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Detlev Schlichter is one of the clearest thinkers I know on the subject of Austrian Economic theory applied to our current crises. Read his book, Paper Money Collapse. More more thoughts on investing in this environment, see the questions and Detlev's answers on the referenced page.

Tom

http://papermoneycollapse.com/2011/10/unstoppable-why-this-crisis-will-keep-unfolding/

Unstoppable: Why this crisis will keep unfolding
by DETLEV SCHLICHTER on OCTOBER 20, 2011 · 20 COMMENTS

Image by Salvatore Vuono
When the tectonic plates underneath society shift, confusion reigns, together with wishful thinking.

It appears that financial markets have again managed to get themselves into a state of unrealistic expectation. The European summit this coming Sunday (or the follow-up summit on Wednesday) is now supposed to bring a “comprehensive plan” to solve the European debt crisis. Of course, nothing of the sort will happen, and for a simple reason: it is impossible. Those who cherish such fanciful hopes are naïve and will be disappointed.

Let’s step back and look at the problem, which in a nutshell is this: The dominant societal model of the second half of the twentieth century – the social democratic nation state with its high levels of taxation, regulation and stifling market intervention, and thus increasingly dependent on a constantly expanding fiat money supply and artificially cheap credit –is rapidly approaching its logical endpoint everywhere, not just in Europe: excessive and unmanageable piles of debt, systemic financial fragility and weak growth.

For many, including quite a few of those demonstrating under the ‘Occupy Wall Street’ banner, this whole mess deserves the label “crisis of capitalism”.  That this is nonsense I explained here. What we are witnessing is not the crisis of capitalism but the failure of statism. The present system, certainly the financial system, has very little to do with true capitalism, and if financial markets are now being demonized for their failure to go on funding political Ponzi-Schemes, than this means shooting the messenger rather than addressing, or even understanding, the root causes of the malaise. As I said, this is also a time of great confusion.

Failure of statism

The monetary madness of recent decades was only made possible by the transition from apolitical and inflexible commodity money (free-market money) towards limitless, entirely discretionary fiat money (state money). This shift was completed on August 15, 1971, when this system was also made global. What does such a monetary system logically entail?

In a complete paper money system, banks cannot be private capitalist enterprises but must be extensions of the state because the state holds the monopoly of unrestricted money creation. The banking sector is cartelized under the state central bank. To operate a bank, you need a state license that requires that you open an account with the central bank.


Photograph by M. Bartosch
In such a system, the central bank can create bank reserves out of thin air and without limit, and has thus full control over the level and the cost of such reserves. The central bank has therefore ultimate control over the funding of the banks and the availability of credit in the economy – which is now supposed to be magically freed from its natural constraint under capitalism: voluntary savings.

In such a system, it is generally assumed that the state cannot go bankrupt as it can always print more money to fund itself. It is equally assumed that the banks cannot fail and do not ever have to shrink, at least collectively, as ever more bank reserves can be made available to them – if need be at no cost, as has become – now that the system arrived at the point of ultimate excess – the global norm.

It can hardly be surprising that those who are in charge of the banks and those who are in charge of state finances have behaved for decades as if the Great Regulator of economic life, the threat of bankruptcy, was of no concern to them. Now that the system has finally overdosed on cheap credit and that the forty-year fiat-money-fed boom is over, reality is sinking in. And it comes as a shock.

There is a lot of talk of return to normality. The market has, of course, a way of returning to normality, which involves liquidating the excesses, clearing out the dislocations, defaulting what will not be repaid, and deflating prices that do not reflect real demand. Liquidation, default and deflation, however, are politically unacceptable, as they cut right to the core of our system of state-managed ‘capitalism’: the notion that the state is above the laws of economics and that it can bestow a similar immunity on its protectorates, most importantly the banks.

What’s €2 trillion among friends?

Back to the alternate reality of the policy debate in Europe. The hope of many financial market participants seems to be that the summit will reveal measures by Germany and France to erect a firewall around Greece in case it will default, that the banks will get ‘recapitalized’, and that steps will be taken toward further ‘fiscal integration’. The wish here is evidently that Big Daddy will finally step forward, that he draws a line in the sand, and says, hey, this stops here. Time out on the crisis.

There is only one problem: Nobody has the money to do it.

Two days ago the British newspaper The Guardian broke the story, unconfirmed so far, that Germany and France had agreed to a €2 trillion bailout fund. In response, equity markets around the world enjoyed a brief rally. Finally, the big bazooka had arrived.

Really? I was wondering if nobody ever heard of Brian Cowen.

He was the hapless Irish chap who in 2008 played Big Daddy himself and implemented an official government back-stop for the Irish banks. And duly bankrupted his country.


Life of Brian (Image by Maxime Bernier)
If Merkel and Sarkozy were really stupid enough to launch a €2 trillion bailout fund, it would certainly pay to go short French BTANs and German Bunds right away. Germany and France have no money to bailout anyone. All they could do is pile on more debt on the already large and ever-growing debt pile of their own. It would not take the market as long as it did in 2008, in the case of Ireland, to figure out what the endgame must look like.

But surely, everyone involved must realize that the little boy in the crowd has already pointed out that Emperor Sarkozy and Empress Merkel have no clothes. Interest spreads on French bonds have already blown out, and Moody’s has warned that France’s AAA-rating (what? Triple-A?) might come under review. Credit-default spreads on German bunds have widened of late, and the cost of insuring against the bankruptcy of the Bundesrepublik Deutschland will most certainly only go one way: up. Have I mentioned that Bunds are the short of the century, and U.S. Treasuries, too?

The whole notion of ‘ring-fencing’ Greece is, of course, absurd, as if Greece had contracted some rare contagious disease from which healthier nations, such as Italy or Spain, had to be isolated. Ongoing, endless fiscal deterioration is, however, not a virus but a self-inflicted and ultimately fatal wound that all European states, and in fact, almost all modern social democratic states are already suffering from. The difference between Greece and Germany is one of degree, not principle.

For these reasons, the idea that some form of ‘fiscal integration’ could be the solution, is equally absurd, as if pooling the finances of the already-bankrupt and the almost-bankrupt will somehow give you a community of the fiscally strong, as if you could improve the financial standing of a trailer park community, in which some inhabitants are maxed out on their credit cards while others still have some borrowing capacity left, by giving all of them a joined bank account.

So does this mean that all political options are exhausted, that default, liquidation, and deflation are now unavoidable?

It will get worse

Not so fast. There are still some options left to governments. None of them will solve the problem, all of them will make the crisis worse. All of them are scarily ugly and destructive. Of course, I expect that all will be adopted by governments soon.


Unlimited Euros!, photo by Florian K.
There is, of course, always the prospect of growing regulation and market intervention, of capital controls and the banning of short selling of government debt. I expect all of this to be enacted at some point in the not-too-distant future. Like all government intervention, it will make things worse and accelerate the demise of the system.

But the biggest of all policy mistakes is already being made, and we will get more of it, much more of it: printing ever more money ever faster.

The ECB will be forced/asked/convinced to support the market for government debt of ever more European states to an ever larger degree. Central banks and fiat money are not creations of the free market but of politics. Their role has always been to fund the state. We have already reached the point at which all major central banks are dominant buyers, frequently the largest marginal buyers, of their governments’ debt. The U.S. Fed is already the single largest holder of U.S. Treasuries, and when the just-announced second round of ‘quantitative easing’ in Britain will have been completed, the Bank of England will own almost a quarter of all outstanding Gilts. Funding the state directly with the printing press is the logical penultimate stage of the demise of the present global fiat money system, and all major economies are approaching it fast. The eurozone will be no exception. The ultimate step is loss of confidence in paper money and inflationary meltdown.

If there is one outcome from the European debt summit that I am most convinced about it is that another crucial step will be taken to accelerate the ongoing debasement of fiat money.

2
On the subject of Lord Maynard Keynes.

"poor Keynes gets his name besmirched by these hacks"

It's true that contemporary economists and others may sometimes incorrectly attribute ideas to Keynes, but on the other hand it's pretty darn difficult to even find out what ideas Keynes actually believed by reading The General Theory (http://www.amazon.com/General-Theory-Employment-Interest-Money/dp/1169831990/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1319468352&sr=1-1).

If you haven't read the book, you are in for a treat. Here is a reference that takes Keynes' book apart chapter by chapter (http://mises.org/resources/3655/Failure-of-the-New-Economics). As Hazlitt says, "What is original in the book is not true; what is true is not original." and "...I have found in Keynes General Theory an incredible number of fallacies, inconsistencies, vaguenesses, shifting definitions and usages of words, and plain errors of fact."

I have read other critiques of Keynes (http://mises.org/resources/3683/The-Critics-of-Keynesian-Economics) written by mainstream economists who were his contemporaries, and sometimes they were nearly left speechless by the confusion and errors sowed by this man. As an aside, by the way, Keynes had very little formal training in the economics of the time -- and no university degree in the discipline. He said that his only training was in Marshallian economics, and that was only a few courses. He admitted to knowing nothing about what we now know as "Austrian" economic thought because he could read in German "only ideas which I already understand."

Macro economics was not founded by Keynes, but macroeconomic constructs such as he used are among the grievous errors committed by what we now identify as mainstream economists. When these clowns start writing equations to describe  the relationship between economic aggregates, they might as well stop right there. It absolutely is not true that these aggregates are in "functional" relationships of any kind. The mathematics implies a precise relationship. Y is a function of X implies that for every X there is a precisely defined result for Y (let's leave other complexities aside). This type of relationship NEVER exists in economics. Humans have volition, they are not bowling balls or subatomic particles.

Keynes was a very smart man, but his genius IMO lay strictly in his ability to cozy up to politically powerful people and tell them what they wanted to hear. Keynes was fundamentally a totalitarian and an elitist who wanted to manage the world. In the German edition of The General Theory Keynes even said, in his preface, that the ideas described within his book would be more easily implemented in a totalitarian state.

Keynes "besmirched"? It really takes some doing to besmirch this miserable S.O.B. Done properly, the besmirching looks something like this: http://mises.org/resources/5223/Keynes-the-Man

Tom

3
"Now we really are fuct"

Yes indeed. In the 1920s, the charge was "price stability." Professor Irving Fisher was the initiator of that failed doctrine. With sound money in the 1920s, prices would have fallen slowly due to rapidly rising productivity, but the Fed used the stable price indices as a license to step on the monetary accelerator. Price stabilization policies were very popular during times of falling prices, not so popular during times of rising prices -- the objective is always to increase monetary inflation, not to tame it.

It will be the same with nominal GDP targeting. It'll be very popular when GDP is falling short, meaning that more monetary inflation is called for. When nominal GDP is exceeding the target ... well, heck, what's wrong with that?

And the problem with both of these ideas, as I have said in earlier posts, is that monetary inflation does its serious damage by distorting prices and interest rates. When interest rates are artificially lowered, people spend too much on capital goods and durable goods. Since 1980, the Fed has not allowed a recession to run its course, so we must have quite an impressive total of malinvestments by now. Anyone doubting that needs to take another look at the aggregate trillions of dollars poured into Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, GM, AIG, and all the other Wall Street institutions and banks that have been sucking the country dry.

Doug Noland has been commenting upon credit expansion bubbles for a long time now (http://www.prudentbear.com/index.php/creditbubblebulletinview?art_id=10586). He worries more and more that we will eventually reach the point where, suddenly, US debt obligations will fail to find a bid. That would change everything.

<I fear global market dynamics and Fed policymaking are propagating the worst-case scenario for the U.S. government finance Bubble.  As was the case in Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Italy and elsewhere, a distorted market is content to accommodate profligate borrowing until it’s way too late.  Is another round of Fed MBS QE going to help?  A dysfunctional marketplace has, almost without exception, been incapable of imposing any degree of market discipline until the point when only exceptionally harsh and destabilizing “austerity” suffices.>

It's reached the point now where the US desperately needs a deflationary correction. Left to run its course, such a correction would soon put this once great nation into to shape to grow and prosper again. But our rulers will never allow that to happen. It appears that they will take us all down "fighting" battles that not only don't need to be fought -- but guarantee our destruction.

Tom

4
"Oy-fracking-vey!"

I like that!

By the way, miss.org has many, many free books in pdf and epub formats (see their literature tab). I have my iPad filled with just about every significant Austrian School book with very few exceptions. On the subject of hyper inflation there are several worth looking at. Fiat Money Inflation in France is one: http://mises.org/resources/3041/Fiat-Money-Inflation-in-France. Another book is When Money Dies -- not available from miss.org, but an interesting history of hyperinflation in Weimar Germany.

IMO, it's too easy to see many of the inflationary disease symptoms right her in the USA. Rapidly rising consumer prices didn't necessarily happen early in these historic hyper-inflations. Governments everywhere seem to be applying the same belief system to money management, so it's difficult to imagine where we are going with all this. Oy-fracking-vey! -- may become my favorite expression over the coming months!

Tom

5
GM,

This may seem completely flippant, but as it stands now virtually ALL of our money might as well be counterfeit. When the Fed creates a few extra trillion dollars in a few months, that has a tremendously negative impact on all dollar holders. The process is indistinguishable from counterfeiting except that the beneficiaries are usually government and financial industry personnel instead of a bunch of misfits slaving over a press in the basement.

Money was not a free market creation in the 19th century. Far from it. There were many government players passing laws that limited the rights of money users. State sanctioned banks were encouraged to lend a greater percentage of their reserves, for example, to create a boom -- and then state governments gave those banks the right to suspend specie payments when they were found out. Lincoln dumped unbacked "Green Backs" on the people. There were lots of legal tender laws and other market interventions. Problems needed to be addressed, but we certainly didn't need to follow the path we have traveled.

Tom

6
Yes, that is the dual mission that I tried to comment upon. As I said, "full employment" is not a valid economic goal and there is no conflict between the goals except in the minds of Keynesian-influenced economists.

Central planning does not work. There should not be any institution setting interest rates or manipulating markets in an attempt to set interest rates at some preferred level. No human being can know where interest rates should be set. Having a Fed empowered to control interest rates makes no more sense than having a commission to set the price of oil, or cantaloupes. The problems created by the Fed, however, are dramatically greater than would be caused by a narrow price setting commission.  

If you want to keep the Fed then eliminate all open market operations and strive to keep the money supply unchanging. Do not let the Fed loan money to banks or set interbank lending rates. If you are going to insist on continuing fractional reserve banking with minuscule required reserves, then there should never, ever be a bailout. Insolvent banks should be immediately subject to bankruptcy -- that should motivate bankers to voluntarily watch the extent to which they narrow their operating reserves. Under those conditions we could still have credit expansion booms (and busts), but they would be inherently far more limited.

It's fascinating how many economists are drawn to the concept of free markets but, for some reason, think in terms of centrally managing money. Milton Friedman is probably the most prominent of those -- but many mainstream economists fall into that broad category, including our so-called supply-side economists. Frankly, I think the reason for this (well explained by Schlichter, by the way) is simply that government benefits dramatically from a monopoly on money and economists benefit dramatically from going along. The entire banking and Wall Street contingent all benefit from ongoing inflation. Most economists are employed by government or the financial industry. The Austrian School thinking basically says: "we don't need no stinking economists trying to invent policy responses for the government." Not too surprising that so many economists choose another path.

Tom

7
Well, DougMacG, I think we have enough overlap of positions for a discussion. But we are miles apart. I have read Keynes and some other elements of mainstream economics, but I must say I have found the economics articulated by Mises and a few other "Austrians" to be absolutely compelling. Keynes' General Theory, on the other hand, should have been laughed off the stage as a bad joke. Within that book, at least, Keynes could not even apply consistency let alone logic.

It's true that governments have used their coercive powers to give themselves a monopoly position in the production of money. But that isn't the way it has always been, nor is it the way it should be. Mises has argued that money began as people simply looked for better ways to conduct indirect exchange. People naturally found they could exchange their product for a good that was highly marketable and then exchange that good for the things they needed. This process doesn't require government and, in fact, benefits from government's absence. All of our problems with money, in fact, are the result of government. Governments rarely do anything positive for the concept of money.

I can't agree with this statement at all: "If the oil price (or corn or lumber) is too high, too low or too volatile, that screws up other industries." First of all, if markets are free, there can be no such thing as a price "too high" or "too low."  Prices just "are."  The price of one good rising or falling dramatically, on a free market, can only happen if there is a large change in supply or demand for that good. Instead of "screwing up" other industries, a suddenly high price simply allocates the supply of that good to the people who value it most highly. Those people who are unwilling or unable to buy at the higher price will naturally shift their attention to substitutes which they now find more appealing. All prices will adjust dynamically to market clearing levels, giving both producers and consumers appropriate signals. If a higher price for one good also results in higher profit, entrepreneurs will shift resources toward its production. This is the principal reason why capitalism works as well as it does to produce the right mix of goods.

As to the "general price level" -- it is actually impossible to measure. Consider the equation of exchange: MV = PT (one variation of the theme). The total physical product of the economy, T, cannot be defined in any sense whatever. Irving Fisher didn't even try to define the elements of this equation, demonstrating how smart he was -- because it can't be done. There are no common units with which to add up the total physical product. Given that you can't define T, the price level P is undefined as well. I have been pushing to have everybody take a look at a newly written book that beautifully addresses many of these questions in a compact form. Take a look at Paper Money Collapse by Detlev Schlichter.

Now, of course, this problem with the price level is ignored by our mainstream economists. They just take a relatively short list of consumer products, apply arbitrary weights, and calculate a price index and ... presto, they have "the price level."  Well, a little thought should tell you that the CPI and other various deflators give us very, very little information about anything important. Read Schlichter, please. However, I agree that when monetary inflation is significant the value of money is materially reduced and that certainly is a problem for everybody. The reason I am de-emphasizing price level rises is simply is that mainstream economists want us to believe that they can beneficially manage the money supply with reference to the silly price index. They cannot do that at all. There are very long lags before monetary inflation results in broad based price increases -- and there is no reason to suppose that price increases will EVER be spread uniformly over all products.

And finally, I believe the "dual mission" problem you cite comes from Keynesian and macro-economic thinking that I find to be just plain foolish. Full employment is easy to achieve if you run a totalitarian government. Just force people to stop using trains and trucks, for example. Let everything be carried on human backs. That will surely put everybody to work! What we need as a goal, instead, is an economy that meets all consumer needs as well as can be accomplished in a world of limited resources. There is only one way to achieve that goal -- a division of labor economy with privately owned factors of production and totally free markets. Including the market for money. A sound money is the only money consistent with any country's proper economic goal.

Tom




8
The Ron Paul post is the shortest possible discussion of this issue. The Fed was created to establish a profit enhancing bank cartel. It's a long story, read the Creature from Jekyll Island or Rothbard's History of Money and Banking in the US for a detailed explanation of this point of view.

Ron Paul is briefly explaining the Austrian School of economics thesis. A market economy is simply a division of labor economy in which the factors of production are privately owned -- with markets to facilitate the free exchange of goods and services. Such a market economy is a self organizing system and the prices that emerge from buying and selling on free markets provide all participants with the information they need to effective employ our scarce resources.

Paul is right, the interest rate is a particular market price, or actually a ratio of prices. With free markets, the interest rate will represent the price of a current good divided by the price of an identical good in the future (say one year out). Humans have a "time preference"  ... they prefer a good now more than the same good later. That preference can vary from individual to individual and from time to time. It is arguably the most important price within a market economy.

When a central bank manipulates the interest rate, it distorts the economy in fundamental ways. The "price level" is not the principal issue. The problem with Fed manipulation is that RELATIVE prices change and that alters human decisions concerning both consumption and production. When the Fed forcibly lowers interest rates below the market level that causes people to invest more heavily in durable goods (like houses) and capital goods. Trouble is, an economy is finite in size and resources -- even an economy as large as the US. A lowered interest rate induces people to launch many projects that prove later to be uneconomic because there are simply inadequate resources in the economy to complete those projects.

We all love the expansion phase, the boom. That is a period of inflation -- money is being generated by the fractional reserve banking system and everybody goes gaga over whatever the particular boom is elevating. Forget about the Fed's definitions of inflation and deflation. It's not even possible to measure "the price level." Inflation used to be defined as an increase in the supply of money and credit. Deflation was defined as a decrease in the supply of money and credit.

According to the Austrian School business cycle theory, the damage is done during the boom. The deflationary recession follows as a period during which market prices reassert themselves so that all economic participants will once again have good information -- so they can make intelligent and effective choices regarding their consumption and production efforts. As some contemporary Austrian School devotees say: "fear the boom, not the bust."

A deflation can be painful, for sure, but it cannot spiral out of control. The money supply and credit can contract by at most the amount it previously expanded during the boom. And the deflation can be avoided only by a central bank determined to pile market distortions on top of market distortions. Carried too far, a central bank can definitely destroy a currency -- and our current Fed Head has a belief system ideally suited to destroying the US dollar.

Tom

9
Politics & Religion / Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, & the US Dollar
« on: May 27, 2010, 12:09:29 PM »
I would doubt there is anyone in the Pentagon, or in our government anywhere, who knows enough economics to design an "economic warfare" simulation.


10
Politics & Religion / Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, & the US Dollar
« on: May 26, 2010, 01:24:57 PM »
GM says,

<It appears that China has more than 2 Trillion dollars in it's foreign currency holdings. Is there even half a trillion of gold in existance on the planet at current prices? Explain to me how this works out in practical terms.>

Changing over to a new monetary system can be very painful and involve big losses to some people. We can't define the value of the dollar in terms of the current gold price, that's for sure. The number of dollars on the planet ensures that the equivalence would require an enormously higher gold price if we wanted the government to institute a new gold standard. To work out the details for this kind of transition would be a horrendous task. Jesus Heurta de Soto proposed a "banking reform" that would move a country to 100% reserve requirements, which would eliminate the monetary inflation caused by fractional reserve banking. You can read about it here: http://www.amazon.com/Money-Bank-Credit-Economic-Cycles/dp/1933550392/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1274904972&sr=1-1. I don't think it can ever happen within the US.

Instead of doing that, I would suggest we repeal the legal tender laws and let individuals within the economy use any form of indirect exchange that makes sense to them. Government's didn't invent money and governments are not necessary to define money. If the US dollar remains viable, that's what most people will continue to use. If other choices start working out better (GoldMoney, maybe?), freedom would allow people to employ those other choices and thereby keep the economy functioning. Consider Zimbabwe. Its currency collapsed and eventually the government lost its ability to dictate the definition of money. Subsequently, people in that country have used other currencies and no telling what else as expedient forms of money. The Zimbabwe economy would have been far, far better off if the government had eliminated its legal tender laws a long time ago.

The Chinese have been had; they are never going to be able to exchange all their dollars for anything with a value even close to what $2 trillion seems to represent at this moment.

Tom


11
Politics & Religion / Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, & the US Dollar
« on: May 23, 2010, 06:24:35 AM »
To move the economy to a sound money system, the government only needs to get out of the way. We already have the private "GoldMoney" service that could expand into a serious payment system if the government would allow that to happen. Governments, however, jealously guard their coerced monopoly on money for a good reason: it gives them the ability to spend money they don't have.

Lots of people seem to think the small quantity of gold means that it could no longer serve as money. That idea comes from the inflationists' mindset ... the idea that an increase in the quantity of money causes economic growth. It's not true. Gold's most important monetary quality is scarcity; more gold cannot be brought into the economy without expending resources to find it, mine it, and process it. The problem with paper (or electronic) money is that it costs zero to make more. The nature of money is that people are motivated to make more of it until the value of the new money falls below its marginal cost. So in the case of paper money, the authorities will ultimately drive its value to zero.

Gold prices are arbitrary, especially with electronic record keeping. We could transfer any arbitrarily small quantity of gold from one account to another. To make gold money again, though, would require absolute rights to redeem the paper (or electronic chits) for gold and vice versa. That is the market mechanism that prevents over issue of paper.

Tom

 

12
Politics & Religion / Re: The Fed, Monetary Policy, & the US Dollar
« on: May 22, 2010, 12:55:30 PM »
Marc, thanks for the invitation to join in. There is a lot of stuff posted above, and I haven't read all of it closely.

Let me just comment on this one little point "I have a hole in my understanding.  Before we came off the gold standard there were boom and bust cycles.  These were caused by what?"

In my opinion, the Austrian School theory of the business cycle is pretty well developed and convincing. Trouble is, there are a lot of books to read before you come to a thorough understanding. One of the least painful and least theoretical books is Meltdown by Thomas Woods, http://www.amazon.com/Meltdown-Free-Market-Collapsed-Government-Bailouts/dp/1596985879/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1274557216&sr=1-1 This book explains the current crisis in Austrian terms staying away from the highly theoretical elements.

Now, with respect to boom/bust cycles prior to the Fed's existence, I would argue that virtually all of the boom periods were made possible by inflationary monetary conditions. Charles P. Kindleberger was a Harvard economic historian and definitely not Austrian in his thinking, but he showed in Manias, Panics, and Crashes, that monetary inflation was a factor in all of his studied boom/bust cycles. Rothbard also wrote a book about the Panic of 1819 and demonstrated that over issuance of bank notes was a factor there, too. In every historical case that has been studied closely, the cause of the boom and subsequent bust was consistent with the Austrian theory.

As I am sure everybody knows, a central bank isn't the only way we can get monetary inflation. It might interest some people to know, however, that the Fed is the United State's fourth central bank. The first three failed to get their charters renewed by Congress because so many people were convinced that they were dangerous scourges.

The gold standard in the US was never absolute. In the 19th century most banks were chartered by the states and they all practiced fractional reserve banking. When the banks made big mistakes and were unable to redeem their notes in specie, state legislatures often passed laws allowing those banks to renege on their contracts without being put out of business. It was always "temporary," of course, but it happened over and over. When a boom is created by monetary inflation it must always eventually come to an end, and once it does there is absolutely nothing that can prevent a recessionary environment during the period when malinvestments are liquidated.

Tom

13
Politics & Religion / Re: 'America Alone'
« on: December 05, 2006, 06:03:45 AM »
Quijote,

Just to try and clarify my opinions on a couple of things. I have no knowledge or opinion about Steyn's claims of imminent "Islamification" in Europe. My comments are aimed at the general damage done by the welfare state concept. If there is an Islamic and demographic problem as severe as Steyn claims, my instincts are to blame the welfare state. My hostility to the welfare state is based on extensive readings in so-called Austrian School economics and observation of the welfare process within the US.  By the way, I didn't mean to imply that the European countries are in any way homogeneous. If I seemed to generalize my anecdote about France, your point is very well taken -- I shouldn't do that!

I disagree that the welfare states are up and running well. Even in Scandinavia the problems are brewing.  See "How the Welfare State Corrupted Sweden" for another view on that issue
( http://www.mises.org/story/2190 ). The biggest problem with the welfare state concept is that it is progressive --- in the sense that the state tends to keep getting bigger and bigger. When the idea is pushed too far, you can lose liberty on nearly every dimension. If you have never read Hayek's "Road to Serfdom" you might find his views challenging.

14
Politics & Religion / Re: 'America Alone'
« on: December 04, 2006, 08:58:14 AM »
For what it is worth, Crafty Dog, here is an article from the dean of the Austrians explaining why state "interventionism" leads toward socialism. Ludwig von Mises says a "middle of the road" policy leads inexorably in that direction. He claims, in fact, that this very process created both Germany's and Britain's socialism.   http://www.mises.org/story/2370

As I said before in the other forum, I think this "fight" with Islam is not something we can win in the same sense as we won WW II. More than anything, winning is going to require changing the trend with respect to state intervention and control. Mises, in the above article, argued that socialism is not inevitable. In my opinion, however, it's getting to be darn important to shift the trend. To save us from this Muslim takeover hypothesized by Steyn, we need to eliminate those factors that make continued migration so desirable -- as a first step.

Tom

15
Politics & Religion / Re: 'America Alone'
« on: December 04, 2006, 05:51:51 AM »
Marc posted a comment from me, just above, and I have decided to try my hand on this interesting forum. It looks like everybody here has lots of intelligent commentary on an amazingly broad array of subjects.

With respect to this topic of the Islamic challenge to Europe and America, I think the diagnosis shared in the preceding post is wrong or at least incomplete:

<As Tom Bethell wrote in this month’s American Spectator: “Just at the most basic level of demography the secular-humanist option is not working.” But there is more to it than the fact that non-religious people tend not to have as many children as religious people, because many of them prefer to “enjoy” freedom rather than renounce it for the sake of children. Secularists, it seems to me, are also less keen on fighting. Since they do not believe in an afterlife, this life is the only thing they have to lose. Hence they will rather accept submission than fight. Like the German feminist Broder referred to, they prefer to be raped than to resist.>

The suffocating state is, IMO, more the point. Germany was the first of the welfare states and therefore has become one of the most damaging. "... many of them prefer to 'enjoy' freedom ... "? There is precious little freedom left in the European welfare states. I know a young couple who immigrated to Florida from France to start a single-store eyeglasses business -- because the French made it virtually impossible for them to do the same in that country! What does the word "freedom" mean if you can't start and run a small retail business? It seems to me that these factors, together with the intolerable tax burden, explain the lack of desire to raise children -- more so than a failure of religion.

TB

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