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One News Now:
'Jolting' the Economy
by Thomas Sowell - Syndicated Columnist
OneNewsNow.com
November 25, 2008
Barack Obama
says that we have to "jolt" the economy. That certainly makes sense, if
you take the media's account of the economy seriously -- but should the
media be taken seriously?
Amid all the political and media hysteria, national output has
declined by less than one-half of one percent. In fact, it may not have
declined even that much -- or at all -- when the statistics are revised
later, as they very often are.
We are not talking about the Great Depression, when output
dropped by one-third and unemployment soared to 25 percent. What we are
talking about is a golden political opportunity for politicians to use the
current financial crisis to fundamentally change an economy that has been
successful for more than two centuries, so that politicians can henceforth
micro-manage all sorts of businesses and play Robin Hood, taking from
those who are not likely to vote for them and transferring part of their
earnings to those who will vote for them.
For that, the politicians need lots of hype, and that is being
generously supplied by the media. Whatever the merits of trying to shore
up some financial institutions, in order to prevent a major disruption of
the credit flows that keep the whole economy going, what has in fact been
done has been to create a huge pot of money -- hundreds of billions of
dollars -- that politicians can use to give out goodies hither and yon to
whomever they please, for whatever reason they please.
No doubt we could all use a few billion dollars every now and then. But
the question of who actually gets it will be strictly in the hands of
Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and Harry Reid. It is one of the few parts of
the legacy of the Bush administration that the Democrats are not likely to
criticize. Much as we may deplore partisanship in Washington, bipartisan
disasters are often twice as bad as partisan disasters -- and this is a
bipartisan disaster in the making.
Too many people who argue that there is a beneficial role for the
government to play in the economy glide swiftly from that to the
conclusion that the government will, in fact, confine itself to playing
such a role. In the light of history, this is a faith which passeth all
understanding. Even in the case of the Great Depression of the 1930s,
increasing numbers of economists and historians who have looked back at
that era have concluded that, on net balance, government intervention
prolonged the Great Depression.
Many of those who have, over the years, praised the fact that this was the
first time that the federal government took responsibility for trying to
get the country out of a depression do not ask what seems like the logical
follow-up question: Did this depression, therefore, end faster than other
depressions where the government stood by and did nothing?
The Great Depression of the 1930s was, in fact, the longest-lasting of all
our depressions. Government policy in the 1930s was another bipartisan
disaster. Despite a myth that Herbert Hoover was a "do nothing" president,
he was the first President of the United States to step in to try to put
the economy back on track.
With the passing years, it has increasingly been recognized that what FDR
did was largely a further extension of what Hoover had done. Where Hoover
made things worse, FDR made them much worse. Herbert Hoover did what
Barack Obama is proposing to do. Hoover raised taxes on high-income people
and put restrictions on international trade, in order to try to save
American jobs. It didn't work then, and it is not likely to work now.
Perhaps the most disastrous of all the counterproductive policies of the
federal government was the National Industrial Recovery Act under FDR,
which set out to do exactly what the politicians today want to do --
micro-manage businesses. Fortunately, the Supreme Court declared that Act
unconstitutional, sparing the country an even bigger disaster.
Today, it is unlikely that the courts will let anything as old-fashioned
as the Constitution stand in the way of "change." In short, the economy
today has some serious problems, but things are not desperate, though they
can be made desperate by politicians.
COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
Thomas
Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA 94305.
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