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Saturday, January 26, 2008
The Keynesian Corner
By Robert Murphy
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Last Tuesday the Fed announced a surprise rate cut of 75 basis points, the biggest cut in 24 years.  Even so, the stock market plunged, with the S&P 500 shedding 1.1% during the session, bringing its total losses to over 10% for 2008.

The Fed has now painted itself into a Keynesian corner.  According to old-school Keynesianism, the government faces a Phillips Curve tradeoff.  It can adopt a loose monetary policy, which spurs output but leads to price inflation.  Or, the government can adopt a tight monetary policy, which keeps prices under control but leads to recession.

The sobering experience of the 1970s demonstrated that this Keynesian orthodoxy was nonsense.  Ultimately, printing green pieces of paper doesn’t make a society richer, it just causes prices to rise.  Once citizens adjust to the constant injections of new money, unemployment returns along with massive price hikes.  Thus the term “stagflation”—meaning double-digit rates of unemployment and inflation—was coined.

Yet memories are short.  It has been decades since Paul Volcker took over the helm at the Federal Reserve in 1979 and jacked up interest rates—yielding the painful recession in 1980—to wean the country off of his predecessors’ cheap-money policies.  Since that readjustment, Americans have become used to the new paradigm, where unemployment can safely remain under 5 percent while inflation stays even lower.

Despite this clear-cut lesson, Keynesian thinking permeates the financial press.  Those concerned about recession clamor for aggressive rate cuts, saying that inflation can be handled down the road.  They ignore the fact that once the inflation genie is out of the bottle, it’s very difficult to get it back in again.

We are closer to the dark days of the 1970s than many people realize.  During 2007, consumer price inflation was 4.1 percent, the highest it’s been in 17 years.  The dollar is near record lows against the euro.  Gold and oil prices have set all-time record highs in the past few months.

If the national discussion on monetary policy is bad, the debate over fiscal policy “stimulus” may be even worse.  The politicians and pundits never explain how borrowing money from one group of Americans, in order to give tax rebates to a different group of Americans, is supposed to raise total spending.  Things would be different if the politicians proposed spending cuts to offset the rebates to taxpayers.  But naturally no one proposes such a sensible policy; they want to give us more money to spend, and to spend more money themselves, too.

The truly depressing feature of all the stimulus talk is that even someone as knowledgeable as Treasury Secretary Paulson believes a rebate is only good if the recipients “spend” it, rather than using it to pay down debts.  Here we see the true insidiousness of the Keynesian mindset:  In a time of recession, when we need to tighten our belts, the politicians encourage us to go buy new cars and plasma screen TVs.  The idea seems to be that if we all just ignore the recession, it will get bored and go away.

Those readers who believe in the virtues of hard work and thrift know that this Keynesian mindset must be wrong, but they may have a hard time pinpointing the sleight of hand in the trick.  So let me give a hint:  Whether you spend $500 on music CDs or on bank CDs, that money is still “in the economy.”  Everyone understands how spending money on music boosts employment in that industry, so we don’t need to explain that portion.

But people apparently don’t recognize that when you lend $500 to the bank, you are still contributing to employment and GDP growth.  The bank doesn’t put this money in a tin can under the bed, after all.  No, it lends it out to a business, perhaps, so it can buy a new factory, or it lends it out to a young couple, so they can buy a home.  Rather than output and employment expanding in the music and retail industries, in this scenario jobs are created in the manufacturing or construction industries.

A penny saved is a penny spent, from the viewpoint of the economy as a whole.  Rather than printing up new money through the Federal Reserve, or engaging in shell games with billions of tax dollars, the government should cut its own budget while we ride out the present crisis.

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About The Author

Robert Murphy has a Ph.D. in economics and is the author of The Politically Incorrect Guide to Capitalism (Regnery 2007).

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Subject: and so what?

the prostitutes, oops sorry, i mean the elected officials know this, the republican conservative prostitutes, oops, sorry, i mean our honorable thomas jeffersons of today, know this, and so what?

the people are ignorant of economic science, it isnt even considerd a science today, but an opinion, until economic opinon is considered a science, like the law of gravity, and is recognized as a scientific law by most Americans, economic opinion will rule, sometimes the economic earth will revolve around the sun and sometimes the economic sun will revolve around the earth, and economic Galileo will be put in ignorant prison.

Ron Paul and Ludwig von Mises may be the Galileos of economic science, but so long as Economics is a land of controversial opinion and not popularly accepted as a science, we are all in in for a roller coaster ride of changing, elected, prostitute opinion.

Keynesian Supply-Sider Pre-Eriksonian?
What the writer of this column blatantly fails to appreciate is that this stimulus package has absolutely nothing to do with economics. It's about politics.
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