HOW
MAINSTREAM ECON PROMOTES SOCIALISM, Roger McKinney | On April 19, 2016
Milton Friedman is a
good example of a great champion of free markets whose economics betrayed his
philosophy. Few economists enjoyed the ear of the common man in the way
Friedman held it. He wrote regularly for popular magazines, appeared on TV talk
shows and produced a wonderful documentary series for PBS on the miracles
produced by free markets. Yet the mainstream economic theories he championed
undermined his speech. Here is how.
The first clue comes
from the fact that economists trained in the German historical school , known as socialists of the chair, created the
American Economic Association to promote German style socialism in the US.
Bismarck, the prime minister in Germany in the late 1800s, had
implemented almost all of the socialist agenda by the 1890s in what became
known as the “welfare state.” Convinced that Germany was inventing the cutting
edge of history, the American economists determined to bring such “progress”
home.
The source of socialism buried in
mainstream economics is the assumption of equilibrium. Walras and Pigou, the
champions of equilibrium analysis in the late 19th century, needed the
assumption of equilibrium in order to apply the math of 19th century mechanics
to the field of economics. In a nutshell, an economy in equilibrium experiences
no change. There are no profits, technological change, entrepreneurs or money.
Everyone does the same thing every day so forecasting is trivial, and obviously
fiction.
It is
precisely the absence of the profits that prompts mathematical economists to
consider the state of undisturbed static equilibrium as the ideal state, for
they are inspired by the prepossession that entrepreneurs are useless parasites
and profits are unfair lucre… There is for the unaffected scientific observer
nothing objectionable in his description of disequilibrium. It is only the
passionate pro-socialist zeal of mathematical pseudo-economists that transforms
a purely analytical tool of logical economics into an Utopian image of the good
and most desirable state of affairs. – (Mises, Theory and History,
366-7)
That fictional construct made it
possible for economists to imagine controlled experiments in which only one
variable at a time is changed in order to assess its impact on other variables.
It’s a useful tool of analysis. The problems developed when mainstream decided
to pretend the fiction was real so they could use their math and pretend to be
physicists. Equilibrium morphed into a norm without telling the students.
Disequilibrium became bad; equilibrium good, even though the real world is
always in disequilibrium.
Yet, equilibrium economists had to
explain 300 years of improvement in standards of living, which couldn’t happen
under equilibrium, so the Solow fabricated a growth model that assumes growth
will just happen. Entrepreneurs need not apply; they’re not needed. But why is
assuming away entrepreneurs so terrible a thing?
Mises responded: This
interpretation of history from the egalitarian point of view is the official
philosophy of our age. It assumes that an automatic process of historical
evolution tends to improve technological methods of production, to accumulate
wealth, and to provide the means for improving the standard of living of the
masses. Looking back upon conditions in the capitalistic West as they developed
in the last century or two, statisticians see a trend of rising productivity
and blithely surmise that this trend will continue, whatever society’s economic
organization may be. As they see it, a trend of historical evolution is
something above the level of the actions of men, a “scientifically” established
fact which cannot be affected by men and by the social system. Hence no harm
can result from institutions— such as the contemporary tax legislation—which
aim at ultimately wiping out the inequalities of income and wealth. – (Mises, Theory and History, 330-331)
As Jorg Guido Hulsmann wrote in
Mises: The Last Knight of Liberalism (722), “The equilibrium construct was necessary as the logical opposite
of entrepreneurial profit and loss.”
But why would economists want to
euthanize the entrepreneur after Schumpeter declared him to be the master of
improvement? According to Marx, the workers and the means of production are all
that matter in a firm: the entrepreneurs are mere exploiters. If progress just
happens, then no one has a right to the products and services produced,
especially the profits, so the state can distribute them as it sees fit.
Keynes understood another problem
with fetish of equilibrium. His famous statement that in the long run we’re all
dead has been taken out of context. He meant by it the obsession with
equilibrium, which he understood to be a fictional state that markets aimed for
in the extreme long run. Keynes was trying to pull other economists back to the
analysis of reality, which is disequilibrium.
Next came the perfect competition
model. Perfect competition assumes that all products and services are nearly
exactly the same, that the numbers of producers and consumers are so large that
no one group can affect prices, and barriers to entry into production are very
low. Technically, marginal costs are equal to marginal revenue and production
takes place at the maximum quantity and lowest price.
The insidious assumption is that of
homogeneous products; everything is alike. Some markets comes close, such as
metals because one ounce of pure gold is very much like any other. The same
goes for iron, copper, tin, etc. Mainstream econ tries to apply the model to
agriculture and small businesses, such as mom-and-pop T-shirt printing
businesses, but it doesn’t fit so well.
But imagine perfect competition
applied to cars: everyone could have the colored the wanted as long as they like
black, as Ford said of his Model-T. If perfect competition has been applied to
the car industry at the invention of the Ford, we would be stuck today with
black Model-T’s. In fact, the old USSR and India tried such a ridiculous scheme
for much of their existence under socialism. Of course, the state had to outlaw
competition and imports in order to force people to buy their junk. But as soon
as the door cracked open for a breath of free air, consumers abandoned the
socialist dream car for anything made anywhere else.
Like equilibrium, perfect
competition provided a useful teaching tool. However, mainstream economists
have made it the norm, the ideal. But only a communist country can implement
it. Perfect competition thinking was behind the Affordable Care Act, or
Obamacare. The government limited the types of policies available on exchanges
to just four and each level had to contain exactly the same benefits. And as
Bernie Sanders likes to say, do we really need all of these choices?
Theories of market failure come
mostly from the assumption that perfect competition should be the norm.
Economists set up a false idol that can only be approximated by communism and
then declare any system that doesn’t live up to the fictional idol a “failure.”
Another way in which mainstream econ
promotes socialism is through its theory of money. When the US created the
Federal Reserve in 1913, it embraced central planning over money, or socialism.
Then Friedman came along and convinced economists that the primary driver of
the economy is monetary policy. Monetarism is socialist in that it gives the
full power to control the economy to the Fed.
Finally, mainstream econ promotes
socialism with its theory of business cycles. The mainstream assumes that
recessions are random events, in other words, crap happens! By denying any
cause for recession, it gives the federal government and Federal Reserve full
authority and power to do anything they want to correct the situation. Neither
can cause any harm and all that they do is for the better.
Mainstream refuses to accept a
monetary theory of business cycles. The Bank for International Settlements is
the only large institution that comes close to embracing it.
Mainstream economists will not even
consider the monetary theory, popularly known as the Austrian business-cycle
theory (ABCT), because they want cycles to be inherent in markets and therefore
an excuse for state intervention, as Mises wrote:
Neglect
of the problems of indirect exchange was certainly influenced by political
prepossessions. People did not want to give up the thesis according to which
economic depressions are an evil inherent in the capitalist mode of production and
are in no way caused by attempts to lower the rate of interest by credit
expansion. Fashionable teachers of economics deemed it “unscientific” to
explain depressions as a phenomenon originating “only” out of events in the
sphere of money and credit. There were even surveys of the history of business
cycle theory which omitted any discussion of the monetary thesis – (Mises Human Action, footnote, 204).
Restraining the march to ever
increasing socialism can’t be slowed by making the public better informed about
economics. Success requires sound economics firmly rooted in reality, such as
the Austrian economics of Mises, Hayek, Lachmann, and others.
People don’t need economics in order
to keep growing and improving their everyday lives. After all, the Dutch
vaulted their standards of living far above those of their ancestors almost two
centuries before Adam Smith wrote his famous book. Smith held the Dutch up as
the best example of his system. Economics was still a babe in England a century
after the Industrial Revolution began, maturing only after Mises assembled all
of the scattered pieces. We need good economics to counter the bad economics
that rains on people from the media and reigns in academia.
http://affluentinvestor.com/2016/04/mainstream-econ-promotes-socialism/
Originally posted on ABCT
Investing. By Roger
McKinney
Comments
Wherever
you have laws that allow the government to determine who can and cannot perform
certain services, you have a system that kills a true free market economy,
kills freedom and increases costs. Farmers should be able to grow their own
animal feed and process their products and sell their products without
government interference. The free market should set prices based on supply and
demand without government subsidies.
Even
where licenses might be expected to be necessary, there is doubt and ample
opportunity for corruption. Big Pharma
has too much control over what Medical Schools teach and consumers are seeking
alternative treatments for diseases like cancer, where “establishment”
treatments have failed.
There are
way too many licenses required by law, especially licenses for minimum wage
jobs like hairdressers. Our current
economy needs relief from these laws, so that unemployed individuals with some
skill can pursue self-employment. But,
the system puts them on welfare. Poor
counties need less restrictive laws.
There are
too many laws designed to protect us from ourselves and too many laws that
restrict our freedom.
Because
of city codes, inspection fees and fines, homeowners are restricted in what
they can do to their own home. All
monopolies need to be eliminated where possible to allow individuals the
freedom to do what they can do for themselves.
Laws that
allow government abuse like Conservation Easements, No-Knock Warrants and
seizure of land, property and bank account balances need to be repealed. Laws
that enable UN Agenda 21 implementation need to be repealed. Laws that require mandatory government school
attendance need to be repealed. Laws
that allow government agencies and hospitals to seize children should be
repealed.
We need
to close those federal government departments, agencies and programs that are
not authorized in the “enumerated powers” outlined in the US Constitution (as
written) This will require Congress and
the President to make these changes to bring government back into compliance
with the 10th Amendment.
US
government debt is unsustainable. Healthcare and Education need to be returned
to the free market to eliminate waste. The federal government needs to pay $1
trillion a year to pay interest and principle on the National Debt and an
additional $1 trillion a year for Social Security conversion to individual
private accounts.
All
government debt needs to be paid off, so that the free market can set the price
of borrowed money. We will not see a
free market economy return to the US until this happens. We will need to restrict campaign
contributions to voters only and remove special interests from funding campaigns
before we see any real reform to end our systemic political corruption. Politicians need to work for the voters and
nobody else. Families need to reassume
their role as the basic economic unit, responsible for its members. We need to
become a Meritocracy and repeal all anti-discrimination laws. If we do all of
this, the free market will return and our economy will boom.
We are
about to experience the failure of the ‘global economy’ and it will become
clear that economic nationalism will prevail, because human nature dictates it.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
No comments:
Post a Comment