banks, a situation more than
ripe for implosion.
All of this new and additional
money entering the loan market
is fundamentally fictitious
capital, in that it does not
represent new and additional
capital goods in the economic
system, but rather a mere
transfer of parts of the
existing supply of capital goods
into different hands, for use in
different, less efficient and
often flagrantly wasteful ways.
The present housing crisis is
perhaps the most glaring example
of this in all of history.
Perhaps as much as a trillion
and a half dollars or more of
new and additional
checkbook-money capital was
channeled into the housing
market as the result of the
artificially low interest rates
caused by the presence of an
even larger overall amount of
new and additional money in the
loan market. Because of the
long-term nature of its
financing, housing is especially
susceptible to the effect of
lower interest rates, which can
serve sharply to reduce monthly
mortgage payments and in this
way correspondingly increase the
demand for housing and for the
mortgage loans needed to finance
it.
Over a period of years, the
result was a huge increase in
the production and purchase of
new homes, rapidly rising home
prices, and a further spiraling
increase in the production and
purchase of new homes in the
expectation of a continuing rise
in their prices.
To gauge the scale of its
responsibility, in the period of
time just since 2001, the
Federal Reserve caused an
increase in the supply of
checkbook-money capital of more
than 70 percent of the
cumulative total amount it had
created in the whole of the
previous 88 years of its
existence—that is, almost 2
trillion dollars.[5]
This was the increase in the
amount by which the checking
deposits of the banks exceeded
the banks’ reserves of actual
money, that is, the money they
have available to pay depositors
who want cash. The Federal
Reserve caused this increase in
illusory capital by means of
creating whatever new and
additional bank reserves as were
necessary to achieve a Federal
Funds interest rate—that is, the
rate of interest paid by banks
on the lending and borrowing of
reserves—that was far below the
rate of interest dictated by the
market. For the three years
2001-2004, the Federal Reserve
drove the Federal Funds Rate
below 2 percent and from July of
2003 to June of 2004, drove it
even further down, to
approximately 1 percent.
The Federal Reserve also made it
possible for banks to operate
with a far lower percentage of
reserves than ever before.
Whereas in a free market, banks
would hold gold reserves equal
to their checking deposits, or
at the very least to a
substantial proportion of their
checking deposits,[6]
the Federal Reserve in recent
years contrived to make it
possible for them to operate
with irredeemable fiat money
reserves of less than 2 percent.
The Federal Reserve drove down
the Federal Funds Rate and
brought about the vast increase
in the supply of illusory
capital for the purpose of
driving down all market interest
rates. The additional illusory
capital could find borrowers
only at lower interest rates.
The Federal Reserve’s goal was
to bring about interest rates so
low that they could not
compensate even for the rise in
prices. It deliberately sought
to achieve a negative
real rate of interest on
capital, that is, a rate below
the rate at which prices rise.
This means that a lender, after
receiving the interest due him
for a year, has less purchasing
power than he had the year
before, when he had only his
principal.
In doing this, the Federal
Reserve’s ultimate purpose was
to stimulate both investment and
consumer spending. It wanted the
cost of obtaining capital to be
minimal so that it would be
invested on the greatest
possible scale and for people to
regard the holding of money as a
losing proposition, which would
stimulate them to spend it
faster. More spending, ever more
spending was its concern, in the
belief that that is what is
required to avoid large-scale
unemployment.
As matters have turned out, the
Federal Reserve got its wish for
a negative real rate of
interest, but to an extent far
beyond what it wished. It wished
for a negative real rate of
return of perhaps 1 to 2
percent. What it achieved in the
housing market was a negative
real rate of return measured by
the loss of a major portion of
the capital invested. In the
words of The New York Times,
“In the year since the crisis
began, the world’s financial
institutions have written down
around $500 billion worth of
mortgage-backed securities.
Unless something is done to stem
the rapid decline of housing
values, these institutions are
likely to write down an
additional $1 trillion to $1.5
trillion.”[7]
This vast loss of capital in the
housing debacle is what is
responsible for the inability of
banks to make loans to many
businesses to which they
normally could and would lend.
The reason they cannot now do so
is that the funds and the real
wealth that have been lost no
longer exist and thus cannot be
lent to anyone. The Federal
Reserve’s policy of credit
expansion based on the creation
of new and additional checkbook
money has thus served to give
capital to unworthy borrowers
who never should have had it in
the first place and to deprive
other, far more credit worthy
borrowers of the capital they
need to stay in businesses. Its
policy has been one of
redistribution and destruction.
The capital it has caused to be
malinvested and lost in housing
is capital that is now
unavailable for such firms as
Wickes Furniture, Linens ‘N
Things, Levitz Furniture,
Mervyns, and innumerable others,
who have had to go bankrupt
because they could not obtain
the loans they needed to stay in
business. And, of course, among
the foremost victims have been
major banks themselves. The
losses they have suffered have
wiped out their capital and put
them out of business. And the
list of casualties will
certainly grow.
Any discussion of the housing
debacle would be incomplete if
it did not include mention of
the systematic consumption of
home equity encouraged for
several years by the media and
an ignorant economics
profession. Consistent with the
teachings of Keynesianism that
consumer spending is the
foundation of prosperity, they
regarded the rise in home prices
as a powerful means for
stimulating such spending. In
increasing homeowners’ equity,
they held, it enabled homeowners
to borrow money to finance
additional consumption and thus
keep the economy operating at a
high level. As matters have
turned out, such consumption has
served to saddle many homeowners
with mortgages that are now
greater than the value of their
homes, which would not have been
the case had those mortgages not
been enlarged to finance
additional consumption. This
consumption is the cause of a
further loss of capital over and
above the capital lost in
malinvestment.
A discussion of the housing
debacle would also not be
complete if it did not mention
the role of government
guarantees of many mortgage
loans. If the government
guarantees the principal and
interest on a loan, there is no
reason why a lender should care
about the qualifications of a
borrower. He will not lose by
making the loan, however bad it
may turn out to be.
A substantial number of mortgage
loans carried such guarantees.
For example, a New York
Times article describes the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development as “an agency that
greased the mortgage wheel for
first-time buyers by insuring
billions of dollars in loans.”
The article describes how HUD
progressively reduced its
lending standards: “families no
longer had to prove they had
five years of stable income;
three years sufficed...lenders
were allowed to hire their own
appraisers rather than rely on a
government-selected
panel...lenders no longer had to
interview most
government-insured borrowers
face to face or maintain
physical branch offices,”
because the government’s
approval for granting mortgage
insurance had become automatic.
The Times’ article goes
on to describe how “Lenders,”
such as Countrywide Financial,
which was among the largest and
most prominent, “sprang up to
serve those whose poor credit
history made them ineligible for
lower-interest `prime’ loans.”
It notes the fact that
“Countrywide signed a government
pledge to use `proactive
creative efforts’ to extend
homeownership to minorities and
low-income Americans.”[8]
“Proactive creative efforts” is
a good description of what
lenders did in offering such
bizarre types of mortgages as
those requiring the payment of
“interest only,” and then
allowing the avoidance even of
the payment of interest by
adding it to the amount of
outstanding principal. (Such
mortgages suited the needs of
homebuyers whose reason for
buying was to be able to sell as
soon as home prices rose
sufficiently further.)
Just as vast numbers of houses
were purchased based on an
unfounded belief in an endless
rise in their prices, so too
vast numbers of complex
financial derivatives were sold
based on an unfounded belief
that the Federal Reserve System
actually had the power it
claimed to have of making
depressions impossible, a power
which the media and most of the
economics profession repeatedly
affirmed.
Derivatives have received such a
bad press that it is necessary
to point out that the insurance
policy on a home is a
derivative. And many of the
derivatives that were sold and
which are now creating problems
of insolvency and bankruptcy,
namely, “credit default swaps (CDSs),”
were insurance policies in one
form or another. Their flaw was
that unlike ordinary homeowners’
insurance, they did not have a
sufficient list of exclusions.
Homeowners’ policies make
exclusions for such things as
damage caused by war and, in
many cases, depending on the
special risks of the local area,
earthquakes and hurricanes. In
the same way, the more complex
derivatives should have made an
exclusion for losses resulting
from financial collapse brought
on by Federal-Reserve-sponsored
massive credit expansion. (If it
is impossible actually to write
such an exclusion, because many
of the losses may occur before
the nature of the cause becomes
evident, then such derivatives
should not be written and the
market will no longer write them
because of the unacceptable
risks they entail.) But decades
of brainwashing by the
government, the media, and the
educational system had convinced
almost everyone that such
collapse was no longer possible.
Belief in the impossibility of
depressions played the same role
in the creation and sale of
“collateralized debt obligations
(CDOs).” Here disparate home
mortgages were bundled together
and securities were issued
against them. In many cases,
large buyers bundled together
collections of such securities
and issued further securities
against those securities. As
more and more homeowners have
defaulted on their loans, the
result has been that no one is
able directly to judge the value
of these securities. To do so,
it will be necessary to
disentangle them down to the
level of the underlying
individual mortgages. Such
tangles of securities could
never have been sold in a market
not overwhelmed by the
propaganda that depressions are
impossible under the
government’s management of the
financial system.
Finally, a discussion of the
housing debacle would not be
complete if it did not include
mention of forms of virtual
extortion that served to
encourage loans to unworthy
borrowers. Thus, the online
encyclopedia Wikipedia writes:
The Community Reinvestment
Act [CRA]...is a United
States federal law designed
to encourage commercial
banks and savings
associations to meet the
needs of borrowers in all
segments of their
communities, including low-
and moderate-income
neighborhoods... CRA
regulations give community
groups the right to comment
or protest about banks'on-compliance
with CRA. Such comments
could help or hinder banks'
planned expansions.
The
meaning of these words is that
the Community Reinvestment Act
gives the power to “community
groups,” to determine in an
important respect the financial
success or failure of a bank.
Only if they are satisfied that
the bank is making sufficient
loans to borrowers to whom it
would otherwise choose not to
lend, will it be permitted to
succeed. The most prominent such
community group is ACORN.
Part and parcel of the
environment that has made an act
such as the CRA possible, is
threats of slander against banks
for being “racist” if they
choose not to make loans to
people who are poor credit risks
and also happen to belong to
this or that minority group. The
threats of slander go hand in
glove with intimidation from
various government agencies that
exercise discretionary power
over the banks and are in a
position to harm them if they do
not comply with the agencies’
wishes. The same points apply to
mortgage lenders other than
banks.
What this extensive analysis of
the actual causes of our
financial crisis has shown is
that it is government
intervention, not a free market
or laissez-faire capitalism,
that is responsible in every
essential respect.
The Laissez-Faire Myth and the
Marxism of the Media
The myth that laissez faire
exists in the present-day United
States and is responsible for
our current economic crisis is
promulgated by people who know
practically nothing whatever of
sound, rational economic theory
or the actual nature of
laissez-faire capitalism. They
espouse it despite, or rather
because of, their
education at the leading
colleges and universities of the
country, When it comes to
matters of economics, their
education has steeped them
entirely in the thoroughly wrong
and pernicious doctrines of Marx
and Keynes. In claiming to see
the existence of laissez faire
in the midst of such massive
government interference as to
constitute the very opposite of
laissez faire, they are
attempting to rewrite reality in
order to make it conform with
their Marxist preconceptions and
view of the world.
They absorb the doctrines of
Marx more in history,
philosophy, sociology, and
literature classes than in
economics classes. The economics
classes, while usually not
Marxist themselves, offer only
highly insufficient rebuttal of
the Marxist doctrines and devote
almost all of their time to
espousing Keynesianism and
other, less well-known
anti-capitalistic doctrines,
such as the doctrine of pure and
perfect competition.
Very few of the professors and
their students have read so much
as a single page of the writings
of Ludwig von Mises, who is the
preeminent theorist of
capitalism and knowledge of
whose writings is essential to
its understanding. Almost all of
them are thus essentially
ignorant of sound economics.
When I refer to the educational
system and the media as Marxist,
I do not intend to imply that
its members favor any kind of
forcible overthrow of the United
States government or are
necessarily even advocates of
socialism. What I mean is that
they are Marxists insofar as
they accept Marx’s views
concerning the nature and
operation of laissez-faire
capitalism.
They accept the Marxian doctrine
that in the absence of
government intervention, the
self-interest, the profit
motive—the “unbridled greed”—of
businessmen and capitalists
would serve to drive wage rates
to minimum subsistence while it
extended the hours of work to
the maximum humanly endurable,
imposed horrifying working
conditions, and drove small
children to work in factories
and mines. They point to the
miserably low standard of living
and terrible conditions of wage
earners in the early years of
capitalism, especially in Great
Britain, and believe that that
proves their case. They go on to
argue that only government
intervention in the form of
pro-union and minimum-wage
legislation, maximum-hours laws,
the legal prohibition of child
labor, and government mandates
concerning working conditions,
served to improve the wage
earner’s lot. They believe that
repeal of this legislation would
bring about a return to the
miserable economic conditions of
the early nineteenth century.
They view the profits and
interest of businessmen and
capitalists as unearned,
undeserved gains, wrung from
wage earners—the alleged true
producers—by the equivalent of
physical force, and hence regard
the wage earners as being in the
position of virtual slaves
(“wage slaves”) and the
capitalist “exploiters” as being
in the position of virtual slave
owners. Closely connected with
this, they regard taxing the
businessmen and capitalists and
using the proceeds for the
benefit of wage earners, in such
forms as social security,
socialized medicine, public
education, and public housing,
as a policy that serves merely
to return to the wage earners
some portion of the loot
allegedly stolen from them in
the process of “exploitation.”
In full agreement with Marx and
his doctrine that under
laissez-faire capitalism the
capitalists expropriate all of
the wage earner’s production
above what is necessary for
minimum subsistence, they assume
that the government’s
intervention harms no one but
the immoral businessmen and
capitalists, never the wage
earners. Thus not only the taxes
to pay for social programs but
also the higher wages imposed by
pro-union and minimum-wage
legislation are assumed simply
to come out of profits, with no
negative effect whatever on wage
earners, such as unemployment.
Likewise for the effect of
government-imposed shorter
hours, improved working
conditions, and the abolition of
child labor: the resulting
higher costs are assumed simply
to come out of the capitalists’
“surplus value,” never out of
the standard of living of wage
earners themselves.
This is the mindset of the whole
of the left and in particular of
the members of the educational
system and media. It is a view
of the profit motive and the
pursuit of material
self-interest as inherently
lethal if not forcibly countered
and rigidly controlled by
government intervention. As
stated, it is a view that sees
the role of businessmen and
capitalists as comparable to
that of slave owners, despite
the fact that businessmen and
capitalists do not and cannot
employ guns, whips, or chains to
find and keep their workers but
only the offer of better wages
and conditions than those
workers can find elsewhere.
Not surprisingly, the
educational system and media
share the view of Marx that
laissez-faire capitalism is an
“anarchy of production,” in
which the businessmen and
capitalists run about like
chickens without heads. In their
view, rationality, order, and
planning emanate from the
government, not from the
participants in the market.
As I say, this, and more like
it, is the intellectual
framework of the great majority
of today’s professors and of
several generations of their
predecessors. It is equally the
intellectual framework of their
students, who have dutifully
absorbed their misguided
teachings and some of whom have
gone on to become the reporters
and editors of such publications
as The New York Times, The
Washington Post, Newsweek, Time,
and the overwhelming majority of
all other newspapers and news
magazines. It is the
intellectual framework of their
students who are now the
commentators and editors of
practically all of the major
television networks, such as
CBS, NBC, ABC, and CNN.[9]
And it is this intellectual
framework within which the media
now attempts to understand and
report on our financial crisis.
In their view, laissez-faire
capitalism and economic freedom
are a formula for injustice and
chaos, while government is the
voice and agent of justice and
rationality in economic affairs.
So firmly do they hold this
belief, that when they see what
they think is evidence of
large-scale injustice and chaos
in the economic system, such as
has existed in the present
financial crisis, they
automatically presume that it is
the result of the pursuit of
self-interest and the economic
freedom that makes that pursuit
possible. Given this fundamental
attitude, the principle that
guides contemporary journalists
so-called is that their job is
to find the businessmen and
capitalists who are responsible
for the evil and the government
officials who set them free to
commit it, and, finally, to
identify and support the
policies of government
intervention and control that
will allegedly eliminate the
evil and prevent its recurrence
in the future.
Their fear and hatred of
economic freedom and
laissez-faire capitalism, and
their need to be able to
denounce it as the cause of all
economic evil, is so great that
they pretend to themselves and
to their audiences that it
exists in today’s world, in
which it clearly does not exist
even remotely. By making the
claim that laissez faire exists
and is what is responsible for
the problem, they are able to
turn the full force of their
hatred for actual economic
freedom and laissez-faire
capitalism against each and
every sliver of economic freedom
that somehow manages to exist
and which they decide to target.
That sliver, they project, is
part and parcel of the
starvation of the workers in the
inhuman exploitation of labor
that, in their ignorance, they
take for granted is imposed by
capitalists under laissez faire.
Their brainwashed audience, as
much the product of the
contemporary educational system
as they themselves, then quickly
follows suit and obliges their
efforts to arouse hatred.
The result is summed up in words
such as these, which appeared in
one of the same New York
Times articles I quoted
earlier: “`We now have a
collective anger, disgust, over
our whole financial system and
it’s obvious we’re going to get
a regulatory backlash…’” [with]
“a spillover effect to other
industries because voters have
the perception that ‘big
companies are animals and they
need to be put in their cages.’”[10]
In this way the enemies of
capitalism and economic freedom
are able to proceed in their
campaign of economic destruction
and devastation. They use the
accusation of “laissez faire” as
a kind of ratchet for increasing
the government’s power. For
example, in the early 1930s they
accused President Hoover of
following a policy of laissez
faire, even as he intervened in
the economic system to prevent
the fall in wage rates that was
essential to stop a reduced
demand for labor from resulting
in mass unemployment. On the
basis of the mass unemployment
that then resulted from Hoover’s
intervention, which they
succeeded in portraying as
“laissez faire,” they deceived
the country into supporting the
further massive interventions of
the New Deal.
Today, they continue to play the
same game. Always it is laissez
faire that they denounce, and
whose alleged failures they
claim need to be overcome with
yet more government regulations
and controls. Today, the massive
interventions not only of the
New Deal, but also of the Fair
Deal, the New Frontier, the
Great Society, and of all the
administrations since, have been
added to the very major
interventions that existed even
in the 1920s and to which Hoover
very substantially added. And
yet we still allegedly have
laissez faire. It seems that so
long as anyone manages to move
or even breathe without being
under the control of the
government, laissez faire
allegedly continues to exist,
which serves to make necessary
yet still more government
controls.
The logical stopping point of
this process is that one day
everyone will end up being
shackled to a wall, or at the
very least being compelled to do
something comparable to living
in a zip code that matches his
social security number. Then the
government will know who
everyone is, where he is, and
that he can do nothing whatever
without its approval and
permission. And then the world
will be safe from anyone
attempting to do anything that
benefits him and thereby
allegedly harms others. At that
point, the world will enjoy all
the prosperity that comes from
total paralysis.
Notes
[1]
See
http://www.volunteertv.com/international/headlines/29762874.html.
[2]
Steve Lohr, “Intervention Is
Bold, but Has a Basis in
History,” October 14, 2008, p.
A14.
[3]
Jackie Calmes, “Both Sides of
the Aisle See More Regulation,”
October 14, 2008, p. A15.
[4]
Landon Thomas Jr. and Julia
Werdigier, “Britain Takes a
Different Route to Rescue Its
Banks,” October 9, 2007, p. B7.
[5]
I arrive at these figures by
calculating total checking
deposits in January of 2001 and
in August of 2008 as the sum of
those contained in M1, the
“sweep” accounts compiled by the
Federal Reserve Bank of St.
Louis, and money market mutual
fund deposits, both retail and
institutional. From these
respective totals I subtract
total bank reserves as of the
same dates. I then subtract the
result for 2001 from that for
2008 and divide the difference
by the sum calculated for 2001.
[6]
If the creation of checkbook
money in excess of currency
holdings is in fact an attempt
at cheating, as I described it
earlier, then it follows that a
free market would actually
require a 100 percent reserve.
[7]
Joe Nocera, “Shouldn’t We Rescue
Housing?, October 18, 2008, p.
B1.
[8]
David Streitfeld and Gretchen
Morgenson, “The Reckoning,
Building Flawed American
Dreams,” October 19, 2008, p.
A26.
[9]
For a comprehensive refutation
of all aspects of this
intellectual framework, see
George Reisman, Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics
(Ottawa, Illinois: Jameson
Books, 1996), chapters 11, 14,
and passim.
[10]
Jackie Calmes, loc. cit.
*Copyright
© 2008, by George Reisman.
George Reisman, Ph.D. is the
author of
Capitalism: A Treatise on
Economics
(Ottawa, Illinois: Jameson
Books, 1996) and is Pepperdine
University Professor Emeritus of
Economics. His web site is
http://www.capitalism.net/.
A pdf replica of his book can be
downloaded to the reader’s hard
drive simply by clicking on the
book’s title
Capitalism: A Treatise on
Economics
and then saving the file when it
appears on the screen.