Making Economic Sense - Chapter 12 - Keynesianism Redux
Making
Economic Sense
by Murray Rothbard
(Contents
by Publication Date)
Chapter 12
Keynesianism Redux
One of the ironic but unfortunately enduring
legacies of eight years of Reaganism has
been the resurrection of Keynesianism. From the late 1930s until the
early 1970s, Keynesianism
rode high in the economics profession and in the corridors of power in
Washington, promising
that, so long as Keynesian economists continued at the helm, the
blessings of modern
macroeconomics would surely bring us permanent prosperity without
inflation. Then something
happened on the way to Eden: the mighty inflationary recession of
1973-74.
Keynesian doctrine is, despite its algebraic and
geometric jargon, breathtakingly simple at
its core: recessions are caused by underspending in the economy,
inflation is caused by
overspending. Of the two major categories of spending, consumption is
passive and
determined, almost robotically, by income; hopes for the proper amount
of spending, therefore,
rest on investment, but private investors, while active and decidedly
non-robotic, are erratic and
volatile, unreliably dependent on fluctuations in what Keynes called
their "animal spirits."
Fortunately for all of us, there is another group
in the economy that is just as active and
decisive as investors, but who are also--if guided by Keynesian
economists--scientific and
rational, able to act in the interests of all: Big Daddy government.
When investors and consumers
underspend, government can and should step in and increase social
spending via deficits, thereby
lifting the econ omy out of recession. When private animal spirits get
too wild, government is
supposed to step in and reduce private spending by what the Keynesians
revealingly call
"sopping up excess purchasing power" (that's ours).
In strict theory, by the way, the Keynesians could
just as well have called for lowering
government spending during inflationary booms rather than sopping up
our spending. But the
very idea of cutting government budgets (and I mean actual cut-cuts,
not cuts in the rate of
increase) is nowadays just as unthinkable, as, for example, adhering to
a Jeffersonian strict
construction of the Constitution of the United States, and for similar
reasons.
Originally, Keynesians vowed that they, too, were
in favor of a "balanced budget," just as
much as the fuddy-duddy reactionaries who opposed them. It's just that
they were not, like the
fuddy-duddies, tied to the year as an accounting
period; they would balance the budget, too, but
over the business cycle. Thus, if there are four years of recession
followed by four years of boom,
the federal deficits during the recession would be compensated for by
the surpluses piled up
during the boom; over the eight years of cycle, it would all balance
out.
Evidently, the "cyclically balanced budget" was the
first Keynesian concept to be poured
down the Orwellian memory hole, as it became clear that there weren't
going to be any surpluses,
just smaller or larger deficits. A subtle but important corrective came
into Keynesianism: larger
deficits during recessions, smaller ones during
booms.
But the real slayer of Keynesianism came with the
double-digit inflationary recession of
1973-74, followed soon by the even more intense inflationary recessions
of 1979-80 and
1981-82. For if the government was supposed to step on the spending
accelerator during
recessions, and step on the brakes during booms, what in blazes is it
going to do if there is a steep
recession (with unem ployment and bankruptcies) and a sharp inflation at
the same time? What
can Keynesianism say? Step on both accelerator and brake at the same
time? The stark fact of
inflationary recession violates the fundamental assumptions of
Keynesian theory and the crucial
program of Keynesian policy. Since 1973-74, Keynesianism has been
intellectually finished,
dead from the neck up.
But very often the corpse refuses to lie down,
particularly one made up of an elite which
would have to give up their power positions in the academy and in
government. One crucial law
of politics or sociology is: no one ever resigns. And so, the
Keynesians have clung to their power
positions as tightly as possible, never resigning, although a bit less
addicted to grandiose
promises.
A bit chastened, they now only promise to do the
best they can, and to keep the system
going. Essentially, then, shorn of its intellectual groundwork,
Keynesianism has become the pure
economics of power, committed only to keeping the Establishment-system
going, making
marginal adjustments, babying things along through yet one more
election, and hoping that by
tinkering with the controls, shifting rapidly back and forth between
accelerator and brake,
something will work, at least to preserve their cushy positions for a
few more years.
Amidst the intellectual confusion, however, a few
dominant tendencies, legacies from
their glory days, remain among Keynesians: (1) a penchant for
continuing deficits, (2) a devotion
to fiat paper money and at least moderate inflation, (3) adherence to
increased government
spending, and (4) an eternal fondness for higher taxes, to lower
deficits a wee bit, but more
importantly, to inflict some bracing pain on the greedy, selfish, and
short-sighted American
public.
The Reagan Administration managed to
institutionalize these goodies, seemingly
permanently on the American scene. Deficits are far greater and
apparently forever; the
difference now is that formerly
free-market Reaganomists are out-Keynesianing their
liberal forebears in coming up with ever more ingenious apologetics for
huge deficits. The only
dispute now is within the Keynesian camp, with the allegedly
"conservative" supply-siders
enthusiastically joining Keynesians in devotion to inflation and cheap
money, and differing only
on their call for moderate tax cuts as against tax increases.
The triumph of Keynesianism within the Reagan
Administration stems from the rapid
demise of the monetarists, the main competitors to the Keynesians
within respectable academia.
Having made a series of disastrously bad predictions, they who kept
trumpeting that "science is
prediction," the monetarists have retreated in confusion, trying
desperately to figure out what
went wrong and which of the many "M"s they should fasten on as being
the money supply. The
collapse of monetarism was symbolized by Keynesian James Baker's
takeover as Secretary of the
Treasury from monetarist-sympathizer Donald Regan. With Keynesians
dominant during the
second Reagan term, the transition to a Keynesian Bush team--Bush
having always had strong
Keynesian leanings--was so smooth as to be almost invisible.
Perhaps it is understandable that an Administration
and a campaign that reduced
important issues to sound bites and TV images should also be
responsible for the restoration to
dominance of an intellectually bankrupt economic creed, the very same
creed that brought us the
political economics of every Administration since the second term of
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
It is no accident that the same Administration that
managed to combine the rhetoric of
"getting government off our back" with the reality of enormously
escalating Big Government,
should also have brought back a failed and statist Keynesianism in the
name of prosperity and
free enterprise.
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