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Beached
economists
By Paul Jacob
7/10/2011
In
a Wall Street Journal profile of
Michele Bachmann, last month, the Minnesota congresswoman claimed to
adore
economist Ludwig von Mises. She said she liked nothing better than to
take a
Mises book with her to the beach. Ah, glorious summer reading!
As
when former President George W.
Bush claimed to be reading Albert Camus’s The Stranger, Bachmann’s
confession
was widely seen primarily as a political one. Could Camus upgrade
Bush’s
intellectual standing? Can Mises do the same for Bachmann?
Mises,
the great Austrian-American
economist, author of The Theory of Money and Credit, Socialism,
Bureaucracy and
many other classics, was among the greatest of last century’s
laissez-faire
advocates. Bachmann’s prime competitor for Tea Party support, a fellow
congressman also running for the Republican nomination, Rep. Ron Paul,
is a
well-known admirer of Mises, often mentioned in conjunction with his
friends at
the Ludwig von Mises Institute. Bachmann’s “confession” of Mises
Enthusiasm
was, honest or not, an obvious play for the heart of the growing
limited-government vote.
Amusingly,
Andrew Leonard, writing in
Salon, claimed to have been haunted by Bachmann’s Mises reference, so
much so
that he read two chapters of Mises’ humungous Human Action. After
slogging
through the philosophical opening of the book, he pronounced something
like a
summary judgment on both Mises and Bachman: They were filled with
certitude,
faith.
Oh,
and “Mises” rhymes with “Jesus.”
By
coincidence — or perhaps more
miraculously — an anti-Tea Party, pro-deficit/pro-debt interview with
“economist” James Galbraith from last year hit my email box as I was
reading
Leonard’s bizarre put-down of both Bachmann and Mises. Asked about the
danger
of long-term deficits, Galbraith proclaimed “I think the danger is
zero. It’s
not overstated. It’s completely misstated.” Certitude! Faith!
Would
that Mises were here to correct
him.
But,
in lieu of “Lu” — or necromancy
(Mises died in 1973) — I’ll take a stab. Galbraith said the “only
possible”
danger such debt accumulation could pose is “increased interest rates.”
While
it’s true that a rise in
interest rates would be a disaster for the Treasury, a sort of
financial
Armageddon for the ever-growing debt, there remains the matter of
increased
payments due. The more debt you pile up, even at low interest rate, the
more
you must pay in interest, and the more you must pay on a regular basis
simply
to maintain your debt level.
As
anyone strung out on too much
consumer credit knows, debt maintenance can be a killer.
One
doesn’t have to lug Human Action
to the beach — it’s huge! (though there’s a nice pocket edition
available, and
two audiobook renditions) — to know the difference between interest
rates and
debt maintenance. To take apart Galbraith’s certainty-tainted,
no-hedged
argument about interest rates, it might help to be a Mises-level
economist. But
knowing that growing debt can be disastrous apart from the rate?
That’s
something everybody who has
ever overused a credit card knows.
But
Galbraith has a point. Rising
interest rates would be the worst. When they dipped a few years ago,
annual
interest payments actually went down. Whoo! Reprieve! But Galbraith
rests most
of his optimism on the bonds market being correct now, interest rates
being so
low and all. If it aren’t correct, it must be, he reasons, that “the
market
isn’t rational. And if the market isn’t rational, there’s no point in
designing
policy to accommodate the markets because you can’t accommodate an
irrational
entity.”
First
off, no. Mightn’t it be that it
takes markets time to figure out the instability of things? It may very
well be
that the market is trying to time insolvency — make money until then,
bail just
before.
Second,
we can accommodate irrational,
unpredictable events. That’s what insurance is about, that’s what
hedging is
supposed to do, and that’s why savings is wiser than debt. Period.
And
it could be that we know that
rising debt is a disaster, but we can’t know when disaster will strike.
We can
have knowledge of patterns, but not precise future events. That’s
what’s left
out of Galbraith’s weird little certitude-filled pro-borrowing rant.
And
hey: That’s one of the lessons of
Mises. Or was that from his student, F.A. Hayek?
I’m
far from the beach, so I can’t
know for sure.
Read
it at Townhall
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