The Rise and Fall of Hope and Change

The Rise and Fall of Hope and Change



Alexis de Toqueville

The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money.
Alexis de Tocqueville

The United States Capitol Building

The United States Capitol Building

The Constitutional Convention

The Constitutional Convention

The Continental Congress

The Continental Congress

George Washington at Valley Forge

George Washington at Valley Forge


Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Why Things Will Not Get Better

From The American Thinker:

May 25, 2010


Why Things Will Not Get Better

Monty Pelerin



From Financial Armageddon comes a reasonable description of what has motivated economic policy during this financial crisis:





Throughout the financial crisis, policymakers have focused on keeping things afloat until the storm passes. They've spent vast sums of taxpayer funds trying to jumpstart growth until the economy is back on track. They've encouraged people to keep the faith until businesses start hiring again.





This governmental response is rather Pavlovian. It has been hard-wired into political DNA for the past 50 years. If you have a problem: spend, stimulate, run deficits, hope the recession goes away and then take credit for saving the economy when it does.



All recessions are self-correcting so long as prices are not interfered with. There is no need, other than the twin political desires of increasing power and the White Knight syndrome, for the government to do anything. The government, like the rooster who believes his crowing brings the sun up each morning, is delusional or at least expects you to be delusional enough to believe they are responsible for the sun rising again.



In reality, the rooster's delusion is harmless but the politician's placebo is not. Each intervention shrinks the private sector relative to the public sector. That ensures slower future economic growth because the government produces nothing. As a result, there are fewer productive people supporting more unproductive people. The economy becomes structurally damaged and cannot grow at normal rates under such circumstances.



Each intervention makes it more difficult for markets to work properly, ensuring that slowdowns are more frequent and exaggerated. These interventions damage the long-term viability of an economy. The developed economies of the Western world are now laden with cancerous debt, both public and private, as a result of the distortions of the past 50 years. This debt can no longer be serviced.





But what happens if all those "untils" turn out to be wide of the mark? What if the carnage we've experienced so far is structural, not cyclical? If that's the case, then Americans are going to find that instead of experiencing better times ahead, they are going to be much worse off than they were -- or are.





We are at the point where the "untils" are now wide of the mark. The Ponzi scheme known as Keynesian economics and the welfare state has passed its sustainability point. The damage has been accumulating since the late 1970s. Short-term political considerations have produced structural problems that cannot be corrected by applying more of the harmful policies. "... Americans are going to find that instead of experiencing better times ahead, they are going to be much worse off than they were -- or are."



The Piper is now presenting his bill for the past transgressions. Fifty years of transgressions is not an easy bill to pay.



Monty Pelerin at www.economicnoise.com montypelerin@gmail.com





Posted at 08:49 AM

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