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George
Reisman's Blog on Economics, Politics, Society, and Culture
January
2008
This blog is a commentary on contemporary
business, politics, economics, society, and culture, based on the values of
Reason, Rational Self-Interest, and Laissez-Faire Capitalism. Its intellectual
foundations are Ayn Rand's philosophy of Objectivism and the theory of the
Austrian and British Classical schools of economics as expressed in the writings
of Mises, Böhm-Bawerk, Menger, Ricardo, Smith, James and John Stuart Mill,
Bastiat, and Hazlitt, and in my own writings.
The contents of the blog are
copyright © 2008 by George Reisman.
All rights reserved. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce and distribute
individual articles below electronically and/or in print, other than as part of
a book.
(Email notification is requested). All other
rights reserved.
George
Reisman, Ph.D., is the author of
Capitalism: A Treatise on Economics
(Ottawa, Illinois: Jameson Books, 1996) and is Pepperdine University
Professor Emeritus of Economics.
Note: A perfect replica
of
Capitalism can be downloaded and saved to your hard drive in the
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file is fully searchable and the book's two tables of contents (brief and
detailed) are fully hyperlinked to the entries described. To perform the
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A Creditor’s
Protection Bill
Today, in the world
of financial celebrity, anyone who is anyone is a
billionaire. By the same token, millions upon millions
of people are or soon will be mere, everyday
millionaires in the United States. Millionaires are on
the way to becoming a dime a dozen.
Similarly, new cars cost what new homes did only a few
decades ago. Men’s neckties often sell nowadays for as
much as men’s suits did not so very long ago. To have a
pair of soles and heels put on a pair of shoes today
costs as much as a new pair of shoes did not too many
years ago.
All of this is the result of continuous inflation of the
money supply by the Federal Reserve System. As a result
of the “Fed’s” actions, tens and hundreds of billions of
new and additional dollars have poured into the economic
system, correspondingly increasing spending and driving
up prices. There are more and more billionaires and
millionaires and shockingly high-priced goods simply
because of the flood of new and additional money coming
from the Fed.
It’s not such things as “oil shocks” or diverting food
crops to fuel production that’s responsible. Without the
flood of new and additional money, increases in the
price of oil and farm products would be accompanied by
decreases in the price of practically everything else.
This is because practically all of whatever additional
money was spent in buying oil et al. would have to be
taken away from spending elsewhere, since the overall
total ability to spend in the economic system would be
limited by a limited quantity of money. And the rise in
the price of oil and farm products would also not be
nearly as great as it has been.
To confirm the fact that the source of today’s high and
rising prices lies in the rapid increase in the supply
of paper currency and checkbook money, it’s helpful to
calculate prices in terms of the currency sanctified by
the U.S. Constitution, namely, the gold dollar.
A gold dollar contains approximately one-twentieth of an
ounce of gold. Today an ounce of gold sells for more
than $800 (it’s actually more than $900 at the present
moment). That means that one gold dollar has the value
of more than $40 paper dollars, because one-twentieth of
$800 is $40. The result is that the price of everything
stated in gold dollars is currently one-fortieth, or
less, of its price in paper dollars.
Thus, a $1million home is $25,000 in gold dollars. A
$50,000 automobile is $1,250 in gold dollars, and so on.
The rise in prices is the result of the fact that we
express prices in paper money, whose supply can be
increased virtually without limit and without cost.
Prices can never rise to anywhere near the same extent
when stated in gold. That’s because gold is rare in
nature and costly to extract.
Today, we have a credit crisis emanating from the
collapse of the real estate bubble that the Fed launched
in order to cope with the effects of the collapse of the
stock market bubble that it had launched only a few
years earlier. Now, in order to cope with the effects of
the collapse of the real estate bubble, the government
and the Fed are looking for yet another program of
monetary “stimulus.” This time it’s to be in the form of
cutting taxes while financing an undiminished, indeed,
an increased amount of government spending by means of
the creation of still more new and additional money.
The Fed and the rest of the government seem to think
that their job is always to be sure that the stock
market averages and the price of homes is never to be
allowed to fall too far below their most recent peaks,
and to flood the economy with as much new and additional
money as may be required to accomplish this. Keeping up
housing prices is an especially remarkable goal,
inasmuch as only a year or two ago, all of the
complaining was about how far housing prices had climbed
relative to the ability of people to afford them. One
would think that a sharp reduction in home prices is the
very thing needed to solve that problem and that the
process needs to go a good deal further than it has, in
order to do so.
For the present and the foreseeable future, there is
probably nothing that will stop the Fed from continuing
with its inflation. Leading pressure groups are ardently
in favor of it: tens of millions of share owners want
it; the great majority of businessmen large and small
want it; bankers and brokers want it; homeowners want
it; labor unions want it; the political establishment
wants it. If there is another terrorist attack, let
alone another war, inflation will be used to pay much of
the cost. To the extent that the environmentalist agenda
of declining energy production is imposed, inflation
will be used to finance subsidies to the growing numbers
of Americans who will be impoverished by it. Their
expenditure of those subsidies will drive up prices for
everyone else and cause further impoverishment and the
need for more subsidization and for still more inflation
to pay for it.
In the face of such prospects, people around the world
who have been willing to hold dollars because dollars
were superior to their own, more rapidly inflating
currencies, will lose their desire to hold dollars.
They’re already losing that desire. The world’s supply
of dollars will sooner or later reside exclusively in
the United States. Indeed, the reflux of dollars appears
to have already begun.
The dollar has begun the kind of slide taken in the past
by such currencies as the Italian lira. In the 1930s,
one lira was worth 20 cents. Twenty cents in that era
had a buying power equal to several of today’s dollars.
Before the lira was replaced by the euro, its value was
less one-twentieth of one U.S. cent. A few days food and
lodging at an undistinguished hotel cost more than a
million lira. The fall of the lira took place in
essentially the same way that the dollar is falling
today—through the reckless increase in its quantity in
response to widely held beliefs in the necessity of such
increase.
Is there anything that can be done to stop the potential
destruction of the real value of all dollar-denominated
savings and long-term contracts by a flood of inflation?
Is there anything that can protect people from a
possible tsunami of inflation in the United States?
There is something that could be done. There is a
financial life raft, as it were, that could be made
available to everyone, that would enable people to
salvage at least some significant portion of the real
value of their savings and contracts denominated in
fixed sums of dollars. It is something much more
urgently needed, aimed at a much more realistic danger,
and much more feasible than efforts to control global
warming, say.
What is it? It is the enactment of a creditors’
protection bill, whose essential provisions would
be the insertion into all outstanding contracts of a
limited, contingent gold clause, and the
removal of all legal obstacles to the inclusion of such
clauses in all future contracts.
Here’s an example of how it would work. Imagine someone
who owns $1 million of corporate bonds that he bought
several years earlier and that are scheduled to be
redeemed in another 25 years. Perhaps 25 percent of this
sum, i.e., $250,000, would be designated as representing
the quantity of gold that the owner of the bonds could
choose to receive when the bonds came due, instead of
the $1 million he is presently entitled to receive at
that time. The actual quantity of gold he would be
entitled to receive would be the amount that $250,000
could buy at the price of gold prevailing on some
specified date within 12 months prior to the enactment
of the law.
If that price of gold were $1,000 per ounce, say, then
the $1 million dollar contract would contain a
contingent liability calling for the payment of 250
ounces of gold. This payment would be at the creditor’s
option. The creditor would have the right to choose to
be paid 250 ounces of gold rather than $1 million
dollars.
Obviously, no creditor would exercise this option if the
price of gold remained at $1,000 per ounce, let alone if
it fell below $1,000 per ounce. He would not exercise it
if the price of gold rose to $2,000 per ounce. Nor would
he do so if it rose to $3,000 per ounce. But when and if
the price of gold exceeded $4,000 per ounce, then it
would be to the advantage of the creditor to choose to
be paid 250 ounces of gold, or the sum of dollars then
necessary to buy 250 ounces of gold, for at that point
250 ounces of gold would represent more than $1 million.
If when gold reached, say, $5,000 per ounce, the 250
ounces of gold that the creditor was entitled to would
be worth $1,250,000, i.e., $250,000 more than the
million he had lent. This would not represent any real
gain to the creditor, however, if over the same period
of time, prices in general had also increased by a
factor of 5. In that case, the actual buying power of
the 250 ounces of gold would be no greater than it had
been when the price of gold was $1,000 per ounce and
prices in general were where they were at that time.
But even in this case, the creditor would not be quite
as badly off as he would have been without the
protection afforded by the 25 percent gold clause. For
in its absence, he would have been repaid merely his
original $1 million, that now had a buying power only
one-fifth as great as it was originally. With this gold
clause and his consequent receipt of $1,250,000, the
buying power he receives is one-fourth as great as the
sum he lent.
The difference between a fourth and a fifth is, of
course, not very great. It would amount to our creditor
incurring a loss in buying power of 75 percent rather
than 80 percent, which is not an outcome to be
particularly happy about.
But the odds are great that the protection afforded by
such a gold clause would be equal to more than 25
percent of the real value of the sum originally due the
creditor. This is because if prices were to start rising
rapidly, the price of gold would almost certainly rise
even more rapidly. Thus, for example, if prices in
general were to rise on the order of 5 times over the
course of a decade or two, say, the price of gold might
very well rise by 10 or even 20 times. In that case, the
250 ounces of gold that the creditor would have the
option of choosing, would be worth $2.5 million or even
$5 million. In the face of a fivefold rise in prices,
these sums would have the buying power of 50 percent or
even 100 percent of the real value of the sum originally
due the creditor.
What would serve to make the price of gold rise faster
than prices in general is that in periods of rapid
inflation, and in the absence of any reliable
alternative paper currency, such as the dollar once
appeared to be, gold is the ideal inflation hedge for
most people. Even though its ownership entails some
costs of storage and safekeeping, those costs are very
modest. At the same time incurring them represents a far
lesser loss than does practically all the usual forms of
investment in a period of rapid inflation, including
ownership of common stocks and family businesses. In
these cases, capital gains taxes and income taxes
consume funds needed for replacement at higher prices.
As a result, a growing demand for gold as an inflation
hedge appears, which operates on the price of gold
alongside of and in addition to the forces operating to
raise prices in general. In addition, the price of gold
could be increased by the desire for accumulations of
gold on the part of those who had agreed to accept
contingent liabilities in gold.
A potential consequence of a system of such partial gold
clauses could well be the development of substantial
opposition to rapid inflation on the part of debtors,
however paradoxical that may sound. This is because once
the number of dollars payable under gold clauses started
to exceed the number of dollars originally owed, debtors
would be in a position in which further inflation served
to increase their burden of debt rather than decrease
it. Gold prices rising more rapidly than prices in
general would mean that debtors would be in a position
in which the additional inflated money they took in
could not keep pace with the additional money they owed.
They would do better to take in less additional inflated
money and not be confronted with debt obligations rising
even more rapidly. (This seemingly paradoxical effect of
inflation under a system of gold clauses is a matter I
discuss more fully in Capitalism.)
Enactment of a creditors’ protection bill along the
lines I have described should be an essential part of
the near-term political agenda of all defenders of
economic freedom. It would offer a potentially valuable
two-fold protection against the ravages of inflation.
First, it could provide substantial protection to the
real value of the assets of individuals. Second, it also
might also ultimately turn debtors, who typically have a
vested interest in inflation, into opponents of
inflation, once they came to be faced with debts payable
in gold, which would become harder to repay as inflation
reduced the ability of paper money to serve as the means
of repayment.
The insertion of a gold clause into existing contracts
should by no means be regarded as any kind of new and
additional government interference with the freedom of
contract. To the contrary, it would be a major step in
undoing such interference. Prior to their
abrogation by the New Deal in 1933, full, 100 percent
gold clauses were the norm in the United States in
long-term term debt contracts, and had been since the
Civil War. They are something that comes about on the
foundation of the rational self-interest of individuals
when it is allowed to operate free of government
interference.
Obviously, the degree of gold clause protection would
not by any means necessarily have to be the 25
percentage points that I have chosen for purposes of
illustration. If a mere 5 or 10 percent protection could
be enacted into law, it would be a major first step,
simply by introducing the concept of gold clauses to the
present generation. And, of course, it would still
afford some actual measure of protection against the
possible ravages of inflation.
The parties entering into new contracts should be free
to include whatever degree of gold clause protection
that was mutually agreeable. What presently stops such
contracts from being made are considerations both of
their enforceability in the courts and their likely
treatment for purposes of taxation. As just mentioned,
such contracts were abrogated on a mass scale in 1933
and the Supreme Court did nothing to uphold them. To be
accepted with any degree of confidence, the
enforceability of new, partial gold-clause contracts
would have to have the benefit at the very least of a
joint resolution of Congress directing the courts to
uphold them.
The gold-clause contracts would have to be exempt from
any possible application of usury statutes. Such
statutes might come into play when creditors ended up
being repaid sums of depreciated paper dollars that were
greatly in excess of the sums originally lent—e.g.,
being repaid $2.5 million paper dollars when one had
originally lent $1 million paper dollars. The contracts
would have to be interpreted in terms simply of being
repaid a fixed amount of gold principal—e.g., the 250
ounces of gold in the example above—irrespective of any
increase in the price of gold.
Treatment of the gold-clause contracts in this way,
would preclude the payment of taxes on any paper money
gains reflecting merely the repayment of larger sums of
paper to maintain parity with the same physical amount
of gold. Thus, for example, the $1.5 million paper gain
in the repayment of $2.5 million on a $1 million loan
would not be subject to any kind of income or
capital-gains taxation. The applicable principle would
be that the lender has merely received the same physical
quantity of gold that he was always entitled to. He has
no gain whatever in terms of gold. In effect, he has
lent a sum of gold and has been repaid that sum, nothing
more. Thus, he has no gold income or gold capital gain.
Gold-clause contracts would almost certainly become very
widespread if the market could take for granted their
enforceability and exemption from taxation based merely
on the rise in the price of gold.
As a matter of principle, the parties entering into new
contracts should be legally free to agree to whatever
degree of gold-clause protection they wished, all the
way to 100 percent. Nevertheless, little actual harm
would likely be done, if for a short time legal limits
were imposed on the percentage of the value of new
contracts that could enjoy gold-clause protection. Such
a limitation would probably make the enactment of
gold-clause protection politically more acceptable in
the beginning, since it would be an incremental change
and thus not appear too radical. Even with such a
restriction, the gain simply from enacting the principle
of gold-clause protection would be profound, not to
mention the substantive protection likely afforded to
creditors.
However, even in the absence of any legal limitation,
for some period of time it would almost certainly be
highly advisable in most cases for the contacting
parties to agree to fairly modest partial gold clauses
rather than full, 100 percent gold clauses. This is
because partial gold-clause protection is what will be
necessary in order not only to give creditors an
important measure of the protection they need, but also
to avoid the development of widespread bankruptcies on
the part of debtors.
The threat of debtors going bankrupt arises because
continuing inflation is likely to drive the real value
of gold far higher than it is today and at the same time
greatly reduce the ability of earnings in paper money to
pay debts stated in gold. As a result, entering into 100
or even 50 percent gold-clause contracts today, at
today’s price and real buying power of gold, would be an
extremely risky proposition for debtors, one likely to
result in their owing amounts of gold they simply could
not pay.
Avoiding near-term widespread bankruptcies in gold is
essential to gaining public support for gold’s once
again serving to protect the real value of contracts on
a large scale. Hopefully, education about the risks of
owing too much gold would serve to prevent bankruptcies
in gold from being too frequent. Partial gold-clause
protection is what would follow from such education and
accomplish its objective.
The implication here is that the degree of gold-clause
protection in contracts should increase only as the risk
of further increases in the real value of gold in the
economic system relative to that of paper money
declines.
Gold-clauses, of course, would protect not only lenders,
but also people dependent on pensions or annuities or
who would be the beneficiaries of such retirement
vehicles in the future. They would also protect the
grantors of long-term leases of all kinds.
The widespread establishment of partial gold clauses is
an essential step in the protection of the buying power
of creditors. It would also be a major step on the path
toward the establishment of sound money.
Of course, it is possible that the Fed will pull back
from its increasingly inflationary course and reverse
field as it did in the early 1980s. In that case,
gold-clause contracts will simply have a status
comparable to fire insurance for people whose homes do
not suffer fire damage greater than their deductible.
They will serve simply as a form of insurance policy.
One that, unfortunately, looks like it is increasingly
needed.
Credit Expansion, Economic Inequality, and Stagnant Wages
Capital in the form
of credit is normally and, certainly, properly, extended
out of previously accumulated savings. In sharpest
contrast, credit expansion is the creation of new and
additional money out of thin air, which money is then
lent to business firms and individuals as though it were
a supply of new and additional saved up capital funds.
Its existence serves to reduce interest rates and to
enable loans to be made and debts to be incurred which
otherwise would not have been made or incurred. Always
and everywhere, to the extent that private banks
participate in the process of credit expansion, they do
so with the sanction and generally with the active
encouragement of the government.
Economists, above all Ludwig von Mises, have shown how
credit expansion is responsible for the boom-bust
business cycle and how its existence depends on
deliberate government policy. Nevertheless, public
opinion believes that the business cycle is an inherent
feature of capitalism and that the role of government is
not that of causing the phenomenon but of combating it.
Indeed, as Mises observed, “Nothing harmed the cause of
liberalism [capitalism] more than the almost regular
return of feverish booms and of the dramatic breakdown
of bull markets followed by lingering slumps. Public
opinion has become convinced that such happenings are
inevitable in the unhampered market economy.”
The truth is that credit expansion is responsible not
only for the boom-bust cycle but also for another major
negative phenomenon for which public opinion mistakenly
blames capitalism. Namely, sharply increased economic
inequality, in which the wealthier strata of the
population appear to increase their wealth dramatically
relative to the rest of the population and for no good
reason.
It is not accidental that the two leading periods of
credit expansion in history—the 1920s and the period
since the mid 1990s—have been characterized by a major
increase in economic inequality. Both in the 1920s and
in the more recent period, a major cause of the
increased economic inequality is that the new and
additional funds created in credit expansion show up
very soon in the financial markets, where they drive up
the prices of securities, above all, common stocks. The
owners of common stock are preponderantly wealthy
individuals, who now find themselves the beneficiaries
of substantial capital gains. These gains are the
greater the larger and more prolonged the credit
expansion is and the higher it drives the prices of
shares. In the process of new and additional money
pouring into the financial markets, investment bankers
and stock speculators are in a position to reap
especially great gains.
Since it’s so important, the main point just made needs
to be repeated: credit expansion creates an artificial
economic inequality by showing up in the stock market
and driving up stock prices. Since the stocks are owned
mainly by wealthy people, they are the main
beneficiaries of the process. The more substantial and
the more prolonged the credit expansion is, the larger
are the gains enjoyed by wealthy people more than anyone
else.
The new and additional funds injected into the economic
system also soon show up in an additional demand for
capital goods, such as business inventories and plant
and equipment, and in an additional demand for
consumers’ durable goods, such as houses and
automobiles. The purchase of these latter goods, like
the capital goods purchased by business firms, depends
largely on credit and is encouraged by lower interest
rates. It is also fed by the capital gains being reaped
by wealthy individuals, which results in an especially
pronounced increase in the demand for luxury housing and
for luxury goods in general.
The additional demand for capital goods and consumers’
durable goods serves to increase business sales revenues
and thus business profits across a wide spectrum of the
economic system. Credit expansion increases profits in
the economic system because the expenditure of the new
and additional money in buying capital goods and labor
increases the sales revenues of business firms
immediately, while it increases the costs they must
deduct from those sales revenues only with a time lag.
This is also true to an extent of inflation that enters
the economic system by means of its creators simply
spending the new and additional money rather than
lending it out—“simple inflation,” as Mises calls it.
What is present in both kinds of inflation—credit
expansion and simple inflation—is the fact that sales
revenues rise as soon as new and additional money is
spent, but the costs deducted from the sales revenues of
any given year largely reflect outlays of money made in
previous years. In those previous years the quantity of
money and volume of spending of virtually all types was
smaller, including the spending that shows up in the
present year as costs in business income statements.
Credit expansion boosts profits more than does simple
inflation because the reduction in interest rates it
brings about serves to increase the time lag between the
making of expenditures for capital goods and labor and
their subsequent appearance as costs in business income
statements. The low interest rates encourage the
purchase of such things as durable machinery and the
undertaking of construction projects. The kind of
increase that this must bring about in economy-wide
profits can be seen in the following examples.
Thus in one case, imagine that a business firm uses
newly created money that has come into its hands to
increase its newspaper advertising, say. Its additional
expenditure will be equivalent additional sales revenue
to the newspaper. It will also most likely be an
equivalent immediate additional cost to it—a cost that
it must deduct from its sales revenues in its very next
income statement. Thus, in the same accounting period
that the newspaper records additional sales revenues
equal to the firm’s additional expenditure, the firm
itself must record an equal additional cost of
production to deduct from its own sales revenues.
Obviously, in this case there is no increase in the
economy-wide aggregate amount of profit. This is because
economy-wide, aggregate sales revenues and economy-wide
aggregate costs have both increased to the same extent.
But now imagine that the firm spends the same amount of
money in buying durable machinery that will be
depreciated over a ten-year period. Once again, a
seller, this time the seller of the machinery, will
immediately have additional sales revenues equal to our
firm’s additional expenditure. But in this case, our
firm will certainly not have an equally large additional
cost of production to report in its next income
statement. If its expenditure for the machinery was $1
million, say, then while the seller has $1 million of
additional sales revenues in his next annual income
statement, our firm will probably have merely $100
thousand of additional costs to report in its next
annual income statement. This is because the purchase
price of the machine is not charged off all at once, but
only gradually, over its depreciable life. The
implication of this example is that in the current year
there will be an addition of $900,000 to economy-wide,
aggregate profits. If our firm’s $1 million were part of
an investment in the construction of a building with a
forty-year depreciable life, the implied addition to
economy-wide, aggregate profits would be even greater.
Such boosts to profits go hand in glove with the rise in
common-stock prices and greatly reinforce them. Of
course, once credit expansion comes to an end, the
stimulus it gave to profits and to the stock market both
disappear and at that point profits plunge and capital
gains turn into capital losses. And at that point, the
enemies of capitalism turn to attacking capitalism for
causing depressions.
Now as the new and additional money created in credit
expansion works its way through the economic system, one
would expect the demand for labor and thus wage rates
also to rise. This certainly does tend to happen and in
the 1920s wages increased substantially in terms both of
money and real buying power. They simply did not
increase to nearly the same extent as the incomes of the
wealthier strata of the population, nor, of course, to
the extent that business profits increased.
In addition to the special stimulus given to profits, a
second reason for the failure of wages to keep pace with
the rise in profits, is that the encouragement given by
credit expansion to the purchase of durable capital
goods, particularly plant and equipment, tends to take
place at the expense of funds that otherwise would be
devoted to the purchase of labor services. As a result,
the rise in wages is retarded at the same time that
profits sharply advance. For this reason too it does not
keep pace with the rise in profits.
Despite any appearances to the contrary, the rise in
real wages in the 1920s was not the result of credit
expansion but of rising production. Credit expansion
actually operated to retard the rise in production
insofar as it caused the wasteful investment of capital,
i.e., what Mises calls malinvestment.
The rise in production is what prevented the prices of
goods and services from rising as rapidly as credit
expansion raised wage rates in terms of money. The rise
in production, in turn, was based on a high degree of
availability of capital funds provided by actual
savings, as opposed to credit expansion, together with
rapid scientific and technological progress. It was this
that increased real wages, i.e., the goods and services
that wage earners could actually buy with their wages.
In contrast to the experience of the 1920s, in the two
great recent credit expansions, i.e., the dot.com bubble
of 1995-2001 and its successor the presently collapsing
housing bubble that began not long thereafter, there has
been very little, if any, rise in real wages. Most
commentators appear to attribute this to nothing more
than the unrestrained greed of businessmen and
capitalists. They apparently go on the theory that if
there is anything in the economic system that breathes
or moves other than at the command of the government, or
other than with the active supervision and control of
the government, it is proof that we live in an era of
“laissez-faire.” For example, in The New York Times
of December 30, 2007, in an article titled “The Free
Market: A False Idol After All?,” Times
columnist Peter Goodman writes:
For more than a quarter-century, the dominant idea
guiding economic policy in the United States and
much of the globe has been that the market is
unfailingly wise. So wise that the proper role for
government is to steer clear and not mess with the
gusher of wealth that will flow, trickling down to
the [sic] every level of society, if only the market
is left to do its magic.
That notion has carried the day as industries have
been unshackled from regulation, and as taxes have
been rolled back, along with the oversight powers of
government.
This alleged laissez-faire environment, such writers
pretend, has enabled businessmen and capitalists
shamelessly to enrich themselves at the expense of
increasingly impoverished wage earners, to whom nothing
any longer even “trickles down.” Increased free trade
and “globalization,” of course, are attacked as part of
the process and as greatly contributing to the
stagnation or outright decline in real wages.
In sharpest contrast to such blather, in the real world
there are innumerable rules and regulations enacted by
the Federal Government to control virtually every aspect
of economic activity. They are contained in the more
than 70,000 pages of The Federal Register. The
overwhelming mass of government interference described
therein, and in its counterparts at the state and local
level, is a glaring refutation of claims about the
existence of any kind of laissez faire in the
present-day world. The very description of such
interference, in tens of thousands of pages of official
text, is a refutation of such size and literal weight as
to render any claims about laissez faire or insufficient
government controls or regulations utterly nonsensical.
This truly massive body of material also suggests that
the actual explanation of the stagnation in real wages
is precisely an ever growing burden of government
intervention in the economic system. The intervention is
in the form of policies that undermine genuine saving
and in numerous other ways undermine capital
accumulation and the rise in the productivity of labor.
Personal and corporate income taxes, the inheritance
tax, the capital gains tax, and government budget
deficits—all entail the taking away of funds that if
left in the hands of their owners would have been
heavily spent, indeed, overwhelmingly spent, in the
purchase of capital goods and labor services. Instead,
those funds are diverted into financing the consumption
of the government and those to whom the government gives
money.
Inflation and credit expansion greatly exacerbate this
diversion of funds, because their effect is artificially
to increase the incomes subject to these taxes and to
thus to deprive business firms of the funds required to
replace assets at prices made higher by the same process
that increases their taxable incomes. The progressive
aspect of income and inheritance taxes also worsens
their effects, because incomes tend to be saved and
invested the more heavily the larger they are; at the
same time, substantial inheritances are more likely to
be retained in the form of accumulated savings and
capital than are modest inheritances.
Because of the reduced demand for labor that results
from the taxation of funds that would otherwise have
been used in employing labor and in buying capital
goods, wages are substantially less than they otherwise
would have been. At the same time, the buying power of
those reduced wages is also sharply reduced in
comparison with what it would otherwise have been.
It is worth pointing out that totally apart from the
effect of social security in undermining the incentive
to save, the sheer rise in tax rates since 1965 to pay
for the system has taken away fully eight additional
percentage points of the income of every wage earner
whose earnings are equal to or less than the amount
subject to such taxation. In 1965 the combined social
security tax on wage earners and their employers was
7.25 percent, which applied to a maximum annual income
of $4800. Today, the combined rate is 15.3 percent,
which includes 2.9 percent for Medicare. The 15.3
percent rate currently, i.e., in 2008, applies to all
wages and salaries up to a maximum of $102,000 per year.
The effect of these major increases both in social
security tax rates and in the amount of income
subject to them has been to reduce the take-home wages
of many workers by considerably more than 8 percent.
The social security contribution of employers is a loss
to wage earners, because it is a cost of employment no
different than the payment of take-home wages.
Financially, it is a matter of indifference to employers
whether they pay this sum to the government or to their
employees. The cost to them is the same. It is money
that the employees could and would have had, if the
government had not taken it from the employers.
The same is true of all other costs borne by employers
on behalf of their workers, whether it is health
insurance, day care, family leave, or whatever. The
costs in question are all costs of employment, which, in
the absence of such government interference, the wage
earners could and would have had in their own pockets.
Compelling employers to pay the costs of such things is
at the expense of the workers’ take-home wages. The more
such costs are imposed, the lower are take-home wages in
comparison with what they otherwise would have been. The
increase in such costs over time has correspondingly
held down any rise in take-home wages.
Government intervention, as I’ve said, not only holds
down the demand for labor and thus wages, particularly
take-home wages, but it also reduces the buying power of
wages. This is because the supply of capital goods is
less, thanks to the diversion of funds from their
purchase. The absence of these capital goods prevents
the productivity of labor from being increased as much
as it otherwise would have been. This in turn holds down
the production both of consumers’ goods and of further
capital goods. The consequence of a lesser supply of
consumers’ goods is prices of consumers’ goods that are
higher than they otherwise would have been and thus a
buying power of wages that is correspondingly lower than
it otherwise would have been.
The consequent absence of further capital goods
compounds the negative effect on production, in a
process that can be repeated over and over again, with
each passing year. What this means is that because fewer
capital goods in the form of factories and machines are
available this year, the ability to produce capital
goods in the form of factories and machines for the
following year is reduced, because capital goods in the
form of factories and machines are the means of
producing further capital goods in the form of factories
and machines no less than they are of producing
consumers’ goods.
The buying power of wages is also reduced by all of the
other laws and regulations that hold down the production
and supply of goods in general and thus keep up prices.
And again, there is a compounding effect. Environmental
legislation deserves an especially prominent place in
any list of such laws and regulations. Already, because
of the restrictions it has imposed on the production of
oil, coal, natural gas, and atomic power, it has served
to raise the price of energy to unprecedented levels and
to deprive many wage earners of the ability to buy
gasoline for their cars or trucks and heating oil for
their homes. To the extent that wage earners are able to
pay energy prices reflecting a $100- per-barrel price of
oil, their ability to buy other goods is correspondingly
reduced. If the environmental movement’s agenda of
radical reductions (up to 90 percent) in carbon dioxide
emissions is imposed, meeting it will require absolutely
crippling cutbacks in the production and use of oil,
coal, and natural gas which must result in corresponding
reductions in production, increases in prices, and
absolute devastation for real wages.
The negative effect on production here is again a
cumulative one, inasmuch as lack of energy supplies
hampers the ability to find and exploit further supplies
of energy. The more abundant and cheaper energy is, the
greater is man’s ability to move masses of earth and to
process them, thereby developing further energy
supplies. Thus, government intervention that reduces
energy supplies reduces the ability to find and exploit
further energy supplies.
Other examples of laws and regulations holding down
production are minimum-wage, prounion, and licensing
legislation. These cause higher costs, higher prices,
the diversion of labor from more productive pursuits to
less productive pursuits, and, finally, unemployment.
Subsidies of all kinds, tariffs, and consumer-product
safety legislation also serve to hold down the
production and supply of things and to keep up or add to
their costs and prices. Again, to whatever extent
production in general is curtailed, so too is the
production of capital goods, with a consequent
cumulative negative effect on subsequent production.
It should be clear that the resumption of an era of high
and progressively rising real wages requires a radical
reduction of government intervention into the economic
system and the reestablishment of economic freedom.
What we have seen is that credit expansion is
responsible not only for the boom-bust business cycle,
as Mises showed, but also that it is a major source of
artificial economic inequality and sharply increases
profits relative to wages. These are processes that come
to an end and are actually thrown into reverse as soon
as credit expansion stops and the recession/depression
that is its ultimate consequence begins. In wasting
capital through malinvestment, it undermines the rise in
production and accompanying rise in real wages. Despite
credit expansion, real wages could still rise through
most of American history, because of the substantial
economic freedom enjoyed in the United States and did so
even in the midst of credit expansion, as in the 1920s.
In the last two episodes of major credit expansion,
however, and over the last several decades as a whole,
real wages have largely stagnated. This stagnation is
the result of massive government intervention into the
economic system that undermines capital accumulation and
both the demand for labor and the productivity of labor.
It is not the result of economic inequality, the profit
motive, or any other aspect of the capitalist system.
I have explained all of the essential matters discussed
in this article in full detail, with all of their
presuppositions and implications, in my book
Capitalism: A Treatise on
Economics.
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