Did I miss it?
The entire world acts as if
the Keynesian Miracle has actually occurred. Printing money and credit from
thin air, after countless failed attempts throughout history, does seem to
create wealth in the eyes of the investing world today. No longer does the
artificial lowering of interest rates via unbacked money and credit distort the
structure of the economy. Malinvestment will never again exist if one is to
judge these things by the elevated stock, bond and real estate prices that
exist today.
Of course, the (remaining) Austrian
economics community thinks this to be rubbish. Unfortunately, we are becoming
fewer in number and this is especially true for those, like this author, who
have been investing based on Austrian economic principles. It has been a wipeout
the last couple of years and Austrian oriented investors are being carted from
the field.
Household net worth is
soaring on the back of skyrocketing stock, bond and real estate prices from the
money and credit created from thin air, thus seeming to justify the Keynesian
actions of Fed chairmen Greenspan, Bernanke and Yellin. The Fed’s Z.1 report
tells us that net worth rose $1.5 trillion in Q1, despite real GDP growth of
-1% and a savings rate that was just over 1% of GDP. That is, there are no
additional goods and services in the US economy to back up the $1.5 trillion in
new claims on goods and services, and nobody cares. The second quarter looks
like more of the same. Everyone just
expects that growth and savings will come….eventually. Everyone now believes that
you really can get something for nothing.
While I remain steadfast in
the belief that we are reaching the zenith of the greatest financial bubble
ever, all of this faith in central planning exhibited by the masses has started
me asking; what if I a miracle occurred and the Keynesian model actually worked?
Suppose the Keynesians are
correct, shouldn’t I just put my stakes down in Keynesland and enjoy the prevailing
something for nothing environment with all of the other believers?
What would a successful
Keynesland be like?
The Bernanke’s and Krugman’s
of the world would delight in the constantly rising GDP. The mandarins with
their hands on the tools of economic policy for society would know how to guide
our economic ship through the shoals and financial collapses would be a thing
of the past. No doubt the proles would sing the praises of the economic
overlords who delivered them into this promised land of constant economic
growth.
I can hardly imagine a more
dreary and frightening world, however. Keynesland would be a world without
rights for the individual. Keynesland is a world where the ends justify the means. All must be sacrificed to the god of GDP
expansion and his cohort, the god of financial crisis containment. There can be
no permanent rights in a world that focuses on outcomes instead of the
protection of the natural rights of the citizen.
Natural law and free will
would be expunged from Keynesland, lest financial panic return. There is no
future for the follower of natural law in this world, he must pull up stakes
and look elsewhere.
Even if the Keynesian promise
of something for nothing is correct, does it mean anything? What does it do for
my soul if wealth can be conjured from thin air? How does a soul grow if it is
not occasionally challenged by (economic) failure? Thomas Merton tells us that souls
are like Olympic athletes because they too need to be pushed by adversity to
become great.
I remain convinced that the
economics of Keynesland would result in disaster. Its biggest problem however, would
be that it would produce men without souls. If man isn’t allowed to use his
free will to follow natural law he is no longer man.
No, even if Keynesian
economics were true, I wouldn’t want to put down stakes in Keynesland. There
seems to be far more nobility for the individual living in Austrianland, let us
keep our course set for a future arrival there.
Disclaimer: Nothing on this site should be construed as investment advice. It is all merely the opinion of the author.
Disclaimer: Nothing on this site should be construed as investment advice. It is all merely the opinion of the author.
No comments:
Post a Comment