Milton Friedman (July
31, 1912 – November 16, 2006) is revered by the Right as an iconic defender
of free enterprise and limited government. This view is entirely misplaced as it
fails to acknowledge Friedman’s Nazi philosophy and quack economics.
David Stockman, whom we have followed recently in
other postings, continues his analysis of our economic travails by exposing errors of Friedman in his latest book, The Great Deformation, by pointing out
the paradox between the Chicago School economist’s philosophy and praxis. To
make true sense of Friedman, one has to include Naomi Klein, whose magnificent
book, Shock Doctrine, pulls the mask off the Nazi extraordinaire.
Before dealing with Klein’s political analysis, we
need to consider the economic sinecures which Friedman offered in consequence to
his understanding of the Great Depression which started in late 1928 into 1929
when the Federal Reserve began tightening interest rates after its Chairman
Benjamin Strong died unexpectedly in 1928.
In perhaps his magnum opus, A Monetary History of the United States, Friedman
argues in essence that the Great Depression was prolonged because of a failure
of the Federal Reserve to supply sufficient credit to capital markets. The
result was a collapse of demand, or a failure to resuscitate it as is supposedly within
the power of the great central private banking concern otherwise known as the
Fed.
The evidence for the collapse in demand was falling prices. Thirty
years after the depression, deflation and depression became associated in a way
in which some people equate electric and chair, or love and marriage. And of
course the guilty party was the central bank which failed to energize itself in
the coordination of aggregate demand.
If all of this sounds familiar, it should – the great
Chairsatan of the Federal Reserve, Benjamin Bernanke, has done all in his power
to reignite demand and sustain prices in the aftermath of 2008's economic implosion even if there is no rational basis for
the prices in the first place.
But the similarities don’t end there. They actually begin with another
equally famous quack, Maynard Keynes, who also argued that price declines are
bad and should be equated with depressions. His prescriptions for falling
demand was increased government spending through manipulation of the fisc.
So while the newsfakers in the press created the charade of Monetarism
vs Keynesianism or Friedman vs Keynes, it was drivel to hide the fact that both
men believed in large macro interventions in the economy to maintain demand.
Of course there are several problems with their beliefs and analyses
but we shall confine ourselves to two. The first is that falling prices do not
equal depression. Frank Hollenbeck, writing in What’s So Scary About Deflation?, cites the study by Atkeson and Kehoe which shows
longitudinally over 180 years and transnationally over 17 countries that there is no positive correlation
between price levels and economic activity.
In particular, he notes
that the majority of the 19th century saw rapid and pronounced
economic growth in the United States while prices generally and modestly
declined.
Hollenbeck also debunks
the falling prices spiral in several ways, but most interestingly by noting
that spending is simply recomposed from consumers to capitalists. In other
words, demand may fall for consumer production but the increased savings will
be channeled into capital goods which will in turn lead to higher productivity
and economic activity.
To put a fine point on
it, Professor Antal Fekete notes that the greatest purpose of interest is to
arbitrate the time preferences between savers and spenders. Thus interest rates
must be allowed to fluctuate freely for then they fluctuate little because the
regulatory flyweight of interest will restrain the extremes of boom and bust.
Central planners have a high preference for inflation because it transfers
wealth from the poor to the rich. Prices will take care of themselves and do
not need the help of a Politburo.
Returning to Friedman and
central banking, Stockman notes that “Carter Glass and Professor Willis assigned to the Federal
Reserve System the humble mission of passively liquefying the good collateral
of commercial banks when they presented it,” a goal in sharp contrast to the
management of macroeconomic aggregates which has no other purpose than central
planning in the great style of the Soviet 5 year plans of ill repute.
We note elsewhere that
the similarity between policies emanating from Washington is identical to
policy which emanated from Moscow because both nations were ruled by the same
Nazi cabal, of which Friedman was the economic hand maiden. But we digress.
Another area where
Friedman and Keynes saw eye to eye was in their disdain for gold. Indeed it was
the monetarist Friedman who advised Nixon to abandon the gold standard in 1971,
from which date we can mark all kinds of evils flowing from “competitive”
exchange rates, not the least of which is the Gargantua and Pantagruel of the
leviathan state and its equally corpulent “public” debt.
Friedman claimed –
without evidence – that the strictures of the gold standard prevented the Fed
from acting vigorously in the face of falling demand. His prescription, as his
acolyte at the Fed today, was the massive intervention in the bond market through open
market operations, a euphemism for printing money. Bernanke has elevated this
technique to permanent status on a scale unimagined in history. For this, Dr
Jim Willie has called for the revocation of his doctorate, a call which i would
extend to Friedman.
As such, Friedman had no
compunction for recommending to Nixon the repudiation of America’s debt in
August of 1971.
Thus Stockman examines Friedman’s
myth of a liquidity shortage, and finds it lacking for two reasons. The first
is that the 6000 banks of the Federal Reserve System did not make heavy use of
the discount window during the period 1929-1932, and that it tapered substantially from 1 billion to less than 250 million during that same period.
Returning to his arguments against Friedman’s liquidity dearth,
Stockman also points out that excess reserves at the Fed increased by over 10
fold in the period of 1929-32, proving beyond doubt that the economy had more
than abundant credit to extend, if
there had been credit-worthy borrowers. But most
of America was in the process of deleveraging from the go-go years of the 1920s
which was exacerbated in large measure by foolhardy trade policy and the
abandonment of the gold exchange system regnant prior to World War 1.
Thus Stockman concludes that there were no
widespread cases where solvent borrowers were denied credit or the calling in of
loans.
But there is the old canard about real high interest
rates, a nostrum which Geroge Gilder repeated in his Wealth and Poverty. The
discount rate dropped from 6% to 2.5% by the early 1930s, about which Friedman
and Bernanke argued that they should go even lower. Yet 2.5% was very low and
should not have been sent lower to penalize savers at the expense spenders. But
the real point Stockman makes is that there simply was no demand for capital
while deleveraging was in progress. Again, Washington was as much to blame for
the antiquation of productive assets as was the Federal Reserve when it raised
rates sharply, thus inducing the stock market crash. Politicians and bureaucrats in Washington simply prolonged it.
In any event, “interest rates on T-bills and commercial paper were one-half percent and
1 percent” in the 1932 – rates as close to 0 as practically possible. Yet the
depression in the capable malevolent hands of Hoover and Roosevelt lumbered on
for 10 more years.
Following through with
our mention of Naomi Klein and Friedman’s politics, we start with World War 2
when the future Nobel laureate invented the income withholding tax which
confiscated workers’ money so that the government could use it interest free.
Klein picks up the story later, though, in Central America where the Chicago
School’s influence was used to advance the causes of big business in what Klein
calls the Shock Doctrine.
Big government is all
about serving big business which rapes and pillages workers, as happened so
cruelly in South America where Ford and General Motors operated slave labor
camps with Nazi brutality. The School was used to influence government leaders
in those countries to accept the temptations of large corporations which
entered the countries to rob them of their natural resources.
The approach was to use
shock and awe techniques of Friedman’s philosophies in order to ruin the daily
order of the people and to impoverish them through the destruction of the
middle classes. This happened under the banner of free enterprise.
But in Friedman’s world,
free enterprise was only for the peons who had to survive in a dog eat dog
world, whereas the plutocrats received favored treatment and munificences of
crony capitalism. Freedom from big government and regulation was only for the
plutocrats; everyone else was to suffer under its slavery in a two class world of haves and haves-not.
The developments in Chile
in 1973, when Kissinger and Nixon ordered the murder of Allende, were a direct
consequence of Friedman’s politcal-economic philosophies. Klein describes how
this shock doctrine stemmed directly from the works of the CIA, the fount of
world wide terrorism. Interestingly, Friedman was sent to Chile to "help" it recover.
The legacy Friedman left in his own country was unlimited government and perpetual debt which hid the need for higher taxes to finance burgeoning government and its endless wars of foreign aggression - one of the great gifts of the Creature from Jekyll Island.
Thus while Friedman spoke grand thoughts about limited government, it was only to limit regulatory interference for his Wall Street cronies. Observing his actions and legacies, rather than his words, we see that Friedman occupied a world of high Nazi intrigue in the suffocation of human freedom and dignity.
References
Frank
Hollenbeck , Guest Post: What’s So Scary About Deflation? Zero Hedge, 6/28/2013David Stockman, When Professor Friedman Opened Pandora’s Box: Open Market Operations, Zero Hedge, 6/28/2013
Copyright 2013 Tony Bonn. All rights reserved.
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