We live in a world of
euphemism. Undertakers have become "morticians," press agents are now
"public relations counsellors" and janitors have all been transformed
into "superintendents." In every walk of life, plain facts have been
wrapped in cloudy camouflage.
No less has this been true of economics. In the old days, we used to
suffer nearly periodic economic crises, the sudden onset of which was
called a "panic," and the lingering trough period after the panic was
called "depression."
The most famous depression in modern times, of course, was the one that
began in a typical financial panic in 1929 and lasted until the advent
of World War II. After the disaster of 1929, economists and politicians
resolved that this must never happen again. The easiest way of
succeeding at this resolve was, simply to define "depressions" out of
existence. From that point on, America was to suffer no further
depressions. For when the next sharp depression came along, in 1937-38,
the economists simply refused to use the dread name, and came up with a
new, much softer-sounding word: "recession." From that point on, we
have been through quite a few recessions, but not a single depression.
But pretty soon the word "recession" also became too harsh for the
delicate sensibilities of the American public. It now seems that we had
our last recession in 1957-58. For since then, we have only had
"downturns," or, even better, "slowdowns," or "sidewise movements." So
be of good cheer; from now on, depressions and even recessions have
been outlawed by the semantic fiat of economists; from now on, the
worst that can possibly happen to us are "slowdowns." Such are the
wonders of the "New Economics."
For 30 years, our nation's economists have adopted the view of the
business cycle held by the late British economist, John Maynard Keynes,
who created the Keynesian, or the "New," Economics in his book, The
General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money, published in 1936.
Beneath their diagrams, mathematics, and inchoate jargon, the attitude
of Keynesians toward booms and bust is simplicity, even naivete,
itself. If there is inflation, then the cause is supposed to be
"excessive spending" on the part of the public; the alleged cure is for
the government, the self-appointed stabilizer and regulator of the
nation's economy, to step in and force people to spend less, "sopping
up their excess purchasing power" through increased taxation. If there
is a recession, on the other hand, this has been caused by insufficient
private spending, and the cure now is for the government to increase
its own spending, preferably through deficits, thereby adding to the
nation's aggregate spending stream.
The idea that increased government spending or easy money is "good for
business" and that budget cuts or harder money is "bad" permeates even
the most conservative newspapers and magazines. These journals will
also take for granted that it is the sacred task of the federal
government to steer the economic system on the narrow road between the
abysses of depression on the one hand and inflation on the other, for
the free-market economy is supposed to be ever liable to succumb to one
of these evils.
All current schools of economists have the same attitude. Note, for
example, the viewpoint of Dr. Paul W. McCracken, the incoming chairman
of President Nixon's Council of Economic Advisers. In an interview with
the New York Times shortly after taking office [January 24, 1969], Dr.
McCracken asserted that one of the major economic problems facing the
new Administration is "how you cool down this inflationary economy
without at the same time tripping off unacceptably high levels of
unemployment. In other words, if the only thing we want to do is cool
off the inflation, it could be done. But our social tolerances on
unemployment are narrow." And again: "I think we have to feel our way
along here. We don't really have much experience in trying to cool an
economy in orderly fashion. We slammed on the brakes in 1957, but, of
course, we got substantial slack in the economy."
Note the fundamental attitude of Dr. McCracken toward the
economy--remarkable only in that it is shared by almost all economists
of the present day. The economy is treated as a potentially workable,
but always troublesome and recalcitrant patient, with a continual
tendency to hive off into greater inflation or unemployment. The
function of the government is to be the wise old manager and physician,
ever watchful, ever tinkering to keep the economic patient in good
working order. In any case, here the economic patient is clearly
supposed to be the subject, and the government as "physician" the
master.
It was not so long ago that this kind of attitude and policy was called
"socialism"; but we live in a world of euphemism, and now we call it by
far less harsh labels, such as "moderation" or "enlightened free
enterprise." We live and learn.
What, then, are the causes of periodic depressions? Must we always
remain agnostic about the causes of booms and busts? Is it really true
that business cycles are rooted deep within the free-market economy,
and that therefore some form of government planning is needed if we
wish to keep the economy within some kind of stable bounds? Do booms
and then busts just simply happen, or does one phase of the cycle flow
logically from the other?
The currently fashionable attitude toward the business cycle stems,
actually, from Karl Marx. Marx saw that, before the Industrial
Revolution in approximately the late eighteenth century, there were no
regularly recurring booms and depressions. There would be a sudden
economic crisis whenever some king made war or confiscated the property
of his subject; but there was no sign of the peculiarly modern
phenomena of general and fairly regular swings in business fortunes, of
expansions and contractions. Since these cycles also appeared on the
scene at about the same time as modern industry, Marx concluded that
business cycles were an inherent feature of the capitalist market
economy. All the various current schools of economic thought,
regardless of their other differences and the different causes that
they attribute to the cycle, agree on this vital point: That these
business cycles originate somewhere deep within the free-market
economy. The market economy is to blame. Karl Marx believed that the
periodic depressions would get worse and worse, until the masses would
be moved to revolt and destroy the system, while the modern economists
believe that the government can successfully stabilize depressions and
the cycle. But all parties agree that the fault lies deep within the
market economy and that if anything can save the day, it must be some
form of massive government intervention.
There are, however, some critical problems in the assumption that the
market economy is the culprit. For "general economic theory" teaches us
that supply and demand always tend to be in equilibrium in the market
and that therefore prices of products as well as of the factors that
contribute to production are always tending toward some equilibrium
point. Even though changes of data, which are always taking place,
prevent equilibrium from ever being reached, there is nothing in the
general theory of the market system that would account for regular and
recurring boom-and-bust phases of the business cycle. Modern economists
"solve" this problem by simply keeping their general price and market
theory and their business cycle theory in separate, tightly-sealed
compartments, with never the twain meeting, much less integrated with
each other. Economists, unfortunately, have forgotten that there is
only one economy and therefore only one integrated economic theory.
Neither economic life nor the structure of theory can or should be in
watertight compartments; our knowledge of the economy is either one
integrated whole or it is nothing. Yet most economists are content to
apply totally separate and, indeed, mutually exclusive, theories for
general price analysis and for business cycles. They cannot be genuine
economic scientists so long as they are content to keep operating in
this primitive way.
But there are still graver problems with the currently fashionable
approach. Economists also do not see one particularly critical problem
because they do not bother to square their business cycle and general
price theories: the peculiar breakdown of the entrepreneurial function
at times of economic crisis and depression. In the market economy, one
of the most vital functions of the businessman is to be an
"entrepreneur," a man who invests in productive methods, who buys
equipment and hires labor to produce something which he is not sure
will reap him any return. In short, the entrepreneurial function is the
function of forecasting the uncertain future. Before embarking on any
investment or line of production, the entrepreneur, or "enterpriser,"
must estimate present and future costs and future revenues and
therefore estimate whether and how much profits he will earn from the
investment. If he forecasts well and significantly better than his
business competitors, he will reap profits from his investment. The
better his forecasting, the higher the profits he will earn. If, on the
other hand, he is a poor forecaster and overestimates the demand for
his product, he will suffer losses and pretty soon be forced out of the
business.
The market economy, then, is a profit-and-loss economy, in which the
acumen and ability of business entrepreneurs is gauged by the profits
and losses they reap. The market economy, moreover, contains a built-in
mechanism, a kind of natural selection, that ensures the survival and
the flourishing of the superior forecaster and the weeding-out of the
inferior ones. For the more profits reaped by the better forecasters,
the greater become their business responsibilities, and the more they
will have available to invest in the productive system. On the other
hand, a few years of making losses will drive the poorer forecasters
and entrepreneurs out of business altogether and push them into the
ranks of salaried employees.
If, then, the market economy has a built-in natural selection mechanism
for good entrepreneurs, this means that, generally, we would expect not
many business firms to be making losses. And, in fact, if we look
around at the economy on an average day or year, we will find that
losses are not very widespread. But, in that case, the odd fact that
needs explaining is this: How is it that, periodically, in times of the
onset of recessions and especially in steep depressions, the business
world suddenly experiences a massive cluster of severe losses? A moment
arrives when business firms, previously highly astute entrepreneurs in
their ability to make profits and avoid losses, suddenly and
dismayingly find themselves, almost all of them, suffering severe and
unaccountable losses -- How come? Here is a momentous fact that any
theory of depressions must explain. An explanation such as
"underconsumption"--a drop in total consumer spending--is not
sufficient, for one thing, because what needs to be explained is why
businessmen, able to forecast all manner of previous economic changes
and developments, proved themselves totally and catastrophically unable
to forecast this alleged drop in consumer demand. Why this sudden
failure in forecasting ability?
An adequate theory of depressions, then, must account for the tendency
of the economy to move through successive booms and busts, showing no
sign of settling into any sort of smoothly moving, or quietly
progressive, approximation of an equilibrium situation. In particular,
a theory of depression must account for the mammoth cluster of errors
which appears swiftly and suddenly at a moment of economic crisis, and
lingers through the depression period until recovery. And there is a
third universal fact that a theory of the cycle must account for.
Invariably, the booms and busts are much more intense and severe in the
"capital goods industries" -- the industries making machines and
equipment, the ones producing industrial raw materials or constructing
industrial plants -- than in the industries making consumers' goods.
Here is another fact of business cycle life that must be explained --
and obviously can't be explained by such theories of depression as the
popular underconsumption doctrine: That consumers aren't spending
enough on consumer goods. For if insufficient spending is the culprit,
then how is it that retail sales are the last and the least to fall in
any depression, and that depression really hits such industries as
machine tools, capital equipment, construction, and raw materials?
Conversely, it is these industries that really take off in the
inflationary boom phases of the business cycle, and not those
businesses serving the consumer. An adequate theory of the business
cycle, then, must also explain the far greater intensity of booms and
busts in the non-consumer goods, or "producers' goods," industries.
Fortunately, a correct theory of depression and of the business cycle
does exist, even though it is universally neglected in present-day
economics. It, too, has a long tradition in economic thought. This
theory began with the eighteenth century Scottish philosopher and
economist David Hume, and with the eminent early nineteenth century
English classical economist David Ricardo. Essentially, these theorists
saw that another crucial institution had developed in the
mid-eighteenth century, alongside the industrial system. This was the
institution of banking, with its capacity to expand credit and the
money supply (first, in the form of paper money, or bank notes, and
later in the form of demand deposits, or checking accounts, that are
instantly redeemable in cash at the banks). It was the operations of
these commercial banks which, these economists saw, held the key to the
mysterious recurrent cycles of expansion and contraction, of boom and
bust, that had puzzled observers since the mid-eighteenth century.
The Ricardian analysis of the business cycle went something as follows:
The natural moneys emerging as such on the world free market are useful
commodities, generally gold and silver. If money were confined simply
to these commodities, then the economy would work in the aggregate as
it does in particular markets: A smooth adjustment of supply and
demand, and therefore no cycles of boom and bust. But the injection of
bank credit adds another crucial and disruptive element. For the banks
expand credit and therefore bank money in the form of notes or deposits
which are theoretically redeemable on demand in gold, but in practice
clearly are not. For example, if a bank has 1000 ounces of gold in its
vaults, and it issues instantly redeemable warehouse receipts for 2500
ounces of gold, then it clearly has issued 1500 ounces more than it can
possibly redeem. But so long as there is no concerted "run" on the bank
to cash in these receipts, its warehouse-receipts function on the
market as equivalent to gold, and therefore the bank has been able to
expand the money supply of the country by 1500 gold ounces.
The banks, then, happily begin to expand credit, for the more they
expand credit the greater will be their profits. This results in the
expansion of the money supply within a country, say England. As the
supply of paper and bank money in England increases, the money incomes
and expenditures of Englishmen rise, and the increased money bids up
prices of English goods. The result is inflation and a boom within the
country. But this inflationary boom, while it proceeds on its merry
way, sows the seeds of its own demise. For as English money supply and
incomes increase, Englishmen proceed to purchase more goods from
abroad. Furthermore, as English prices go up, English goods begin to
lose their competitiveness with the products of other countries which
have not inflated, or have been inflating to a lesser degree.
Englishmen begin to buy less at home and more abroad, while foreigners
buy less in England and more at home; the result is a deficit in the
English balance of payments, with English exports falling sharply
behind imports. But if imports exceed exports, this means that money
must flow out of England to foreign countries. And what money will this
be? Surely not English bank notes or deposits, for Frenchmen or Germans
or Italians have little or no interest in keeping their funds locked up
in English banks. These foreigners will therefore take their bank notes
and deposits and present them to the English banks for redemption in
gold--and gold will be the type of money that will tend to flow
persistently out of the country as the English inflation proceeds on
its way. But this means that English bank credit money will be, more
and more, pyramiding on top of a dwindling gold base in the English
bank vaults. As the boom proceeds, our hypothetical bank will expand
its warehouse receipts issued from, say 2500 ounces to 4000 ounces,
while its gold base dwindles to, say, 800. As this process intensifies,
the banks will eventually become frightened. For the banks, after all,
are obligated to redeem their liabilities in cash, and their cash is
flowing out rapidly as their liabilities pile up. Hence, the banks will
eventually lose their nerve, stop their credit expansion, and in order
to save themselves, contract their bank loans outstanding. Often, this
retreat is precipitated by bankrupting runs on the banks touched off by
the public, who had also been getting increasingly nervous about the
ever more shaky condition of the nation's banks.
The bank contraction reverses the economic picture; contraction and
bust follow boom. The banks pull in their horns, and businesses suffer
as the pressure mounts for debt repayment and contraction. The fall in
the supply of bank money, in turn, leads to a general fall in English
prices. As money supply and incomes fall, and English prices collapse,
English goods become relatively more attractive in terms of foreign
products, and the balance of payments reverses itself, with exports
exceeding imports. As gold flows into the country, and as bank money
contracts on top of an expanding gold base, the condition of the banks
becomes much sounder.
This, then, is the meaning of the depression phase of the business
cycle. Note that it is a phase that comes out of, and inevitably comes
out of, the preceding expansionary boom. It is the preceding inflation
that makes the depression phase necessary. We can see, for example,
that the depression is the process by which the market economy adjusts,
throws off the excesses and distortions of the previous inflationary
boom, and reestablishes a sound economic condition. The depression is
the unpleasant but necessary reaction to the distortions and excesses
of the previous boom.
Why, then, does the next cycle begin? Why do business cycles tend to be
recurrent and continuous? Because when the banks have pretty well
recovered, and are in a sounder condition, they are then in a confident
position to proceed to their natural path of bank credit expansion, and
the next boom proceeds on its way, sowing the seeds for the next
inevitable bust.
But if banking is the cause of the business cycle, aren't the banks
also a part of the private market economy, and can't we therefore say
that the free market is still the culprit, if only in the banking
segment of that free market? The answer is No, for the banks, for one
thing, would never be able to expand credit in concert were it not for
the intervention and encouragement of government. For if banks were
truly competitive, any expansion of credit by one bank would quickly
pile up the debts of that bank in its competitors, and its competitors
would quickly call upon the expanding bank for redemption in cash. In
short, a bank's rivals will call upon it for redemption in gold or cash
in the same way as do foreigners, except that the process is much
faster and would nip any incipient inflation in the bud before it got
started. Banks can only expand comfortably in unison when a Central
Bank exists, essentially a governmental bank, enjoying a monopoly of
government business, and a privileged position imposed by government
over the entire banking system. It is only when central banking got
established that the banks were able to expand for any length of time
and the familiar business cycle got underway in the modern world.
The central bank acquires its control over the banking system by such
governmental measures as: Making its own liabilities legal tender for
all debts and receivable in taxes; granting the central bank monopoly
of the issue of bank notes, as contrasted to deposits (in England the
Bank of England, the governmentally established central bank, had a
legal monopoly of bank notes in the London area); or through the
outright forcing of banks to use the central bank as their client for
keeping their reserves of cash (as in the United States and its Federal
Reserve System). Not that the banks complain about this intervention;
for it is the establishment of central banking that makes long-term
bank credit expansion possible, since the expansion of Central Bank
notes provides added cash reserves for the entire banking system and
permits all the commercial banks to expand their credit together.
Central banking works like a cozy compulsory bank cartel to expand the
banks' liabilities; and the banks are now able to expand on a larger
base of cash in the form of central bank notes as well as gold.
So now we see, at last, that the business cycle is brought about, not
by any mysterious failings of the free market economy, but quite the
opposite: By systematic intervention by government in the market
process. Government intervention brings about bank expansion and
inflation, and, when the inflation comes to an end, the subsequent
depression-adjustment comes into play.
The Ricardian theory of the business cycle grasped the essentials of a
correct cycle theory: The recurrent nature of the phases of the cycle,
depression as adjustment intervention in the market rather than from
the free-market economy. But two problems were as yet unexplained: Why
the sudden cluster of business error, the sudden failure of the
entrepreneurial function, and why the vastly greater fluctuations in
the producers' goods than in the consumers' goods industries? The
Ricardian theory only explained movements in the price level, in
general business; there was no hint of explanation of the vastly
different reactions in the capital and consumers' goods industries.
The correct and fully developed theory of the business cycle was
finally discovered and set forth by the Austrian economist Ludwig von
Mises, when he was a privatdozent in Vienna. Mises developed hints of
his solution to the vital problem of the business cycle in his
monumental Theory of Money and Credit, published in 1912, and still,
nearly 60 years later, the best book on the theory of money and
banking. Mises developed his cycle theory during the 1920s, and it was
brought to the English-speaking world by Mises's leading follower,
Friedrich A. von Hayek, who came from Vienna to teach at the London
School of Economics in the early 1930s, and who published, in German
and in English, two books which applied and elaborated the Mises cycle
theory: Monetary Theory and the Trade Cycle, and Prices and Production.
Since Mises and Hayek were Austrians, and also since they were in the
tradition of the great nineteenth-century Austrian economists, this
theory has become known in the literature as the "Austrian" (or the
"monetary over-investment") theory of the business cycle.
Building on the Ricardians, on general "Austrian" theory, and on his
own creative genius, Mises developed the following theory of the
business cycle:
Without bank credit expansion, supply and demand tend to be
equilibrated through the free price system, and no cumulative booms or
busts can then develop. But then government through its central bank
stimulates bank credit expansion by expanding central bank liabilities
and therefore the cash reserves of all the nation's commercial banks.
The banks then proceed to expand credit and hence the nation's money
supply in the form of check deposits. As the Ricardians saw, this
expansion of bank money drives up the prices of goods and hence causes
inflation. But, Mises showed, it does something else, and something
even more sinister. Bank credit expansion, by pouring new loan funds
into the business world, artificially lowers the rate of interest in
the economy below its free market level.
On the free and unhampered market, the interest rate is determined
purely by the "time-preferences" of all the individuals that make up
the market economy. For the essence of a loan is that a "present good"
(money which can be used at present) is being exchanged for a "future
good" (an IOU which can only be used at some point in the future).
Since people always prefer money right now to the present prospect of
getting the same amount of money some time in the future, the present
good always commands a premium in the market over the future. This
premium is the interest rate, and its height will vary according to the
degree to which people prefer the present to the future, i.e., the
degree of their time-preferences.
People's time-preferences also determine the extent to which people
will save and invest, as compared to how much they will consume. If
people's time-preferences should fall, i.e., if their degree of
preference for present over future falls, then people will tend to
consume less now and save and invest more; at the same time, and for
the same reason, the rate of interest, the rate of time-discount, will
also fall. Economic growth comes about largely as the result of falling
rates of time-preference, which lead to an increase in the proportion
of saving and investment to consumption, and also to a falling rate of
interest.
But what happens when the rate of interest falls, not because of lower
time-preferences and higher savings, but from government interference
that promotes the expansion of bank credit? In other words, if the rate
of interest falls artificially, due to intervention, rather than
naturally, as a result of changes in the valuations and preferences of
the consuming public?
What happens is trouble. For businessmen, seeing the rate of interest
fall, react as they always would and must to such a change of market
signals: They invest more in capital and producers' goods. Investments,
particularly in lengthy and time-consuming projects, which previously
looked unprofitable now seem profitable, because of the fall of the
interest charge. In short, businessmen react as they would react if
savings had genuinely increased: They expand their investment in
durable equipment, in capital goods, in industrial raw material, in
construction as compared to their direct production of consumer goods.
Businesses, in short, happily borrow the newly expanded bank money that
is coming to them at cheaper rates; they use the money to invest in
capital goods, and eventually this money gets paid out in higher rents
to land, and higher wages to workers in the capital goods industries.
The increased business demand bids up labor costs, but businesses think
they can pay these higher costs because they have been fooled by the
government-and-bank intervention in the loan market and its decisively
important tampering with the interest-rate signal of the marketplace.
The problem comes as soon as the workers and landlords--largely the
former, since most gross business income is paid out in wages--begin to
spend the new bank money that they have received in the form of higher
wages. For the time-preferences of the public have not really gotten
lower; the public doesn't want to save more than it has. So the workers
set about to consume most of their new income, in short to reestablish
the old consumer/saving proportions. This means that they redirect the
spending back to the consumer goods industries, and they don't save and
invest enough to buy the newly-produced machines, capital equipment,
industrial raw materials, etc. This all reveals itself as a sudden
sharp and continuing depression in theproducers' goods industries. Once
the consumers reestablished their desired consumption/investment
proportions, it is thus revealed that business had invested too much in
capital goods and had underinvested in consumer goods. Business had
been seduced by the governmental tampering and artificial lowering of
the rate of interest, and acted as if more savings were available to
invest than were really there. As soon as the new bank money filtered
through the system and the consumers reestablished their old
proportions, it became clear that there were not enough savings to buy
all the producers' goods, and that business had misinvested the limited
savings available. Business had overinvested in capital goods and
underinvested in consumer products.
The inflationary boom thus leads to distortions of the pricing and
production system. Prices of labor and raw materials in the capital
goods industries had been bid up during the boom too high to be
profitable once the consumers reassert their old consumption/investment
preferences. The "depression" is then seen as the necessary and healthy
phase by which the market economy sloughs off and liquidates the
unsound, uneconomic investments of the boom, and reestablishes those
proportions between consumption and investment that are truly desired
by the consumers. The depression is the painful but necessary process
by which the free market sloughs off the excesses and errors of the
boom and reestablishes the market economy in its function of efficient
service to the mass of consumers. Since prices of factors of production
have been bid too high in the boom, this means that prices of labor and
goods in these capital goods industries must be allowed to fall until
proper market relations are resumed.
Since the workers receive the increased money in the form of higher
wages fairly rapidly, how is it that booms can go on for years without
having their unsound investments revealed, their errors due to
tampering with market signals become evident, and the
depression-adjustment process begins its work? The answer is that booms
would be very short lived if the bank credit expansion and subsequent
pushing of the rate of interest below the free market level were a
one-shot affair. But the point is that the credit expansion is not
one-shot; it proceeds on and on, never giving consumers the chance to
reestablish their preferred proportions of consumption and saving,
never allowing the rise in costs in the capital goods industries to
catch up to the inflationary rise in prices. Like the repeated doping
of a horse, the boom is kept on its way and ahead of its inevitable
comeuppance, by repeated doses of the stimulant of bank credit. It is
only when bank credit expansion must finally stop, either because the
banks are getting into a shaky condition or because the public begins
to balk at the continuing inflation, that retribution finally catches
up with the boom. As soon as credit expansion stops, then the piper
must be paid, and the inevitable readjustments liquidate the unsound
over-investments of the boom, with the reassertion of a greater
proportionate emphasis on consumers' goods production.
Thus, the Misesian theory of the business cycle accounts for all of our
puzzles: The repeated and recurrent nature of the cycle, the massive
cluster of entrepreneurial error, the far greater intensity of the boom
and bust in the producers' goods industries.
Mises, then, pinpoints the blame for the cycle on inflationary bank
credit expansion propelled by the intervention of government and its
central bank. What does Mises say should be done, say by government,
once the depression arrives? What is the governmental role in the cure
of depression? In the first place, government must cease inflating as
soon as possible. It is true that this will, inevitably, bring the
inflationary boom abruptly to an end, and commence the inevitable
recession or depression. But the longer the government waits for this,
the worse the necessary readjustments will have to be. The sooner the
depression-readjustment is gotten over with, the better. This means,
also, that the government must never try to prop up unsound business
situations; it must never bail out or lend money to business firms in
trouble. Doing this will simply prolong the agony and convert a sharp
and quick depression phase into a lingering and chronic disease. The
government must never try to prop up wage rates or prices of producers'
goods; doing so will prolong and delay indefinitely the completion of
the depression-adjustment process; it will cause indefinite and
prolonged depression and mass unemployment in the vital capital goods
industries. The government must not try to inflate again, in order to
get out of the depression. For even if this reinflation succeeds, it
will only sow greater trouble later on. The government must do nothing
to encourage consumption, and it must not increase its own
expenditures, for this will further increase the social
consumption/investment ratio. In fact, cutting the government budget
will improve the ratio. What the economy needs is not more consumption
spending but more saving, in order to validate some of the excessive
investments of the boom.
Thus, what the government should do, according to the Misesian analysis
of the depression, is absolutely nothing. It should, from the point of
view of economic health and ending the depression as quickly as
possible, maintain a strict hands off, "laissez-faire" policy. Anything
it does will delay and obstruct the adjustment process of the market;
the less it does, the more rapidly will the market adjustment process
do its work, and sound economic recovery ensue.
The Misesian prescription is thus the exact opposite of the Keynesian:
It is for the government to keep absolute hands off the economy and to
confine itself to stopping its own inflation and to cutting its own
budget.
It has today been completely forgotten, even among economists, that the
Misesian explanation and analysis of the depression gained great
headway precisely during the Great Depression of the 1930s -- the very
depression that is always held up to advocates of the free market
economy as the greatest single and catastrophic failure of
laissez-faire capitalism. It was no such thing. 1929 was made
inevitable by the vast bank credit expansion throughout the Western
world during the 1920s: A policy deliberately adopted by the Western
governments, and most importantly by the Federal Reserve System in the
United States. It was made possible by the failure of the Western world
to return to a genuine gold standard after World War I, and thus
allowing more room for inflationary policies by government. Everyone
now thinks of President Coolidge as a believer in laissez-faire and an
unhampered market economy; he was not, and tragically, nowhere less so
than in the field of money and credit. Unfortunately, the sins and
errors of the Coolidge intervention were laid to the door of a
non-existent free market economy.
If Coolidge made 1929 inevitable, it was President Hoover who prolonged
and deepened the depression, transforming it from a typically sharp but
swiftly-disappearing depression into a lingering and near-fatal malady,
a malady "cured" only by the holocaust of World War II. Hoover, not
Franklin Roosevelt, was the founder of the policy of the "New Deal":
essentially the massive use of the State to do exactly what Misesian
theory would most warn against--to prop up wage rates above their
free-market levels, prop up prices, inflate credit, and lend money to
shaky business positions. Roosevelt only advanced, to a greater degree,
what Hoover had pioneered. The result for the first time in American
history, was a nearly perpetual depression and nearly permanent mass
unemployment. The Coolidge crisis had become the unprecedentedly
prolonged Hoover-Roosevelt depression.
Ludwig von Mises had predicted the depression during the heyday of the
great boom of the 1920s--a time, just like today, when economists and
politicians, armed with a "new economics" of perpetual inflation, and
with new "tools" provided by the Federal Reserve System, proclaimed a
perpetual "New Era" of permanent prosperity guaranteed by our wise
economic doctors in Washington. Ludwig von Mises, alone armed with a
correct theory of the business cycle, was one of the very few
economists to predict the Great Depression, and hence the economic
world was forced to listen to him with respect. F. A. Hayek spread the
word in England, and the younger English economists were all, in the
early 1930s, beginning to adopt the Misesian cycle theory for their
analysis of the depression--and also to adopt, of course, the strictly
free-market policy prescription that flowed with this theory.
Unfortunately, economists have now adopted the historical notion of
Lord Keynes: That no "classical economists" had a theory of the
business cycle until Keynes came along in 1936. There was a theory of
the depression; it was the classical economic tradition; its
prescription was strict hard money and laissez-faire; and it was
rapidly being adopted, in England and even in the United States, as the
accepted theory of the business cycle. (A particular irony is that the
major "Austrian" proponent in the United States in the early and
mid-1930s was none other than Professor Alvin Hansen, very soon to make
his mark as the outstanding Keynesian disciple in this country.)
What swamped the growing acceptance of Misesian cycle theory was simply
the "Keynesian Revolution" -- the amazing sweep that Keynesian theory
made of the economic world shortly after the publication of the General
Theory in 1936. It is not that Misesian theory was refuted
successfully; it was just forgotten in the rush to climb on the
suddenly fashionable Keynesian bandwagon. Some of the leading adherents
of the Mises theory-- who clearly knew better-- succumbed to the newly
established winds of doctrine, and won leading American university
posts as a consequence.
But now the once arch-Keynesian London Economist has recently
proclaimed that "Keynes is Dead." After over a decade of facing
trenchant theoretical critiques and refutation by stubborn economic
facts, the Keynesians are now in general and massive retreat. Once
again, the money supply and bank credit are being grudgingly
acknowledged to play a leading role in the cycle. The time is ripe--for
a rediscovery, a renaissance, of the Mises theory of the business
cycle. It can come none too soon; if it ever does, the whole concept of
a Council of Economic Advisors would be swept away, and we would see a
massive retreat of government from the economic sphere. But for all
this to happen, the world of economics, and the public at large, must
be made aware of the existence of an explanation of the business cycle
that has lain neglected on the shelf for all too many tragic years.
This essay was originally published as a minibook by the Constitutional
Alliance of Lansing, Michigan, 1969.
| Home | Conditioning | Credit |