In the previous
posting in this series, we ended by asking the question, What was wrong with
the New Deal? Didn’t it save the
country?
Not exactly. In fact, a good case could be made that the
New Deal ruined the United States, especially monetarily.
Backing promises to pay with other promises to pay is not a good idea. |
Backing the money
supply with government debt throws a monkey wrench in Say’s Law of Markets. The solution to the Keynesian bogeyman of
market gluts is not to create artificial demand, but for the people who want to
consume to produce something that they can trade for the unsold productions of
others. As Say explained in his first
“Letter” to the Reverend Thomas Malthus,
All those who, since Adam Smith, have turned their attention to
Political Economy, agree that in reality we do not buy articles of consumption
with money, the circulating medium with which we pay for them. We must in the
first instance have bought this money itself by the sale of our produce.
To a proprietor of a mine, the silver money is a produce with which
he buys what he has occasion for. To all those through whose hands this silver
afterwards passes, it is only the price of the produce which they themselves
have raised by means of their property in land, their capitals, or their industry.
In selling them they in the first place exchange them for money, and afterwards
they exchange the money for articles of consumption. It is therefore really and
absolutely with their produce that they make their purchases: therefore it is
impossible for them to purchase any articles whatever, to a greater amount than
those they have produced, either by themselves or through the means of their
capital or their land.
Jean-Baptiste Say: Production and consumption in balance. |
I know that this proposition has a paradoxical complexion, which
creates a prejudice against it. I know that one has much greater reason to
expect to be supported by vulgar prejudices, when one asserts that the cause of
too much produce is because all the world is employed in raising it. — That
instead of continually producing, one ought to multiply barren consumptions,
and expend the old capital instead of accumulating new. This doctrine has,
indeed, probability on its side; it can be supported by arguments, facts may be
interpreted in its favor. But, Sir, when Copernicus and Galileo taught, for the
first time, that the sun, although we see it rise every morning in the east,
magnificently pass over our heads at noon, and precipitate itself towards the
west in the evening, still does not move from its place, they had also
universal prejudice against them, the opinions of the Ancients, and the
evidence of the senses. Ought they on that account to relinquish those
demonstrations which were produced by a sound judgment? I should do you an
injustice to doubt your answer.
Besides, when I assert that produce opens a vent for produce; that
the means of industry, whatever they may be, left to themselves, always incline
themselves to those articles which are the most necessary to nations, and that
these necessary articles create at the same time fresh populations, and fresh
enjoyments for those populations, all probability is not against me.
Ricardo: Land a cost-free factor of production. |
That being the
case, if technology and land are (contrary to Keynes) actually productive in
and of themselves, then another spanner gets bunged into the works, as P.G.
Wodehouse put it. Trying to finance
economic growth out of past savings instead of future savings, and then denying
that land and technology are productive, inserts two fatal flaws into the system. Trying to reconcile the irreconcilable by
manipulating money, credit, private property, contracts, taxation, and whatever
else comes to hand to force the system to work against its own principles is a
certain recipe for disaster.
There was also
the problem that the currency was no longer convertible into gold on demand. It
actually became illegal for Americans to own gold. Convertibility of the debt-backed reserve
currency into gold and a legal limit on the amount of government debt that
could be used to back the currency was the only thing that had kept the
National Banking system from being a complete disaster.
Does that mean,
however, that the situation is hopeless?
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