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October
17, 2008
Capitalism
Without Capital?
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
It
has been long understood that our federal
government is going deeper into debt, consistently
raising the debt ceiling and demonstrating no
fiscal restraint. In recent years, debt ceiling
increases have been placed in "must pass"
legislation as a means to guarantee that
Republicans as well as Democrats would vote for
them when Congress was under Republican
control.
We also know our nation's "negative savings
rate" reflects the habits of private citizens,
showing those habits to be not tremendously
different than the habits of the public sector.
Yet, the signs of decline are becoming ever more
apparent. So apparent, in fact, that it seems
unlikely that bailouts or other gimmicks will have
even short-term success. More inflation, and
creating moral hazard by bailing out egregious
offenders, is a recipe for disaster. These
activities can seem to provide some short-term
relief, but it seems we are now at a significant
crisis point, where monetary policy gimmicks don't
provide the band-aids they did in the past.
Not only is our nation on the verge of
bankruptcy, but so are its people and private
institutions. We are now repeatedly hearing about
businesses "needing to access the credit market to
make payroll." This is an unmistakable sign of more
dire consequences ahead for the economy. If
businesses must borrow just to make payroll, this
is evidence of a severe undercapitalization that
cannot be sustained, even for the short run.
Couple these facts with items such as the
explosion of the "payday loan" industry and the
unmasking of the false sense of economic well-being
is nearly complete. These payday loan companies use
preferred access to easy credit to inject cash into
the hands of the working poor. They are nearly
always set up in lower-income neighborhoods. These
people, who are struggling to buy food and pay
rent, get addicted to the credit drug. Their
standard of living is only further depressed by the
interest payments on these loans that make them
profitable to their providers. Thus, the recipients
are left even less capable of paying for items such
as food and housing in the long run, without using
this credit again and again.
These people are often the very ones being paid
by businesses who "borrow to make payroll." This is
the dark underbelly of the fiat money,
borrow-and-spend economy this nation has been
building. As the government takes over more and
more functions of the economy many see the rise of
socialism as an antidote to this failure of
"capitalism." However, the fact remains that our
economy has been increasingly running on debt, not
capital. Capitalism does not exist without capital
and debt is not, has never been and will never be a
form of capital. Only now are we seeing the more
dire implications of an economy without
capital.
Paul
Archive
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican
member of Congress from Texas.
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