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October
1, 2008
Blaming
the Victim: The Free Market
by Gary North, Ph.D.
The
economy is in a recession. The bugaboo word,
"depression," is at last being used by high-level
officials, economists, and talking heads on TV.
This is the first time in my lifetime that people
of influence have used the word, except in this
sentence: "A depression is no longer possible
because of central bank policy and government
regulation."
Secretary of the Treasury Paulson followed the
Keynesian and Chicago School party lines on this
issue until September 18, 2008. Then, out of the
blue, he announced the need for a $700 billion
bailout. The implication was clear: depression is
knocking at the door. Like the Big Bad Wolf in the
ancient Disney cartoon, the depression threatened
to huff and puff and blow our house in.
Congress is now debating whether or not to pass
legislation that will enable Paulson to write
checks to American banks and financial institutions
to enable them to fulfill the highly leveraged
contracts that they voluntarily agreed to.
Well, this is not quite true. Congress is not
debating whether or not to pass the legislation. It
is debating about how many new restrictions will be
placed on the capital markets, and how much pork
can be squeezed out of the Bush Administration as a
quid pro quo. Obama is pushing for a new Section 8
housing subsidy: letting people who cannot pay
their mortgages remain in their homes at taxpayers'
expense.
This entire charade is really about this issue:
contracts. How much will it cost taxpayers to
enable people who made binding legal contracts to
now escape their obligations? Some of these people
are legal fictions: corporations. Others are real
people: families. They have made contracts with
each other, and now they all seek to escape the
terms of these contracts, yet also be allowed to
get the benefits. Corporations will stay in
business, and homeowners will stay in their
homes.
I don't think most homeowners who cannot pay
will be allowed to stay in their homes. But large
financial corporations who cannot pay will be
allowed to stay in business.
THE GREAT DEBATE
I am glad that Congress is debating this issue.
It reminds the public about just how bad the mess
is. But I do not think that Congress will send
Bernanke and Paulson packing. From what I can see
from the brief televised snippets of the
cross-examination of Bernanke and Paulson, the
Senate is ready to capitulate. But, in an election
year, the Senators are going through the motions in
order to persuade the voters that the Senate has
done due diligence in examining the claims of
Paulson and Bernanke. It is a charade, but what
isn't in Washington?
Congress insists that all future transactions of
the banks be transparent and open and fair and low
risk and just good for everyone. It does this every
time there is a crisis to bail out. Then there is
another wave of profits followed by a crisis.
We have had the Federal Reserve System since
1914. We have had extensive Federal regulation of
the securities markets since 1933. The result? We
now need to bail out the financial system by $700
billion, in addition to the $85 billion AIG bailout
that was announced two days before Paulson made his
announcement about the need for $700 billion more.
This was two weeks after Paulson, on his own
authority, announced that the Federal government
would absorb $5 trillion worth of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac debt. Yet we are assured, "this is the
last time. Congress is making sure that this is the
last time."
It is all a charade. The voters really do not
care. The voters do not understand the complexity
of these issues. Why should they? The bankers and
the largest insurance company did not understand
the complexity of these issues, and they put their
firms in the hole by at least $800 billion. The
economists who created the mathematical models that
made possible these preposterous, money-losing
contracts clearly did not understand the complexity
of these issues. The two Nobel prize-winning
economists who created the sophisticated
mathematical models that bankrupted Long-Term
Capital Management in 1998 did not understand the
complexity of these issues.
The reason why bankers do this is that they want
short-term profits. They believe that they are
masters of the universe. They believe that
mathematics will save them. They believe they can
use highly sophisticated mathematical models, which
all of their competitors use, and still extract
billions of dollars of profit from these models,
despite the competition.
Why were they able to extract these enormous
profits? Because they ignored the economic effects
of a reduction in the rate of monetary inflation by
the Federal Reserve System. None of them understood
the Austrian theory of the business cycle. So, they
loaded up on enormous quantities of highly
leveraged debt, and they skimmed off the profits
from the front end of the contracts.
Now these contracts have gone the other way. The
entire financial structure is dependent upon the
fulfillment of these contracts, but these contracts
cannot be fulfilled by the people who wrote them.
So, the people who wrote them went to Secretary of
the Treasury Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman
Bernanke and moaned and groaned and screamed and
begged and pleaded: "Give us the money we need to
fulfill our contracts." That is exactly what
Paulson and Bernanke are doing with Congress. They
are acting as the representatives of the
profit-seeking, bonehead bankers who loaded up on
debt, skimmed off the front-end commissions, and
have now gone away, with tens of millions of
dollars in their pockets. Now the taxpayers will be
saddled with the obligations to the tune of almost
$2 trillion.
It is always this way. This is what Federal
regulation means. Federal regulation creates rules
that can be circumvented by any banker, lawyer, and
accountant who want to get really creative. When
they get creative, they load up on massive debt,
and then they stick the taxpayers with the bill,
either indirectly through Federal Reserve inflation
or directly through the Treasury. It has been this
way ever since 1933. As the regulatory structure
has increased its control over the financial
markets, the financial markets have found ways of
beating the system. But they all depend on one
assumption: the United States government will
intervene in a crisis and load up on massive debt
in the name of the People in order to bail out
financial institutions that say they are going
bankrupt. The entire system depends on the fact
that the government will take over the obligations
of big-time losers. This is called "moral hazard,"
and it has been a well-known phenomenon since the
middle of the 19th century. The phrase is not
recent. It is over 150 years old.
Now the politicians are going to flex their
muscles. They stand in front of the cameras and
tell the voters next time it will be different.
Next time, we will impose restrictions on these
greedy capitalists. "We will make certain that they
don't get lots of profits." It is all a charade.
Yes, they will pass legislation. This legislation
will create careers for high-paid Wall Street
lawyers and well-paid government agency lawyers.
The lawyers will figure out ways to get around the
regulations, just as they always have since
1933.
There is no question that these regulations will
hamper the free market economy. It will transfer
oligopoly status to large firms that can afford to
hire lawyers that get paid $500 an hour to identify
loopholes in the regulatory system. Small
businesses will be penalized. Small businesses are
where most of the economic growth originates. It
will become more difficult for small businesses to
raise capital.
Congress is insisting that senior managers will
no longer be paid high salaries. Well, most senior
managers were not paid high salaries. They were
given stock options. So, they ran up the value of
the stock options by using corporate money to buy
shares of stock in the open market. Instead of
developing new, creative ways of serving the
consumer, they did what any self-respecting,
self-interested official would do. They saw their
opportunities and they took them.
They have now gone away, with tens of millions
of dollars or hundreds of millions of dollars in
their various financial accounts. This is why it is
so important the government intervene to bail out
the financial system. If the government did not do
this, the former heads of these corporations, who
took their money and left, might lose a lot of
money. They don't want to lose money. So, Congress
will intervene to make certain that they don't lose
any money. Congress will do this in the name of the
People.
This is called locking the barn door after the
horses have escaped. The horses left behind a
massive pile of droppings. Congress is going to use
taxpayers' money to clean out the Augean stables.
Meanwhile, the guys who got rich are gone, and the
guys who replaced them will find it more difficult
to get rich. But they will find ways to do this
eventually. Their lawyers will find ways. Then,
once again, Congress will be facing the need to
bail out the financial markets.
THE FEDERAL RESERVE
This is inescapable, because the Federal Reserve
System has the power to inflate at any time, for
any reason. The Federal Reserve System controls the
money supply. The chairman of the Federal Reserve
System always believes that he can outsmart the
financial markets. He believes that he and his
staff know what is good for the economy. So, they
regulate short-term interest rates by creating
money at varying rates of expansion.
The Federal Reserve System is at the heart of
the American economy, and it is a
government-protected monopoly. The people inside
the FED do not get rich, but they gain enormous
power. People who possess power like to use power.
This is why they manipulate the American economy.
They get their jollies by directing the economy in
ways they think the economy should go.
Recently, the economy went over a cliff. Anyway,
this is what the Secretary of the Treasury and the
chairman of the Federal Reserve System are telling
Congress. Whether it is true or not, no one knows.
The reason no one knows is because the complexity
of the system is so great that no one can possibly
know. This is why we have free markets: to
distribute risk and to decentralize information.
The problem is, in the field of monetary policy, we
do not have a free market. We have a
government-created, government-protected cartel.
From time to time, the cartel of commercial banks
loses money, and it goes to the Federal Reserve
System and to the United States Treasury to tap
into the taxpayers' accounts. Congress debates, and
then it capitulates.
The failure of the financial markets is being
blamed on free enterprise. Almost nobody blames it
on Alan Greenspan. Nobody blames it on the Federal
Reserve System itself. Nobody blames the regulatory
structure that has created this monster. No, they
blame the free market. They blame de-regulation
under Reagan. There was de-regulation under
Clinton, too. His Secretary of the Treasury had
been CEO at Goldman Sachs, just as Bush's is. No
matter.
The critics blame greedy capitalists.
Capitalists are indeed greedy. They are always
greedy. The question then is this: Why does their
greed lead to financial disasters during one period
of time? The answer is monetary policy. This is the
Austrian theory of the business cycle. But hardly
anybody believes it, because if they did believe
it, they would have to abolish the Federal Reserve
System and the entire regulatory structure of the
Federal Government over the financial markets. They
would have to revert to a system in which contracts
are in force. Nobody wants to live in that system
who is in a position to milk the existing system by
violating contracts.
We are going to see the banks come back again
for another round of bailouts. The recession is
going to intensify. There will be more
bankruptcies. There will be more unexpected crises.
The Treasury will come back again, hat in hand,
begging for more money, and insisting that the
worst is over, that this time it will be different.
The worst is not over, and next time will be no
different.
The voters never figure it out. The regulatory
system and central banking system are deliberately
complex, which keeps the voters from figuring it
all out. The problem, above all, is the Federal
Reserve System. Yet this institution is considered
sacrosanct. Congress is listening to Bernanke as
though Bernanke and his predecessor were not the
primary cause of the disaster which Congress is now
expected to bail out with taxpayers' money.
Paulson assured us that the financial system had
no major problem. He insisted that it was safe and
sound. Yet, somehow, in just one weekend, the
system bordered on collapse, according to Paulson.
Paulson and Bernanke were clueless, yet Congress is
listening to them, praising them as great leaders,
and vowing that this will never happen again.
Paulson and Bernanke say they want more regulatory
power. Surprise, surprise. Everybody in Washington
wants more regulatory power. This time, the Federal
Reserve System and the Treasury Department will get
what they want. Why will they get it? Because they
have jointly overseen the collapse of the financial
structure. Anybody who oversees a collapse of the
financial structure, who then goes before Congress
saying capitalism has failed, is going to be
granted more regulatory power.
REDUCED GROWTH
The free market will be less free as a result of
the shenanigans of the Federal Reserve System and
the Treasury Department. The voters will capitulate
because the politicians insist there is no other
alternative. The politicians will insist this
because they have been told that this is the case
by the boneheads who created the crisis. And so it
goes. It will not be different.
Economic growth will be slower because money
will flow into Treasury debt rather than
businesses.
The recession will last longer because of this
intervention. The bad investments will stay on the
books. Huge liabilities will remain. The projects
that should not have been begun will be completed.
They will lose money.
When the government intervenes to set the terms
of exchange rather than enforce contracts, economic
growth is reduced. Responsibility is transferred to
regulators, who then go to the politicians and
insist on more taxpayer money to bail out the
system and more regulatory power. The politicians
comply.
There is no organized opposition to this
expansion of power. Even free market economists
come around. "One last time!" "This time, it's
necessary." Why? Because on one issue, they are
agreed: the need for a government-licensed central
bank. They all believe that the free market is not
capable of developing a monetary system based on
consumer choice and the enforcement of
contracts.
Well, not quite all. The Austrian School
doesn't. But this is a fringe group in the
profession. Nobody pays attention to it.
CONCLUSION
We are witnessing the re-regulation of American
capital. There was a brief loosening of the strings
attached, but investment banks (R.I.P.) and
financial institutions misused the system, knowing
that Uncle Sugar would bail them out. A few did not
get out in time. Bear Stearns didn't. Merrill Lynch
didn't. Lehman Brothers Holdings didn't. But
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley got the government
to allow them to switch from investment banks (less
regulation) to commercial banks (regulation and
bailout money) on Friday, September 19. This let
them survive.
We have moved away from somewhat freer markets.
In the process, critics of capitalism have been
handed a great weapon: "See what the free market
did. We must save capitalism from itself." It is
the same old refrain. It goes back to Franklin
Roosevelt's first term.
The noose will tighten.
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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