Thursday , 28 March 2024

U.S. Can’t Escape the Mess It’s In Without a Complete Economic Collapse! Here’s Why (+2K Views)

The last several decades of governmental economic policy has seen wealth destruction. Such policies are analogous to the government heating its home by burning the furniture. Burning furniture might get you through a few winters, but unless it is replaced eventually there is nowhere to sit and no fuel for next winter. Fortunately our ancestors were industrious and frugal, creating a lot of furniture. We stayed warm for a long time as a result, but the furniture is disappearing. Words: 970

So writes “Monty Pelerin” (www.economicnoise.com) in edited excerpts from his original article* entitled Government Economic Policy Cannot Cure A Problem It Caused. 

 This article is presented compliments of www.munKNEE.com (Your Key to Making Money!) and may have been edited ([ ]), abridged (…) and reformatted (some sub-titles and bold/italics emphases) for the sake of clarity and brevity to ensure a fast and easy read. Please note that this paragraph must be included in any article re-posting to avoid copyright infringement.

Pelerin goes on to say in further edited excerpts:

Neither President Bush’s nor President Obama’s economic policies brought this recession. The event was preordained from years of governmental economic mismanagement and intervention. The crisis could have come sooner, or later. It happened on Bush’s watch. Now Obama must deal with it.

The insanity of current economic policy has been dealt with [by me] before. Keynesian economics, as practiced by politicians, was not what Keynes advocated. He envisioned the role of government as a controller/moderator of the economy, stepping to help in down times. Keynes never proposed a government consistently spending beyond its revenues. The government was expected to run surpluses in good economic times.

To understand how badly the Keynesian system was bastardized, one only need know that the last true surplus in this country was 50 years ago! Have we been in a depression for 50 years? It happened because politicians are not economists, and they don’t think like economists. Rational politicians live for the moment. Like renters of a home, they do not care about wear and tear or residual value. Politicians “enjoy the home to the fullest.” The residual value of their home (country) is not their concern; staying in the home (retaining office) is….

Massive supplies of capital and wealth enabled the government to mostly avoid small downturns in the economy by intervening but each intervention came at a cost. Higher taxes, increased spending, larger deficits, too much credit, and distorted interest rates and prices resulted. These factors consumed wealth directly or produced distortions in the allocation of resources, particularly capital. With each intervention, the distortions grew, creating the need for ever bigger future interventions. This cycle has now gone on for at least 50 years. The effects in terms of malinvestment of capital and the increasing size and frequency of downturns has only become more apparent in the last decade.

Whether furniture-burning can work one more time or not is moot. We are getting progressively poorer as the result of consuming and misallocating capital. At some point, we run out of furniture. If we wiggle through this crisis, it only means that the next crisis will be bigger and more devastating. It is likely also to occur soon. The current one started around 2007, only about six years after the 2001 crisis. As a result of trying to avoid them, each subsequent crisis has been coming quicker and bigger than its predecessor.

The presumption that politicized macroeconomics works is the basis for current Administration policy. A growing portion of economists disagree. Many feel that current policies will make matters worse. John Williams, as quoted by Greg Hunter, suggests a complete collapse may be imminent….

Keynesian economics depends upon the assumption of stable (actually causal) relationships between macro variables over time. Yet history is not particularly supportive. Japan and our own Great Depression provide two dramatic examples of the failure of the “science.”

Japan has been through two “lost decades” of economic growth. In the 1980s, conventional wisdom believed that Japan would overtake the U.S. economy early in the 21st Century. The Japanese bubble burst in 1989. Their economic response to their downturn was similar to ours; support the failed banks with massive credit expansion and the economy with large stimulus in the form of government spending. These policies created zombie banks and a zombie economy in Japan.

japan-stats

The table above shows key variables over this two decade period. The results were devastating. Japan no longer is considered an economic contender to the U.S..  Japan is now considered an economy in danger of sovereign default. Its government debt is almost twice its GDP. Its stock market is still off close to 75%. Rolfe Winkler stated with respect to Japan (my italics):  “My hope is that America finds the political will to deal with debt. If we don’t, even matching Japan’s sorry trajectory will be tough.”

Political mythology of our Great Depression of the 1930s holds that President Roosevelt ended the Great Depression. According to Robert P. Murphy, among others, Hoover and Roosevelt’s policies turned what would have been a normal downturn into a Great Depression. Prior to the 1930s, all downturns in the U.S. were called depressions. None were as severe but none before the Great Depression had any significant government intervention.

Arguably the depression that began in 1920 was more severe at its inception than the Great Depression. With no government intervention, this depression became little more than a minor footnote in history. The details can be found here:  The Depression You’ve Never Heard Of: 1920-1921. The reality is that our Great Depression did not end until WW II concluded, 15 plus years later.

Less analytic, but at least as compelling as Murphy’s analysis, was Roosevelt’s Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau’s emotional 1939 admission:

We have tried spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does not work. I have just one interest, and if I am wrong … somebody else can have my job. I want to see this country prosperous. I want to see people get a job. I want to see people get enough to eat. We have never made good on our promises … I say after eight years of this Administration we have just as much unemployment as when we started … and an enormous debt to boot!

Conclusion

It is doubtful that we can escape the mess we are in without a complete economic collapse. Current economic policies virtually assure such an outcome.

Editor’s Note: The author’s views and conclusions are unaltered and no personal comments have been included to maintain the integrity of the original article. Furthermore, the views, conclusions and any recommendations offered in this article are not to be construed as an endorsement of such by the editor.

*http://www.economicnoise.com/2013/02/25/government-economic-policy-cannot-cure-a-problem-it-caused/

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One comment

  1. Simply put, life in the USA will be far different for young children growing up today than for all those that were born during the last Century, as our Leaders continue to vote for what is best for their Ultra Wealthy supporters instead of for the majority of voters and America. Corporate GREED is now changing the American Dream into one of $ervitude for all future generations.