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October
8, 2007
A Better
Future, If....
by Gary North, Ph.D.
If
Americans do nothing very different, most of us
will have a better economic future, and so will our
children, if we can avoid war.
These five words -- if we can avoid war -- are
crucial. I have in mind war in the broadest sense.
It includes terrorism. If we can somehow recover
peace as a society and not spread war, which will
produce low-intensity, low-tech, low-cost
retaliatory domestic terrorism inside our borders,
economic growth will do its astounding work.
The magnificent fact of the free market system
over the last quarter of a millennium is this:
economic growth compounds. Recessions come and go.
Wars come and go. Inflations come and go. Economic
growth continues. It produces miracles.
Because we do not perceive the daily effects in
our lives of 2% per year economic growth, we need
years of hindsight to see just how far we have
come. We take for granted the effects of that
seemingly insignificant but civilizationally
astounding 2% per year growth.
Most of my readers are middle class. I grew up
in a middle-class household, and while I am no
longer middle class in terms of net worth, my
tastes, outlook, and lifestyle remain middle
class.
Middle-class morality has a tendency over time
to produce economic growth. It is thrift-oriented.
It espouses personal responsibility for one's own
future. It is devoted to education as the way to
advancement. It is monogamous. It produces steadily
rising income. From monks who took vows of poverty
in the medieval era, and whose orders grew rich
over centuries as a result of hard work and
reinvested capital, to immigrant Jews whose sons
became lawyers and accountants, and whose grandsons
became media moguls and real estate tycoons, the
story has been the same: middle-class morality
produces society-wide economic growth and
occasional individual wealth.
Two percent growth per annum, compounded over
two and a half centuries, has produced the modern
world. In contrast, the lifestyle of the rich and
famous rests on capital consumption. Eventually the
heirs run out of money.
My grandparents were born in a world without
automobiles, airplanes, commercial electricity,
radio, and most of the other common features of
middle-class life in the West. Their grandparents
were born in a world without railroads, steamships,
anesthetics, or even something as common as toilet
paper. Their grandparents' grandparents were born
in a world that would have been recognizable by
Moses. This transformation of the world did not
take very long.
Two percent per annum, either up or down, is
barely observable in any area of life. Yet over
decades, such slow, directional change transforms
the social landscape. Middle-class morality can be
maintained in the conditions of compound economic
growth, just as it was in North America from 1750
to 1960.
If this morality declines, growth will decline.
Violence is a corrosive influence on middle-class
morality and lifestyle, as we can see in the West's
inner cities and, for that matter, in the cities in
Iraq.
THE SIGNS OF DECLINE
Every generation has its signs of economic
decline. My parents' generation went through the
Great Depression and then World War II. But
eventually things do change. Even in war-ravaged
Western Europe and Japan, capitalism and peace
combined to produce economic growth on a scale that
restored middle-class living to pre-war conditions
by 1950. Throughout the West and in Japan in 1955,
things were much better than in 1938. Only in the
Communist world did economic growth lag. Where men
had the economic liberty to make their own
decisions with their own skills and money, they
prospered.
There is no doubt in my mind that the American
economy is facing a series of severe challenges
that will cost most Americans the fulfillment of
some of their most cherished dreams. One of these
dreams is comfortable retirement at the expense of
the U.S. government. But that dream deserves to
die. Another dream is the idea of the typical
American as the richest average Joe on earth -- a
common dream of children in my youth. Urban Asians
are catching up fast. My grandchildren will live in
a world in which Americans will not be kings of the
hill. But so what? If the rest of the world catches
up by way of increased productivity, consumers
around the world will benefit. It is better to be
middle class in a rich world than upper class in a
poor world. It is far better to be a two-eyed
average Joe than a one-eyed man in the kingdom of
the blind.
The addiction of Americans to consumer debt has
limits: insolvency. The growth-stifling effects of
government regulation of the economy have limits:
the competence of bureaucratic regulators to pursue
their plans. The growth-hampering effects of high
marginal taxation has limits: the unwillingness of
American voters, so far, to turn this country into
Scandinavia. The United States government absorbs
about 25% of American output. This percentage has
not changed significantly in several decades. It is
too high, but limits placed on new spending by
rising Social Security and Medicare costs will keep
new programs from becoming budget-busters. The
existing old-age programs will succeed at busting
the budget all by themselves.
Tax cuts would help. Stable money would help. A
wave of future-orientation would help most of all:
a widespread desire to invest rather than the
desire to borrow. We are unlikely to get and keep
any of the three over the next two decades. Still,
the fact remains that the ability of politicians to
extract significant new revenues out of the wallets
of American taxpayers is limited. The bond market
is the hammer, and Washington does not hold it. The
central banks of Japan and China hold it.
So, we should maintain an attitude of long-run
optimism, on this condition: if we can avoid war.
The problem is, we are becoming more likely to see
the war brought home to us. The political-strategic
promise of 2003 that war in Iraq and Afghanistan
will keep the terrorists "over there" was never
realistic. Terrorists are ever more mobile. Our
southern border is as porous as ever. Finally, the
costs of effective terrorist violence are
constantly falling because of the very productivity
of technology and capitalism.
OVER HERE
My father was a great fan of George M. Cohan, so
I grew up with Cohan's music. Like most Cohan fans,
he loved "Over There." I can think of no song that
more encapsulates the message of America as the
liberating policeman of the world. "For the yanks
are coming, the yanks are coming, there's
drum-drum-drumming everywhere." There is, indeed:
on approximately 750 military bases in over 100
countries. Each country contains prospective
terrorists who want revenge for our being over
there.
The voters' assumption has been that our troops
will keep terrorists occupied over there. But why
should we think that all terrorists with a grudge
against America are occupied over there? Islam is
an international religion. It has 1.2 billion
adherents. It does not take a large percentage to
put together a team of terrorists who could bring
the U.S. economy to its knees.
I think 12 men could do it. That is not a large
percentage.
We live in an era of asymmetric warfare. Small
groups of mobile, dedicated terrorists can create
havoc with large organizations, as we saw on 9-11.
Add to this a desire for revenge, coupled with a
particular variety of Islamic warriorism.
In June, 2007, an important article appeared in
Military Review. The author was Thomas
Hammes. Col. Hammes is a retired Marine. He is the
author of a book on 4th-generation warfare,
The
Sling and the Stone (2004). The title
refers back to David's use of a sling and a stone
against Goliath. That was surely low-tech
technology warfare. Its effect on Goliath was to
destroy the confidence of the opposing military
forces, who fled.
Fourth-generation warfare has to do with moral
confrontation. Any technology used is a means to an
end. If a group can undermine the enemy's will to
resist, Sun Tzu-like, it can achieve a victory. If
it can break the enemy's economic system, so much
the better.
Hammes' article is titled, "Fourth Generation
Warfare Evolves, Fifth Emerges." It deserves your
consideration. The fact that it was published in
Military Review is also worth considering.
THE NATION-STATE IS THE TARGET
Hammes writes that modern warfare has moved from
organizations that are loyal to a nation-state to
those that are loyal to a cause. They are likely to
use their resources to attack a nation-state that
is perceived as damaging the cause. The members of
these organizations see their cause as a moral
cause. This leads to fanaticism. The organization
does not feel restrained by conventional standards
of morality. Hammes could have used the example of
the 9-11 hijackers. They cared nothing about the
lives of those who were on the planes or in the
towers. The Geneva Convention meant nothing to
them.
Matching this transformation is the problem
Hammes calls "no return address." The 9-11
terrorists are classic examples. They were mostly
Saudis, but this fact did not lead to an invasion
of Saudi Arabia by the United States. Instead, it
led to an invasion of Afghanistan, followed by an
invasion of Iraq. The supposed mastermind, Osama
bin Laden, is still at large.
In the aftermath of a successful terrorist
attack using low-cost biological weapons of mass
destruction, what could the President do? The
perpetrators are unknown. Who put them up to it? If
the technology is off-the-shelf technology
available anywhere on earth, how could the sources
of the devastation be traced back to a
nation-state?
If the cause is international, and if the target
is internationally perceived as a local invader,
the recruits can come from anywhere. If they speak
the same international language, such as Arabic,
this identification offers nothing specific to the
revenge-seeking government. The victim can strike
out blindly, but this undermines its legitimacy in
the eyes of the new victims. A new pool of recruits
appears overnight.
THE POWER OF PRICE COMPETITION
First, the capitalist system is driven by price
competition. Second, there is a fundamental law of
economics that says, "When the price of anything
drops, more is demanded." Col. Hammes did not
mention this law. It seems applicable to the
process he describes.
He focuses on a potential weapon of mass
destruction: a laboratory-created strain of the
smallpox virus. He says that he could have picked
another virus, but smallpox is convenient. Here is
the basic story.
He begins by reporting the findings of Dr. Craig
Venter. Dr. Venter and his team have synthesized a
specific virus by using readily available base
pairs. He used these base pairs to synthesize a
completely different virus. The components are
commercially available. There are no restrictions
on their purchase. This was an expensive
experiment, but he said that in less than a decade,
a competent graduate student in a university
laboratory will be able to achieve a similar
synthesis.
This experiment so impressed a science writer
named Paul Boutin that he went back into a biology
lab. He had not worked in one since high school.
There, with assistance from a biologist who kept
him away from life-threatening experiments, he
created a glowing yeast. He used the same
techniques that could be used to create a smallpox
virus.
It turns out that the smallpox genome has been
published on the Web. Boutin found it within 15
minutes.
So, the fact that smallpox no longer exists
outside of specialized research laboratories that
deal with deadly viruses is no longer a major
restraining factor on its reappearance in the
general population.
Hammes
then sums up the present situation. Here, we
see the power of technology coupled with the free
market's price competition.
- The nucleotides to make smallpox can be
purchased from a variety of suppliers without
identity verification.
-
- Smallpox has about 200,000 base pairs. DNA
with up to 300,000 base pairs has already been
successfully synthesized.
-
- An Australian research team heated up
mousepox virus by activating a single gene. The
modification increased its lethality from 30
percent to over 80 percent. It is even lethal to
60 percent of an immunized population. They
posted their result on the Internet. It turns
out smallpox has the same gene.
-
- The cost of creating a virus is dropping
exponentially. If Carlson's Curve continues to
hold true, the cost of a base pair will drop to
between 1 and 10 cents within the decade. Thus,
a researcher could order all the necessary base
pairs to create a smallpox virus for between
$2,000 and $20,000. The equipment he needs to
assemble the virus will cost an additional
$10,000.
Hammes then refers to a simulated smallpox
terrorist attack that was conducted in the summer
of 2001 at Johns Hopkins University. The list of
observers was high level. It was called Dark
Victory. The attack was assumed to involve three
states. The source was unknown. With the incubation
period of nine days, there was no way to trace its
origins.
The simulation covered only 13 days. Then it was
mercifully shut down. Of course, in the real world,
there would be no shutdown after two weeks. It
would spread. Here
is a summary of the simulation's findings on
biological warfare (BW).
- 1) An attack on the United States with
biological weapons could threaten vital national
security interests. Massive civilian casualties,
breakdown in essential institutions, violation
of democratic processes, civil disorder, loss of
confidence in government and reduced US
strategic flexibility abroad are among the ways
a biological attack might compromise US
security.
-
- 2) Current organizational structures and
capabilities are not well suited for the
management of a BW attack. Major "fault lines"
exist between different levels of government
(federal, state, and local), between government
and the private sector, among different
institutions and agencies, and within the public
and private sector. These "disconnects" could
impede situational awareness and compromise the
ability to limit loss of life, suffering, and
economic damage.
-
- 3) There is no surge capability in the US
health care and public health systems, or the
pharmaceutical and vaccine industries. This
institutionally limited surge capacity could
result in hospitals being overwhelmed and
becoming inoperable; could impede public health
agencies' analysis of the scope, source and
progress of the epidemic, the ability to educate
and reassure the public, and the capacity to
limit causalities and the spread of
disease.
-
- 4) Dealing with the media will be a major,
immediate challenge for all levels of
government. Information management and
communication (e.g., dealing with the press
effectively, communication with citizens,
maintaining the information flows necessary for
command and control at all institutional levels)
will be a critical element in crisis/consequence
management.
Hammes continues. The contagion could be spread
merely by having a few infected people get on
several airliners bound for the United States. The
numbers: 3 million infected, one million dead, in
25 states. In 13 days.
How's that for a suicide attack?
What would you do about it on the day you hear
about a smallpox outbreak? Remember, there is a
nine-day incubation period. On the day you saw a
report on the Web regarding an outbreak of
smallpox, what steps would you take? I know what I
would do. Before. For my recommended ten steps,
click
here.
CONCLUSION
We live in a society that is rich because of the
division of labor. The problem we will be facing
for many years is simple to describe: blowback. The
decentralized systems that keep us alive rely on
such factors as a fractional reserve banking that
is licensed by the government, a public health
system run by various governments, a
government-operated road system that has
concentrated populations, and government-funded
public utilities.
In those end-of-the-world movies about a planet
or meteor heading for the earth, the entire
economic system functions normally until the
handful of chosen ones board the escape rocket
(When
Worlds Collide), or get on the
rocket that will blow up the meteorite
(Armageddon),
or go to work on the coasts, despite the inevitable
tidal wave (Deep
Impact). It is all nonsense. The
division of labor would collapse within weeks of
the announcement. That is why there will be no
announcement.
Peace is indispensable to the maintenance of
social order, which is in turn indispensable to the
division of labor. Our government's senior
officials for over a century have failed to
understand this. Our foreign policy has reflected
this: "Over There."
Today, the price competition of the free market,
when coupled with advancements in biological
science, is moving toward blowback: "Over Here."
The politicians have not counted the costs of their
actions. Neither have the voters. They have
underestimated the cost of worldwide
intervention.
One more time: "When the price of anything
drops, more is demanded." This includes high-risk
foreign policy that is perceived as low risk.
Gary
North Archive
Dr.
Gary North earned a Ph.D. in history and is one of
America's keenest economic analysts and
commentators. He supports the Austrian school of
economics and is a previous assistant to
libertarian congressman Dr. Ron Paul. Visit his
website at http://garynorth.com.
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