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Thought To Ponder

Those who expect to reap the blessings of liberty must undergo the fatigues of supporting it
Thomas Paine

 Stimulus: The Power of Names 
6 February 2009
by Dr. David Friedman

Reprinted with the kind permission of Dr. Friedman. Visit his blog Ideas here...

A well chosen name wins an argument by assuming its conclusion. Label cash subsidies to foreign government as "foreign aid" and who can be so hard hearted as to oppose them. Call subsidies to the public schools "aid to education" and you neatly skip over the question of whether additional spending in the public school system results in more education. Label something "pollution" and is no longer necessary to offer evidence that it is bad, since everyone knows pollution is bad—even thermal pollution, otherwise described as warm water. Occasionally we even get dueling names. Both "right to life" and "pro-choice" are obviously good things; how could anyone be against either?

For a more recent example, consider Obama's economic policy. Everyone—including Obama, back when he was running for President—is against deficit spending. Relabel it "stimulus" and everyone is for it. The label neatly evades the question of whether having the government borrow money and spend it is actually a way of getting out of a recession—a claim for which evidence is distinctly thin. It is stimulus, so obviously it must stimulate.

The success of the relabelling with the general public is not surprising. What is somewhat surprising is the way in which much, although not all, of the economics profession has suddenly adopted as gospel the 1960's Keynesianism that most of the profession rejected several decades back. Everyone talks as though deficit spending was a way, indeed the way, of reducing unemployment, a central recommendation of that theory.

One explanation, of course, is that government spending is popular, taxes are unpopular, so a argument that converts deficits from a problem to a solution has a lot of natural supporters. But that is not the whole story.

Another part of it is that the credit crunch seems to bear at least a family resemblance to what Keynesians expected to see, indeed believed they had seen, as the cause of depressions. Interest rates are so low that holding money makes more sense than investing it, so demand drops, so everything spirals down—underemployment equilibrium due to the economy falling into the liquidity trap. The solution they proposed was fiscal policy. The government borrows the money that was accumulating under mattresses, spends it, gets things going again.

There is, however, one small problem with this account of the present situation. The Keynesian liquidity trap was supposed to be a result of running out of investment opportunities. All the productive things that could be done with capital had been done, so firms were only willing to offer a trivial reward to investors, so nobody bothered to invest.

That story has nothing to do with what actually happened. Firms are eager to borrow money and invest. The problem is not that we have exhausted investment opportunities but that lenders don't know what borrowers, or what intermediaries, to trust, due to a malfunction of the capital markets set off by the bursting of the housing bubble. One can argue about who to blame for that malfunction and what to do about it. But whoever is to blame, it is not a liquidity trap, hence it isn't any reason to resurrect the economic doctrines of fifty years ago.

The first round of "stimulus" proposals, whatever their faults, could at least be defended as a response to the actual problem. Lenders did not know who to trust but did trust the Federal Government. So let the government borrow the money from them, lend it to the firms that needed capital, and so keep those firms from being destroyed by a temporary freezing up of the capital markets. Skeptics might express doubt as to the competence of the government to allocate capital, but at least the policy could be seen as an attempt to get capital allocated.

The current proposal has no such defense. It simply consists of borrowing very large amounts of money and spending it. Insofar as it has any effect on the ability of firms to borrow, it makes it harder, since public borrowing is competing with private borrowing. A dollar I spend in government securities floated to fund the deficit is a dollar I don't invest in a private firm.

See the original post here...

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Comments

Rick - 7 February 2009 08:14
Greed & Free Markets
Greed has always been with us (read corruption in Government and executives with big eyes), and markets have never been free in my lifetime. How about the theories of the Austrian economists Hayek & Mises and more?
Lester R. Cox - 7 February 2009 07:29
The Failure Of Theories
Curious as to what people think are the new answers. Obviously, free markets are not the answer because the players therein have incentives to be greedy, unethical and irrational as evidenced by the current crisis and the compensation packages of executives. And obviously, more Government is not the answer because of the problems of corruption, greed and incompetence. The theory of free markets is practical nonsense because it can be restated as the theory of insiders (using a play on words). We have reached a new place in history – the failure of theories.
G.J.Wirth - 7 February 2009 05:46
IS THERE REAL STIMULUS ?
It seems to have taken the bullying tactics of the White House to get some form of agreement to this so-called ficticious stimulus programme.
Remember in our own context how long it took for the Albany Development to be approved - how long it took for the Ginn sur Mar and the Ritz Charlton hotel on Rose Island to be approved? Years and it will take years for EPA's, Economic impact studys, Zoning etc., to approve any of the projects envisaged by the White House. Also it is as yet unproven that wind,solar or other alternative power sources are viable but they are all included in this spending orgy.
Economics A-B-C simply suggests that it is imperative to rekindle Real Estate business wiith House building and buying and as so many trades are involved this will effectively ignite the economy.
The grave dangers of this proposal is that it will cause inflation - ever increasing Interest rates and high prices an eventuality worse than what is seen to-day.
It is clear the liberals of the Democratic Party saw the opportunity to push their far left socialism to the max and resulting from an ever inceasing public demand of responsible proposals changes had to change trhe original $919 billion package - to me even the $818 billion package is irresponsible and dangerous.
It is so ironic that we now have the Socialist Republic of the United States of America, a process started by the Republicans and now being finished by the Democrates a la the european experience.
The question arises who will buy these Notes ?

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