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MAKE IT STOP HURTING! by Gary
North
Americans live in a fantasy world. This fantasy world is going
to be destroyed by economic forces that are already well established.
It is easy for readers to think, "He's talking about the other guy."
Maybe I am, but if you are doing essentially what the other guy is doing,
then I'm talking about you.
Americans no longer save. They spend. You
have read this over and over, but has it registered? Really? What
percentage of your after-tax income do you save each month? Do you have
an automatic thrift plan with your employer? Do you ever touch the money?
Unfortunately, saving does not come naturally for most people; it
must be learned. A young man doesn't emotionally know that if he doesn't
save for his old age, he will be in dire straits. Children are not
future-oriented. Present-orientation is one of the primary marks of a child.
Children are also not independent; others make their decisions for them.
That is the primary mark of a child.
Americans today are a nation of
children. We can see this in their savings habits. We can also see it in
their voting habits.
In recessions, the rate of thrift rises. People
get scared. They worry about losing their jobs. They recognize that they
are vulnerable. Like the overweight person who finds that his clothes are
too tight and who thinks, "I must start dieting today," so is the
spendthrift in a recession. He can no longer put off a savings program, he
thinks. He must begin saving. So, he does.
But, like the overweight
person who loses 20 pounds and whose clothes again fit, the saver is tempted
to go off his budgetary diet. The money seems good. The job seems safe.
He stops saving.
You can chart recession years by looking at the
sharp increase in the national savings rate. You can also mark the
period of the recovery. The savings rate drops.
In the most recent
recession of 2001, the savings rate never went over 4%. In previous
recessions, it has gone over 8%. Today, it has fallen back into the 1% to 2%
range. The recession has had no lasting effect on people's willingness
to sacrifice present enjoyment for the sake of future security and
income.
From the point of view of the return on savings, I can hardly
blame the American public. The Federal Reserve System pumped in so much
money in 2001 that it drove the short-term interest rate from over 6% to
about 1%. Meanwhile, the rate of price increases was over 2%. After
income taxes and the decline of purchasing power, a person with a
passbook savings account or money market fund went in the hole. He had a
negative return on his money. That means that his sacrifice of present
enjoyment of spending the money left him poorer. Then why
save?
Here's why. When someone loses the willingness to save, this
affects his outlook regarding the future. He consciously decides that the
payoff of self-denial today is a losing proposition. He concludes that the
system is rigged against him in his capacity as a saver. He is correct:
the system really is rigged in favor of the spender and the
debtor.
When a recession hits, Keynesian policies of deficit
financing are adopted by the Federal government. The central bank starts
buying government debt with newly created fiat money. The government and the
central bank adopt policies that are disastrous for individuals to
adopt: reduced saving, more spending, more borrowing.
The public is
so utterly ill informed today - as ill informed as Keynesian economists -
that people mimic the state. They spend. They take on consumer debt. In the
2001 recession, they bought homes and new cars. This, we are assured by
government economists, was a good thing. The consumer did not falter. The
consumer spent the country into prosperity.
This is the essence of
the Keynesian economic solution to recession: spend yourself (and the
nation) into prosperity. Keynesians apply this principle to government
spending because they believe that consumers are slackers when it comes
to spending during a recession. There is insufficient demand. Demand -
spending - is the key to recovery... not thrift (a negative), not reduced
wage rates (a negative), but spending. So, the government must pick up the
slack. It must also encourage the public to follow the leader.
This
is a child's universe. The child falls down and scrapes his knee. He runs to
his mother to get her to make the pain go away. His mother will fix it! Two
minutes before he fell down, he may have resented his dependence on his
mother. He wanted to be a big boy. But when big boys fall down, they don't
run to their mothers... and so he finds he is not ready to be a big boy
after all.
Americans have bought the Keynesian party line. They
believe that self-discipline is not the way to success. They believe in
the state as mother. So, we live under the watchful eye of the nanny state.
That is what most Americans want. They vote for politicians who refuse to
cut back on government spending. The state grows ever larger, and so do
its promises.
We have again seen the rate of thrift fall to about 1%. We
have seen the Federal government's percentage of the economy rise to
25%. These phenomena are the result of the same mind-set. As surely as the
determination to save is related to the determination to become independent
economically, so is the determination to take on consumer debt to buy
depreciating assets linked to the determination to find someone else to
solve life's economic problems. "Make it stop hurting!"
When the
economy falls down and goes un-boom, the voters run to the government. "It
hurts. Make it better." What snookums needs is a cotton swab drenched in
alcohol. "This is going to hurt." Response: "No! Don't!" The child wants
the hurt to go away now. He doesn't want what is necessary to solve his
problem - his real problem. He doesn't know anything about infection. He
knows only that his knee hurts and he wants mommy to make it stop
hurting.
In politics, however, mommy has to be re-elected at regular
intervals. Mommy is not secure in her high office. So, she promises
never to use that nasty old alcohol. She will kiss the wound and make it
well. In doing so, she will increase the risk of infection.
Ever
since John Maynard Keynes persuaded politicians that what they wanted to do
- increase spending without raising taxes, and therefore increase the
national deficit - is economically sound policy, the politicians have become
incorrigible spendthrifts. They want to be re-elected, and a slack
economy is their own scraped knee. So, they run to the central bank. "Kiss
it and make the pain go away." The central bank obliges. It creates money.
The supply of money goes up. This tends to lower the price of money - the
interest rate - in the recession phase. The result: the destruction of a
positive economic return for savers, after taxes and price
inflation.
Keynes taught that what is rational for the individual
during a recession - increased thrift - is bad for the economy as a
whole. To cut expenses personally is self-defeating nationally, says the
Keynesian, even if he calls himself a supply-side economist, a monetarist,
or an Austrian economist. If his argument is that thrift and
cost-cutting are good for the individual but bad for the economy, he is
a Keynesian. He is denying the heart of free market economics, from Adam
Smith to the present. He is saying that rational individual self-interest
not only fails to coordinate the economy, it is bad for the
economy.
This is the child's universe. The West has become dependent
on government to provide fiat money. If the world's central banks were
ever to stop creating money, the malinvestments which their low interest
rate policies have created would be exposed by the capital markets as
misused capital... and the capital markets would fall like a stone.
The West is now in its second childhood. It refuses to do what is
necessary to grow up: reduce taxes, increase thrift, pay off the national
debt, and stop creating new money. This can be done, but it won't be done.
To do it would hurt. "Make it stop hurting!"
Meanwhile, the nanny
state continues to look for injuries to kiss. The voters need to tell the
state exactly what it can kiss... but they never do.
This story is
not going to end well for most people. I hope it ends well for
you.
Regards,
Gary Northfor The Daily
Reckoning
Editor's Note: Gary North is the author of "Mises on Money"
and the editor of Reality Check, his free e-letter. At the age of 25, Gary
North became the youngest elected member of the Economists' National
Committee on Monetary Policy. He has also held such posts as research
assistant to U.S. Congressman Ron Paul and senior staff member of the
Foundation for Economic Education.
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