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Perhaps the greatest modern champion of central
economic planning was the 20th century English economist John Maynard Keynes.
Keynes, who was a political socialist and for a time a central banker,
advocated the idea that the government should play a large, active role in
the economy. Among the consequences of Keynes’
economic theories, whether intended or unintended, is the fact that Western
economies today are characterized by large, central governments, central
banks and massive debts.
According to Dr. Andrew Gelman,
Professor of Statistics and Political Science at Columbia University,
“the law of unintended consequences is what happens when a simple
system tries to regulate a complex system. The political system is simple. It
operates with limited information (rational ignorance), short time horizons,
low feedback, and poor and misaligned incentives. Society, in contrast, is a
complex, evolving, high-feedback, incentive-driven system. When a simple
system tries to regulate a complex system you often get unintended
consequences.” Professor Gelman’s
statement seems equally apropos to central banking.
Government policies based on Keynesian theories and
the institution of central banking form a nexus of central economic planning.
Control of the central planning process is a winner-take-all proposition for
businesses. In the U.S., the result is an unholy alliance of the U.S. federal
government, the Federal Reserve (along with the largest U.S. banks) and the
largest U.S. corporations. The logical chain beginning with Keynes’
fundamental idea that government, supported by a central bank, should play a
large and active role in the economy sets the stage for a centrally planned
economy and ultimately produces a corporate state.
The U.S. economy is locked in a downward spiral of
economic decline. By growing in size, and by engaging in ever larger economic
interventions, the U.S. federal government became itself a material cause of
the recession that began in 2007. By attempting to grow the economy through
monetary expansion, i.e., consumer spending fueled by debt, the Federal
Reserve destroyed savings and fueled a series of disastrous economic bubbles,
culminating in the housing bubble. At the same time, the largest U.S. banks
engaged in reckless lending and high-stakes gambling on hundreds of trillions
in over the counter (OTC) derivatives. OTC derivatives, which amount to
risky, largely un-backed wagers, were the root cause of the “too big to
fail” doctrine that has virtually bankrupted Western governments since
2008. By seeking ever greater influence over Washington D.C. and by seeking
to generate higher profits by cutting production in the U.S., the largest
U.S. corporations undermined the U.S. market and economy. The U.S. federal
government did virtually nothing to prevent the destructive developments
because of the influence of the largest U.S. corporations.
Following Keynesian economic theories, the policy
response of the U.S. federal government to the recession that began in 2007
and of the financial crisis that began in 2008 was to expand the government
further and at a more rapid pace. In other words, some of the root causes of
the economic imbalances that lead to the recession and financial crisis (the
relative size of the government and the resulting economic distortions) were
compounded. As a consequence, the so-called “double dip
recession” in the U.S. that began in the second half of 2011 will be
longer and ultimately more severe than the economic downturn of 2007-2009.
The Baltic Dry Index (BDI) indicates international
shipping returning to crisis levels. Since the U.S. is the world’s
largest economy and has a large trade deficit, the BDI suggests that the U.S.
is in a recession.
Keynes and Leviathan: The Size of the State
Originally a sea monster referred to in the Bible
and, in demonology, one of the seven princes of Hell, as well as its
gatekeeper, the name Leviathan was adopted by the English philosopher Thomas
Hobbes to refer to an artificial political order, i.e., to the institution of
the state. Hobbes was concerned with the distinction between individual
rights and the powers of sovereign governments and he elaborated the idea of
the social contract. When a government taxes its citizens, it implicitly
asserts the right of the government over the property rights of individuals
and presupposes that the government can make better use of economic resources
than households, individual entrepreneurs, businesses and private investors.
In theory, the government’s use of economic
resources accomplishes goals that privately owned businesses cannot, such as
national defense or emergency response services, i.e., things that, by their
nature, are not economically productive or profitable but still necessary for
society. In contrast, embarking upon idealistic projects such as
“creating jobs” or “expanding home ownership”
encroaches on the productive elements of the economy. However, governments
are inefficient compared to privately owned businesses due to the absence of
competition. Further, the record of history suggests an inability on the part
of central planners to make superior economic decisions.
Government encroachment on the private sector, like
a self fulfilling prophecy, often magnifies the reasons
why government intervention was originally believed to be necessary. For
example, when the U.S. federal government became involved in education
through federally guaranteed student loans, the result was that the cost of a
college education rose towards the limit of what students could borrow and
repay during their careers simply because the loans were guaranteed by the
government. The guarantees produced more and riskier loans, larger loans and
higher education costs.
When the U.S. federal government promoted home
ownership for minorities and the poor, mortgage loan guarantees resulted in
higher home prices and contributed to the sub-prime lending debacle where
banks originated loans to unqualified borrowers in order to sell them to government
sponsored entities (GSEs), i.e., to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and to
investors as collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and other mortgage backed
securities (MBS).
Banks were certainly to blame for knowingly making
bad loans, which is fraud, but the conditions that made the problem possible
existed substantially because of government intervention in the housing
market, i.e., opening the door to fraud was an unintended consequence of
policies intended to increase lending to unqualified, low income borrowers.
Of course, the U.S. federal government did not compel lenders to commit
fraud, thus accountability for the U.S. mortgage disaster is shared by the
federal government, which interfered with the free market, pursued misguided
policies and failed in terms of regulatory oversight and law enforcement, and
by banks, which engaged in widespread mortgage related fraud.
Governments redistribute wealth and manipulate
economic activity through taxes, subsidies, guarantees, regulations and so
forth, but they do not produce new wealth. Government spending may be for
good purposes, or at least stem from good intentions, but it unavoidably
favors businesses with close ties to the government over those that are taxed
but that do not benefit. Despite the theoretically higher moral purposes of
lofty government undertakings, government programs that overlap the private
sector divert economic resources to businesses that have the favor of
politicians minus the cost of government, thus producing economic distortions
and a net loss of wealth for society.
The Rahn curve is an
economic theory proposing that there is an optimal level of government
spending, 15% to 25% of gross domestic product (GDP), to maximize economic
growth.
As the government grows larger, economic growth is
curtailed and, eventually, the economy contracts, crushed under the burden of
government.
As the government grows in size relative to the
economy, not only is economic growth compromised, but the potential for, and
the cost of, government waste, fraud and abuse increases.
How the Government Destroys Jobs
While politicians extol the theoretical benefits of
ever more government control of the economy, e.g., through increased
regulation, from the standpoint of individual entrepreneurs, businesses and
private investors, the government is a nuisance, an impediment to wealth
creation, and the source of countless costs and risks. The larger the
government becomes relative to the size of the economy, the more it tends to
discourage economic activity. Although roughly 70% of U.S. jobs are created
by small businesses, ranging from family owned businesses to high technology
startups, the burden of government falls disproportionately on them because
they have fewer resources with which to administer and to demonstrate
compliance with government regulations.
When large companies are audited or investigated by
any of several government agencies, their accounting, legal and compliance
departments are well equipped to deal with such matters. However, when a
small company faces the same hurdles or seeks government permits, licenses or
certifications, its operations are directly impacted and the associated
accounting, legal and regulatory compliance costs can cause the business to
lose money or to fail. In the event of an audit or investigation, small
business owners in the U.S. generally seek to comply immediately and often
pay fines or penalties without contest in order to end the government’s
interference. While large companies can afford to dispute the government,
small businesses face the equivalent of extortion.
As a practical matter, small businesses in the U.S.
are permitted to operate at the sole discretion of government bureaucrats
that can effectively shut down small businesses without any evidence of
wrongdoing. Setting aside the fact that small business owners live in
constant and well justified fear of their own government, the result is a
stifling of economic activity and a net loss of jobs. For example, traditional
small businesses in the U.S., i.e., sole proprietorships, increasingly avoid
hiring employees.
Free market competition and the inherent uncertainty
of economic conditions provide ample risk for startup businesses. A
disproportionately large government relative to the size of the economy
damages economic activity and discourages investment in new businesses. The
aggregate overhead of government regulations and regulatory compliance, along
with taxes and potential penalties, e.g., the 2010 Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”),
increases business costs, amplifies business risks and further increases the
burden of regulatory compliance. The result of systematically increasing the
costs and risks of doing business—in lock step with the size of
government—is to reduce the rate of business formation and to encourage
investors to look elsewhere to find returns.
If the U.S. government, currently almost 45% of GDP,
desired to create jobs, the correct policy would be to greatly reduce the
countless regulations, taxes and fees that encumber small businesses. The
path to job creation is for the government to reduce job destruction. Since
no political will to reduce the size of the government exists, however,
continued shrinking real GDP and permanent workforce reduction can be
expected.
Keynes and Ziz: Money Out
of Thin Air
Ziz, the beast of
the air, is a giant griffin-like bird in Jewish mythology large enough to
blot out the sun with its wingspan. Central banks, such as the Federal
Reserve, are examples of central economic planning, i.e., they control the
money supply and exercise centralized control over the value and cost of
money through interest rates, bank reserve ratios, monetary inflation and by
other means. In contrast to the government’s central planning for the
putative public good, the Federal Reserve engages in central planning for the
benefit of banks. Like the U.S. federal government, the Federal Reserve,
through monetary mechanisms, distorts spending and investment patterns,
redistributes wealth and preempts the financial and economic decisions of
households, individual entrepreneurs, businesses and private investors.
When a central bank increases the money supply
beyond the level necessary to support a sustainable economy or population
growth, it destroys the value of savings and wages by diluting the value of
money and causing prices to rise. Wall Street embraces the Federal Reserve
because easy monetary policies provide an inexpensive way to finance
operations and to expand, but there is a cost. Inflationary monetary policies
favor speculators over savers and debt over genuine capital formation.
Banks do not create wealth. The structure of the
financial system, where debt-based money is created ex nihilo, virtually guarantees banks a piece of the action
whenever wealth is created. When debt service (principal and interest
payments) is attached to the income streams of consumers and businesses,
excess production is diverted from capital formation into the coffers of
banks. The Federal Reserve, therefore, is at the core of a system where, over
time, wealth accrues to banks while capital formation is reduced, ironically
increasing the need to borrow. The majority of entrepreneurs and businesses
have little choice but to borrow and, even if they are successful, the
economy as a whole may still suffer due to increased debt levels relative to
GDP.
Keynesians embrace the Federal Reserve’s
un-backed, fiat money because it permits the government to borrow and spend freely
based on the theory that stimulating the economy through deficit spending
produces economic growth at a faster pace than debt accumulates. However, as
a function of debt service, the number of dollars that must be borrowed and
spent to generate each new dollar of GDP becomes larger as the total amount
of debt grows.
The result is debt saturation where further debt
funded increases in GDP are impossible and where, therefore, existing
government debt cannot be retired, i.e., the result of Keynes’ theory,
taken to an extreme, is government insolvency and sovereign default. Default,
of course, can take the form of monetary inflation in order to debase the
currency and reduce the real value of debt, e.g., the Federal Reserve’s
monetary easing and continued accommodative monetary policy.
Keynes and Behemoth: The Corporatocracy
Behemoth is a mythological beast of the land
mentioned in the Book of Job (40:15-24) that has come to describe any
extremely large or powerful entity. The U.S. economy is anything but a free
market today. In fact, the U.S. government increasingly resembles an
oligarchy in which the oligarchs are large corporations, i.e., a “corporatocracy”. Thus, the illegitimate offspring
of the grand government envisaged by Keynes and the institution of central
banking is a corporate state.
Without a large government, businesses have little
incentive to influence it, but with the government (local, state and federal)
representing nearly half of the U.S. economy, influencing the government is a
mission-critical objective for every company. The size of government implied
by Keynesian economics provides motive and opportunity but only the largest
corporations have the means to succeed.
Obama
|
Romney
|
Citigroup Inc
|
$736,771
|
Citigroup Inc
|
$57,050
|
Columbia University
|
$547,852
|
Bain & Co
|
$52,500
|
General Electric
|
$529,855
|
Bain Capital
|
$74,500
|
Goldman Sachs
|
$1,013,091
|
Goldman Sachs
|
$367,200
|
Google Inc
|
$814,540
|
Bank of America
|
$126,500
|
Harvard University
|
$878,164
|
Barclays
|
$157,750
|
IBM Corp
|
$532,372
|
Blackstone Group
|
$59,800
|
JPMorgan Chase
& Co
|
$808,799
|
JPMorgan Chase
& Co
|
$112,250
|
Latham & Watkins
|
$503,295
|
Credit Suisse
Group
|
$203,750
|
Microsoft Corp
|
$852,167
|
EMC Corp
|
$117,300
|
Morgan Stanley
|
$512,232
|
Morgan Stanley
|
$199,800
|
National Amusements Inc
|
$563,798
|
HIG Capital
|
$186,500
|
Sidley Austin
LLP
|
$600,298
|
Kirkland &
Ellis
|
$132,100
|
Skadden, Arps et al
|
$543,539
|
Marriott International
|
$79,837
|
Stanford University
|
$595,716
|
PriceWaterhouseCoopers
|
$118,250
|
Time Warner
|
$624,618
|
Sullivan & Cromwell
|
$79,250
|
UBS AG
|
$532,674
|
UBS AG
|
$73,750
|
University of California
|
$1,648,685
|
The Villages
|
$97,500
|
US Government
|
$513,308
|
Vivint Inc
|
$80,750
|
WilmerHale LLP
|
$550,668
|
Wells
Fargo
|
$61,500
|
Total Primary Dealers:
|
$3,603,567
|
Total Primary Dealers:
|
$810,050
|
Political campaign contributions
indicating U.S. Federal Reserve Primary Dealers (Source: opensecrets.org)
|
The goals of businesses seeking to influence the
government include winning government business, mandating consumption of
products and services (from child car seats to health insurance), avoiding
taxes, guaranteeing profits, creating regulatory loopholes, protecting markets,
eliminating competition, socializing losses and so forth.
The influence of Wall Street over Washington D.C.
through political campaign contributions, corporate lobbyists and revolving
doors (where the same individuals alternate between closely linked private
sector jobs and government posts) is almost absolute. Lobbyists are
intimately involved in writing legislation that is often rubberstamped by the
U.S. Congress, i.e., passed without reading or meaningful debate. The largest
corporations support political candidates through campaign contributions and
by funding political action committees that, among other things, use
corporate public relations tools for political purposes, i.e., propaganda.
Key government posts are consistently held by individuals with clear
conflicts of interest and the existence of such conflicts is routinely
ignored.
The current reality of the United States is that the
largest corporations have hijacked the Keynesian central planning powers of
the federal government and have used these powers to encourage ever larger
and more direct interventions in the economy for their own benefit, as well
as laws and regulations that serve as a barrier to free market competition.
U.S. regulators, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC),
Commodities and Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) appear to have been captured by the industries they are
intended to regulate. Government regulators selectively enforce regulations,
often against small businesses and growing companies, such as organic dairy
farmers, protecting the interests of the largest corporations from small
businesses, free market competition and consumer choice.
The largest U.S. corporations (including oil
companies like ExxonMobil and Chevron; drug companies like Johnson &
Johnson, Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline; agribusiness companies like Archer
Daniels Midland, which are heavily subsidized by the U.S. federal government;
agricultural biotechnology companies like Monsanto; military contractors like
Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Boeing, Raytheon and General Dynamics; and
banks like Bank of America, J. P. Morgan Chase, Citigroup, Wells Fargo,
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley) have not only been the beneficiaries of
government expansion, deficit spending and central economic planning, but,
considering political campaign funding practices, have become the de facto
oligarchs of America.
Leviathan, Ziz, Behemoth
and Keynes
The decline of the U.S. economy is the logical
outcome of Keynesian economics, which enshrines central economic planning and
embraces central banking. The unholy alliance of Leviathan, Ziz and Behemoth (the federal government, the Federal
Reserve and Wall Street) has all but eliminated capitalism and has
transformed the United States from a burgeoning free market economy into a
failing corporate state.
The U.S. federal government, the Federal Reserve and
Wall Street each played a role in the progression from central economic
planning and central banking to a corporate state. Politicians used Keynesian
economics to justify big government, a welfare state and budget deficits. The
Federal Reserve sought to grow the economy through monetary expansion,
focusing on consumption but ignoring debt levels and inadvertently
encouraging financial speculation. At the same time, Wall Street sought
higher profits both by eliminating production (and jobs) in the U.S. and by
sparing no expense to influence the government. The resulting corporate state
undermined capitalism and the free market in the United States and produced a
downward spiral of economic decline from which there is no escape without
fundamental reforms.
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