The recent frenzy in the world’s
stock markets had a number of people panicking about the possibility of (yet)
another crash of the magnitude of October 1929, and the possibility of another
Great Depression on the heels of the Great Depressions of 1873-1878, 1893-1898,
1930-1940, etc., etc., etc. . . . although
we don’t call them “depressions” now, but “recessions” ‘cause “depression” is
too scary and makes the government look bad.
Keynes: "So let it be written. So let it be done." |
The fact is that, in terms of real
economic growth, the ups and downs of the secondary stock market are
meaningless. In 1936, when he predicted
the “depression within the depression,” Dr. Harold G. Moulton noted that the
Crash of 1929 did not cause the Great Depression of 1930-1940.
The number one rule in business and
commerce is “confidence,” another way of saying contracts — promises — are
sacred; “Let your yes mean yes, and your no mean no” (Matt. 5:37) is (if you’re
a Christian) God’s way of telling you to keep your word. “Anything beyond this is from the Evil
One.” If you don’t trust the people
you’re doing business with, you can’t do business.
Another word for trust — confidence
— in economics and finance is “creditworthiness.” As Charles Morrison, a nineteenth century
investment banker pointed out in An Essay on the Relations Between Labour and
Capital (1854) advocating widespread capital ownership,
Loss of Confidence, 1831 |
So, if the stock market crash didn’t
cause the Great Depression of 1930-1940, what did?
Decline in the value of traditional
collateral. Businesses in the primary,
productive sector of the economy collateralized their loans with the value of
their businesses, presumably reflected in the value of the companies’ shares on
the secondary market.
"What went wrong" was money creation for speculation. |
The result? Instant uncreditworthiness. Banks stopped lending, and even began calling
existing loans from borrowers whose collateral had declined in value below what
was required in the loan covenant.
The companies still had the same
productive capacity, the market demand still existed, people were employed and
making money . . . but most companies had no substitute for traditional
collateral. This forced companies either
into bankruptcy, in which case all workers lost their jobs, into contraction,
in which case many workers lost their jobs, or to cut pay, in which case workers
lost effective demand.
In all cases effective demand
plummeted, business contracted even further, another round of bankruptcies,
layoffs, and pay cuts occurred, and by February 1932 the country was in a full
blown depression. Because of the stock
market crash? No, because there was no
substitute for traditional forms of collateral.
This is why a key component in Capital Homesteading is the
replacement of traditional forms of collateral with capital credit insurance
and reinsurance, as Louis Kelso proposed in both of the books he co-authored
with Mortimer Adler, The Capitalist Manifesto (1958) and The New Capitalists (1961). The latter book
especially focused on the need for capital credit insurance. Given that the primary use of past savings is
collateral, not direct reinvestment, the subtitle to The New Capitalists has a world of unexpected meaning: “A Proposal
to Free Economic Growth from the Slavery of Savings.”
Had businesses in 1930 been able to replace their
traditional collateral with insurance policies, there would have been no Great
Depression. There would have been a
moderate downturn due to some other factors unrelated to the Crash. These, however, were short term, e.g., some overcapacity in housing construction
and consumer durables production and so on, but nothing particularly serious.
If today’s powers-that-be want to “stimulate recovery,” they
need to figure out a way for banks to start lending to businesses to finance
new capital formation instead of to pour into stock market speculation. Capital Homesteading is one way.
#30#