Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Nothing New Under the Sun
Monday, March 09, 2009
The Ghost of Marx

"Owners of capital will stimulate the working class to buy more and more of expensive goods, houses and technology, pushing them to take more and more expensive credits, until their debt becomes unbearable. The unpaid debt will lead to bankruptcy of banks, which will have to be nationalized, and the State will have to take the road which will eventually lead to communism."
— Karl Marx, 1867, Das Kapital
Marx, contrary to popular opinion, did not carry his youthful idealism into his grey years. Rather Marx advocated the abandonment of the radical agenda which he and Engels outlined in Kommunist Manifesto. In so doing, he fostered the notion that “capitalism” would ultimately destroy itself. To wit, he made a very strong case against intervention. Marx surmised that “capitalism” was such a damnable system that if left to its own devices would pave the way for the transition to communism. Hence the view that the “owners of capital” will usher us along those lines. And this is also where he erred.
In the current economic malaise, it was not the “owners of capital” who paved the way for nationalization and communism. It was the government itself, particularly the committed socialists on the Left and the misguided interventionists on the Right. Their policies created the environment wherein the “working class” would react as nature intended to their own detriment. A beautifully orchestrated crisis of world-wide proportions which allows those committed to Socialism to come to our rescue.
In the words of Rahm Emanuel, President Obama’s Chief of Staff, “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste.” For therein lies “an opportunity to the things you think you could not do before.”
Wednesday, March 04, 2009
The More Things Change…..
"We have tried spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does not work. And I have just one interest, and if I am wrong … somebody else can have my job. I want to see this country prosperous. I want to see people get a job. I want to see people get enough to eat. We have never made good on our promises ... I say after eight years of this Administration we have just as much unemployment as when we started … And an enormous debt to boot."But these are not the words of some unnamed official of future fantasy. These are the words of Henry Morgenthau taken from the Congressional Record of May 1939 (House Ways & Means Committee). Who was Henry Morgenthau? Only the U.S. Treasury Secretary under President Roosevelt. This is the man who oversaw implementation of Roosevelt’s New Deal policies which after seven years had produced no positive changes in the economy. In fact, by May 1939, the national unemployment rate had once again climbed above the 20th percentile.
Tuesday, March 03, 2009
The "Why" of Moral Hazard
We know that “moral hazard” exists. Buts why do mature, intelligent and well-informed people behave in such ways? Is it a cognitive response or is it simply a trait encoded in our psyche?
In its simplest form “moral hazard” is what results when the individual no longer bears sole responsibility for the consequences of his actions. And while we are all prone to such behaviour, not a one of us would admit that we would react this way. The fact is, such behaviour is hardwired in our nature. Therefore we are correct in denying deliberation for we do not do so knowingly or wilfully.
All human beings are guided by a dual nature, one higher, one lower. At our basic level we are much like any other animal in that we act and react instinctively. I do not believe, nor have I seen evidence sufficient to allow me to presume that human behaviour is cognitive though there are certainly times when we naturally think through our actions beforehand and choose the worst alternative. Why? Because our instincts drive our pursuit of the maximum pleasure with the minimum pain. Hence in an economy driven by profit and loss for example, we are encouraged to take risks by the lure of profit and simultaneously encouraged to minimize our risks so as to avoid loss. In other words we take calculated risks. But what happens when we assuage risk to the point of eliminating the consequences of imprudence?
We each have a level of risk with which we are comfortable. One instinctively (as opposed to cognitively) measures consequences involved in a given situation and compensates by adjusting risk exposure to achieve a level thereof commensurate with ones existing comfort level. Such is the premise behind the concept of risk homeostasis.
Consider ultra-cautious, mild-mannered, John. John buys a new Chevy Subcontinent. It’s large, powerful, sits higher than nearly everything else on the road and has the most advanced safety features you could imagine. A vehicle slightly smaller than a Challenger battle tank with roughly the same fuel economy of an aircraft carrier and approximately the same cargo capacity, in cubic feet, as Sri Lanka. So John sits in the cockpit of his new Subcontinent and suddenly he gets a sense of invulnerability. John dispenses with his normal predisposition towards behavioural restraint and proceeds to drive with reckless abandon. Now John isn’t doing this because he doesn’t care about other drivers, nor is he consciously making decisions in utter disregard for the safety of himself or others. No John is merely reacting instinctively to the false sense of security he feels and therefore compensating for the perceived diminutive risk by “pushing the envelope” if you will. The important point here is that this occurs on a purely subconscious level which is to say, instinctively, not cognitively. And once we understand that John is not an aberration, but a normal human being reacting to what he perceives as a low risk situation, we can reasonably predict human behaviour in innumerable circumstances.
When consequences are diminished (even if only perceptively so), people are naturally incentivised to take greater risks. This is just a true in driving as it is in investing and just as true for the janitor as it is for the investment banker.
Therefore, while it is wrong to say that government policies cause specific problems such as the current financial crisis it is entirely reasonable to charge that such policies created an environment wherein individuals and institutions take on risks in ways and to degrees that they would never considered but-for said government policies. That's why we call it the law of unintended consequences. It makes us feel good to protect individuals or entities from the risk of failure or to shield certain persons from the harsh realities of life, but in so doing, we only create conditions wherein greater harm ensues. It's in our nature.
Thursday, February 26, 2009
1933 Pro-Inflation Propaganda Film
WARNING: The following video is intended for intelligent audiences. Viewing this information without at least a marginal understanding of basic economics or an IQ above room temperature may prove hazardous to your political beliefs. Please do not view in the presence of leftist politicians, professors, journalists or government employees as they have been shown to become sexually aroused by economic inanity.
Friday, February 20, 2009
Why Elections Matter
Governor, Arnold Taxenegger (R) and State Senator Abel “The Enabler” Maldonado (R), joined Democrats in passing a budget that includes more than $70 billion in new taxes. Of course they assure us that it is mildly offset by spending cuts. From what I can tell, the total value of all spending cuts in the new budget would, if given to me in cash, allow me to purchase a Snickers Bar.
Far be it of me to say “I told you so” but….well, you know.
Monday, February 16, 2009
Why Do So Many Reject Free Enterprise?
I'll turn to an old master for this one:"One can hardly expect people either to like an extended order (free enterprise system) that runs counter to some of their strongest instincts, or readily to understand that it brings them the material comforts they also want. The order is even “unnatural” in the common meaning of not conforming to man’s biological endowments. Much of the good that man does in the extended order is thus not due to his being naturally good; yet it is foolish to deprecate civilisation as artificial for this reason. It is artificial only in the sense in which most of our values, our language, our art and our very reason are artificial; they are not genetically embedded in our biological structures. In another sense, however the extended order is perfectly natural; in the sense that it has itself, like similar biological phenomena, evolved naturally in the course of natural selection." [Parenthesis mine] – F.A. Hayek, Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism