This article is excerpted from Part I of Pillars
of Prosperity. An MP3 audio file of this article, read by
Dr. Floy Lilley, is available
for download.
Before the U.S. House of Representatives, July 9, 2002
It is now commonplace and politically correct to blame what
is referred to as the excesses of capitalism for the economic
problems we face, and especially for the Wall Street fraud that
dominates the business news. Politicians are having a field
day with demagoguing the issue while, of course, failing to
address the fraud and deceit found in the budgetary shenanigans
of the federal government – for which they are directly
responsible. Instead, it gives the Keynesian crowd that run
the show a chance to attack free markets and ignore the issue
of sound money.
So once again we hear the chant: "Capitalism has failed;
we need more government controls over the entire financial market."
No one asks why the billions that have been spent and thousands
of pages of regulations that have been written since the last
major attack on capitalism in the 1930s didn't prevent the fraud
and deception of Enron, WorldCom, and Global Crossings. That
failure surely couldn't have come from a dearth of regulations.
(Article continues below)
What is distinctively absent is any mention that all financial
bubbles are saturated with excesses in hype, speculation, debt,
greed, fraud, gross errors in investment judgment, carelessness
on the part of analysts and investors, huge paper profits, conviction
that a new era economy has arrived and, above all else, pie-in-the-sky
expectations.
When the bubble is inflating, there are no complaints. When
it bursts, the blame game begins. This is especially true in
the age of victimization, and is done on a grand scale. It quickly
becomes a philosophic, partisan, class, generational, and even
a racial issue. While avoiding the real cause, all the finger
pointing makes it difficult to resolve the crisis and further
undermines the principles upon which freedom and prosperity
rest.
Nixon was right – once – when he declared "We're
all Keynesians now." All of Washington is in sync in declaring
that too much capitalism has brought us to where we are today.
The only decision now before the central planners in Washington
is whose special interests will continue to benefit from the
coming pretense at reform. The various special interests will
be lobbying heavily like the Wall Street investors, the corporations,
the military-industrial complex, the banks, the workers, the
unions, the farmers, the politicians, and everybody else.
But what is not discussed is the actual cause and perpetration
of the excesses now unraveling at a frantic pace. This same
response occurred in the 1930s in the United States as our policymakers
responded to the very similar excesses that developed and collapsed
in 1929. Because of the failure to understand the problem then,
the depression was prolonged. These mistakes allowed our current
problems to develop to a much greater degree. Consider the failure
to come to grips with the cause of the 1980s bubble, as Japan's
economy continues to linger at no-growth and recession level,
with their stock market at approximately one-fourth of its peak
13 years ago. If we're not careful – and so far we've
not been – we will make the same errors that will prevent
the correction needed before economic growth can be resumed.
In the 1930s, it was quite popular to condemn the greed of
capitalism, the gold standard, lack of regulation, and a lack
government insurance on bank deposits for the disaster. Businessmen
became the scapegoat. Changes were made as a result, and the
welfare/warfare state was institutionalized. Easy credit became
the holy grail of monetary policy, especially under Alan Greenspan,
"the ultimate Maestro." Today, despite the presumed
protection from these government programs built into the system,
we find ourselves in a bigger mess than ever before. The bubble
is bigger, the boom lasted longer, and the gold price has been
deliberately undermined as an economic signal. Monetary inflation
continues at a rate never seen before in a frantic effort to
prop up stock prices and continue the housing bubble, while
avoiding the consequences that inevitably come from easy credit.
This is all done because we are unwilling to acknowledge that
current policy is only setting the stage for a huge drop in
the value of the dollar. Everyone fears it, but no one wants
to deal with it.
Ignorance, as well as disapproval for the natural restraints
placed on market excesses that capitalism and sound markets
impose, cause our present leaders to reject capitalism and blame
it for all the problems we face. If this fallacy is not corrected
and capitalism is even further undermined, the prosperity that
the free market generates will be destroyed.
Corruption and fraud in the accounting practices of many companies
are coming to light. There are those who would have us believe
this is an integral part of free-market capitalism. If we did
have free-market capitalism, there would be no guarantees that
some fraud wouldn't occur. When it did, it would then be dealt
with by local law-enforcement authority and not by the politicians
in Congress, who had their chance to "prevent" such
problems but chose instead to politicize the issue, while using
the opportunity to promote more Keynesian useless regulations.
Capitalism should not be condemned, since we haven't had capitalism.
A system of capitalism presumes sound money, not fiat money
manipulated by a central bank. Capitalism cherishes voluntary
contracts and interest rates that are determined by savings,
not credit creation by a central bank. It's not capitalism when
the system is plagued with incomprehensible rules regarding
mergers, acquisitions, and stock sales, along with wage controls,
price controls, protectionism, corporate subsidies, international
management of trade, complex and punishing corporate taxes,
privileged government contracts to the military-industrial complex,
and a foreign policy controlled by corporate interests and overseas
investments. Add to this centralized federal mismanagement of
farming, education, medicine, insurance, banking and welfare.
This is not capitalism!
To condemn free-market capitalism because of anything going
on today makes no sense. There is no evidence that capitalism
exists today. We are deeply involved in an interventionist-planned
economy that allows major benefits to accrue to the politically
connected of both political spectrums. One may condemn the fraud
and the current system, but it must be called by its proper
names – Keynesian inflationism, interventionism, and corporatism.
What is not discussed is that the current crop of bankruptcies
reveals that the blatant distortions and lies emanating from
years of speculative orgy were predictable.
First, Congress should be investigating the federal government's
fraud and deception in accounting, especially in reporting future
obligations such as Social Security, and how the monetary system
destroys wealth. Those problems are bigger than anything in
the corporate world and are the responsibility of Congress.
Besides, it's the standard set by the government and the monetary
system it operates that are major contributing causes to all
that's wrong on Wall Street today. Where fraud does exist, it's
a state rather than federal matter, and state authorities can
enforce these laws without any help from Congress.
Second, we do know why financial bubbles occur, and we know
from history that they are routinely associated with speculation,
excessive debt, wild promises, greed, lying, and cheating. These
problems were described by quite a few observers as the problems
were developing throughout the 90s, but the warnings were ignored
for one reason. Everybody was making a killing and no one cared,
and those who were reminded of history were reassured by the
Fed Chairman that "this time" a new economic era had
arrived and not to worry. Productivity increases, it was said,
could explain it all.
But now we know that's just not so. Speculative bubbles and
all that we've been witnessing are a consequence of huge amounts
of easy credit, created out of thin air by the Federal Reserve.
We've had essentially no savings, which is one of the most significant
driving forces in capitalism. The illusion created by low interest
rates perpetuates the bubble and all the bad stuff that goes
along with it. And that's not a fault of capitalism. We are
dealing with a system of inflationism and interventionism that
always produces a bubble economy that must end badly.
So far the assessment made by the administration, Congress,
and the Fed bodes ill for our economic future. All they offer
is more of the same, which can't possibly help. All it will
do is drive us closer to national bankruptcy, a sharply lower
dollar, and a lower standard of living for most Americans, as
well as less freedom for everyone.
This is a bad scenario that need not happen. But preserving
our system is impossible if the critics are allowed to blame
capitalism and sound monetary policy is rejected. More spending,
more debt, more easy credit, more distortion of interest rates,
more regulations on everything, and more foreign meddling will
soon force us into the very uncomfortable position of deciding
the fate of our entire political system.
If we were to choose freedom and capitalism, we would restore
our dollar to a commodity or a gold standard. Federal spending
would be reduced, income taxes would be lowered, and no taxes
would be levied upon savings, dividends, and capital gains.
Regulations would be reduced, special-interest subsidies would
be stopped, and no protectionist measures would be permitted.
Our foreign policy would change, and we would bring our troops
home.
We cannot depend on government to restore trust to the markets;
only trustworthy people can do that. Actually, the lack of trust
in Wall Street executives is healthy because it's deserved and
prompts caution. The same lack of trust in politicians, the
budgetary process, and the monetary system would serve as a
healthy incentive for the reform in government we need.
Markets regulate better than governments can. Depending on
government regulations to protect us significantly contributes
to the bubble mentality.
These moves would produce the climate for releasing the creative
energy necessary to simply serve consumers, which is what capitalism
is all about. The system that inevitably breeds the corporate-government
cronyism that created our current ongoing disaster would end.
Capitalism didn't give us this crisis of confidence now existing
in the corporate world. The lack of free markets and sound money
did. Congress does have a role to play, but it's not proactive.
Congress' job is to get out of the way.