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Book Review: Meltdown by Thomas Woods

In his timely new book Meltdown: A Free- Market Look at Why the Stock Market Collapsed, the Economy Tanked, and Government Bailouts Will Make Things Worse, economic historian and best-selling author Thomas Woods does for macroeconomics what Henry Hazlitt did for microeconomics in his classic Economics in One Lesson.

Woods observes in the opening chapter that:

Since the fall of 2008, as the stock market plummeted, companies folded, and economic fear and uncertainty began to spread, Americans have been bombarded with a predictable and relentless refrain: the free-market economy has failed. The remedy? According to Barack Obama, the late Bush Administration, Republicans and Democrats in Congress, and the mainstream media, it’s more regulation, more government intervention, more spending, more money creation, and more debt. To add insult to injury, the very people who devised the policies that produced the mess are now posing as the wise public servants who will show us the way out.

…. And of course, that same government failure is being used to justify further increases in government power. The talking heads have been about their usual business of giving the wrong answers to every important question, but this time most of them haven’t even been asking the right questions. Where did all the excess risk, leverage, and debt, not to mention the housing bubble itself, come from?

Woods locates the principal source of the crisis in the mismanagement of the money supply by the Federal Reserve Bank. By inflating the money supply, the Federal Reserve induced credit expansion, leading to an unrealistic real estate housing boom based on lending out mortgages to unqualified customers via quasi governmental agencies such Freddie Mac and Fanny Mae (whose activities were themselves the result of social engineering legislation by both Democratic and Republican congressmen). How better might our current economic collapse be handled? Woods points to the “forgotten” Depression of 1920 -1921, when the government did, well, almost nothing:

Not surprisingly, many modern economists who have studied the depression have been have been unable to explain how the recovery could have been so swift and sweeping even though the federal government and the Federal Reserve refrained from employing any of the macroeconomic tools—public works spending, government deficits, inflationary monetary policy—that conventional wisdom recommends as the solutions to economic slowdowns…

‘In 1920–21,’ says Benjamin Anderson, ‘we took our losses, we readjusted our financial structure, we endured our depression, and in August 1921 we started up again…The rally in business production and employment that started in August 1921 was soundly based on a drastic cleaning up of credit weakness, a drastic reduction in the costs of production, and on the free play of private enterprise. It was not based on governmental policy designed to make business good.’ The federal government did not run unbalanced budgets and prime the pump through increased expenditures. Rather, there prevailed the old-fashioned view that government should keep spending and taxation low and reduce the public debt.

This astringently laissez-faire solution reflects Woods’ affiliation with the Austrian school of economics, and in fact he is a senior fellow at the Ludwig von Mises Institute (in Auburn, AL), named for one of its foremost economic theorists. The Austrian school champions laissez-faire economic practice based largely on the extreme difficulty — amounting to a practical impossibility — of bureaucratic and centralized entities such as governments to successfully devise economic approaches and solutions, since they can never fully penetrate to the multitudinous sources of economic activity in individual human motivations and decisions. Thus the ungainly activities of governmental attempts to correct markets and regulate industries are at best doomed to failure and at worst likely to make things worse.

The primary economic nemesis of the Austrians was the British economist John Maynard Keynes, whose theories were influential in a deeply damaging way during the Great Depression, in the form of big government spending, high taxation, inflation, and make-work programs. The failure of such policies to end the Great Depression largely discredited Keynesianism and the success of the Reagan years in following the supply-side theories of Arthur Laffer and colleagues more in line with Friedman and Mises appeared to finish Keynes off until the surprising resurrection of his theories in the current disastrous “priming the pump” economic policies of Presidents Bush and Obama.

What is Woods’ program to address the current crisis?

He proposes the following measures to escape “the phony, capital consuming kind of prosperity] that comes from artificial credit expansion or Keynesian ‘stimulus’…”

1. Let firms go bankrupt. (A firm does not disappear when it declares bankruptcy. Its capital equipment and its assets continue to exist. But they pass out of hands of those who have failed to employ them in ways that best satisfy the public and into the hands of those more likely to do a capable job.)

2. Abolish Fannie and Freddie Mac. (Government engineering promoting home ownerships to those could not afford them has been one of the major causes of the current deep downturn)

3. Stop the bailouts and cut government spending. Subsidizing the inefficient corporations only prolongs their death agony and using taxpayer’s money to do so is immoral.  (Out of control spending only produces higher prices, taxes. borrowing and passes on the debt to future generations)

4. End government manipulation of money. (Is a system that has caused the dollar to lose 95% of its value really the best of all possible systems?)

5. Put the Fed on the table. (The Fed is responsible for elevating moral hazard into a permanent feature of banking.)

6. End the monopoly money. (Some people have called for a return to the gold standard to replace fiat money, or even “privatize money.” Maintaining a stable currency without a commodity standard is like maintaining morality with shifting Ten Commandments. )

In the seven chapters of his well-documented and footnoted book, Woods explains in detail why he favors the above reforms and more.

We shall see in the years ahead whether the Keynesian nostrums proffered by Bush /Obama for economic recovery “work.” History and common sense tell us they won’t. Therein lies an opportunity to return to the economic wisdom of the Founding Fathers and the Constitution for the common good, limited government prosperity, and freedom of us all as families and persons. As Dr. Woods said recently:

People are ready to listen to reasonable, previously neglected ideas, especially if the people who hold them managed to predict the current crisis — as indeed the economists of the Austrian School did. It’s up to us to bring them these ideas.

Mission accomplished in this essential book. Take time to read it and argue with it. Woods is a powerful persuader. I, for one, would like to see a televised debate between Paul Krugman and Thomas Woods on these crucial questions. Let the public decide.

Comments

5 responses to “Book Review: Meltdown by Thomas Woods”

  1. elkabrikir Avatar
    elkabrikir

    As I recall, Reagan received quite a few, “Laffers” at his economic policy. He was just a glamorous Hollywood nutcase….oh! and a perceptive, prophetic, moral genius too. Ironically, his power base came from giving power to the people in a real sense, through hands-off government.

    Obama et-al are vote buyers “extraordinare”. These political programs won’t be disbanded because their purpose is not to “fix” the economy but, rather, to secure a constituency. (What do you think the so-called War on Poverty was/is all about?)

    The political/economic/moral crossroads at which America finds itself today is not about HOW to get the job done, but rather, we’re at the point where we must decide WHO we are as a people.

    Frost made this point poetically: “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I– I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference.”

    or, if you prefer God’s take: “Today I set before you life and death, blessings and curses, choose life that you and your children may live”. (Deut 30:19)

  2. Warren Jewell Avatar
    Warren Jewell

    Be careful with the concept of ‘laissez-faire’, which has become something of a pejorative among political leaders. Of course, these politicos love the Keynesian approach that purports advanced wisdom and strength in political and hegemonic academic leadership in economics and finances. What is worse is that too (increasingly) great a portion of our electorate agrees with these lordly-arrogant political leaders.

    The conservative Austrian economic school simply reflected what our founders of our American Experience (and economic heart of American exceptionalism) also realized. That is, the government that governs least governs best. In our revolutionary birth, our founders had learned from staking their ‘lives, fortunes and sacred honor’ that they not only weren’t sure they wanted the job of general leadership – they couldn’t bring themselves to trust anyone who did want it. One might say that all but George Washington (the President who would be a farmer) soon forgot their cautions, considering how electoral campaigns became soon began to descend into pitched battles. Still, we could handle such offal-slinging political battles if the politicians just would leave economics alone; of course, they haven’t been able to do that ‘leaving alone’.

    In 1920, under the Wilson administration that had lost its progressivist(round-one)-activist thrust with Wilson’s physical decline after a massive stroke, there was little political leadership to drive some bogus ‘stimulus’. Democrats were diverted, knowing that they were under the electoral gun that elected Republican Warren Harding that November. So, the economy, mainly driven by businesses free enough to recover and thrive, recovered quickly simply because neither business nor anyone else was waiting for government handouts and had to move back into productive mode on its own initiative and efforts. The 1920-21 recovery is the exact opposite coin side from the New Deal. It sure didn’t seem to take Hoover and the Republicans and Roosevelt and the Democrats long to get forgetfully stupid – just within the same decade.

    And, since that stupidity, that has mirrored the electorate’s similar ongoing descent, we’ve been paying a price of not only servitude to Keynesian economics, but civil servants who deem themselves our masters. Like some evolutionary regression, as a culture, we seem to act as know-it-alls even as we are effectively know-nothings. It is partly why Europe would turn its back on its Christian heritage. Like my study to strengthen my faith, my studies in history, biography, economics, etc., lead me to believe that ‘for every answer, there are three more questions’, and ‘the more I learn the more ignorant I can see that I am’. I’m so different in learning and knowing efforts and needs from the rest of humanity?

    Almost like horrible culmination, we Americans have elected an administration that seems to be driven by the belief that ‘government just has never done enough’ – well, not since the twentieth-century’s despotic socialistic entities of the thirties and forties, anyway. And, we all know what those socialistic masters did so well for their own people, and millions of dead others and billions of enslaved others, don’t we?

  3. elkabrikir Avatar
    elkabrikir

    Mr Jewell,

    your statement: “Like some evolutionary regression, as a culture, we seem to act as know-it-alls even as we are effectively know-nothings. It is partly why Europe would turn its back on its Christian heritage” calls to mind the words of President Coolidge in his Speech on the Occasion of the 150th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence (1926). He said:

    About the Declaration there is a finality that is exceedingly restful. It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences which have given us a great advance over the people of that day, and that we may therefore very well discard their conclusions for something more modern. But that reasoning can not be applied to this great charter. If all men are created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny their truth or their soundness, the only direction in which he can proceed historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people. Those who wish to proceed in that direction can not lay claim to progress. They are reactionary. Their ideas are not more modern, but more ancient, than those of the Revolutionary fathers.

    The full text can be found at:

    http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=41

  4. Warren Jewell Avatar
    Warren Jewell

    Ah, “Silent Cal” – maybe, the last good politician Massachusetts has given this land . . .

    As his biographer (CALVIN COOLIDGE, Claude M. Fuess; Little, Brown) later put it, “he embodied the spirit and hopes of the middle class, could interpret their longings and express their opinions. That he did represent the genius of the average is the most convincing proof of his strength.” Pace any Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Warren G. Harding, Herbert Hoover, Harry S. Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Baines Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, either Bush, William J. Clinton, and today’s President “Three-Card Monte”, in the last century, second only to Ronald Reagan.

    A bit of frosting: from his Autobiography, about his marriage: “We thought we were made for each other. For almost a quarter of a century she has borne with my infirmities, and I have rejoiced in her graces.” (Her name was Grace.) Sounds downright Ron-n-Nancy, huh?

  5. kent4jmj Avatar
    kent4jmj

    Articles and other resources for Tom Woods can be found at

    http://mises.org/

    http://lewrockwell.com/

    http://www.campaignforliberty.com/blog.php?view=15793

    “Tom’s tremendous lunchtime talk on the economic crisis (based on his latest book Meltdown) at the St. Louis Regional Conference was filmed by CSPAN2 for Book TV and will be airing this weekend. The first airing is Sunday, April 19th at 3:30pm, followed by reairings on Monday, April 20th at 2:00am and 6:00am (all times Eastern).
    Update: CSPAN2 added an extra time last night! Check out the video here.”

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