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SUBSCRIBE NOW AND RECEIVE CRISIS AND LEVIATHAN* FREE! The Independent Review does not accept pronouncements of government officials nor the conventional wisdom at face value. JOHN R. MACARTHUR, Publisher, Harper s The Independent Review is excellent. GARY BECKER, Noble Laureate in Economic Sciences Subscribe to The Independent Review and receive a free book of your choice* such as the 25th Anniversary Edition of Crisis and Leviathan: Critical Episodes in the Growth of American Government, by Founding Editor Robert Higgs. This quarterly journal, guided by co-editors Christopher J. Coyne, and Michael C. Munger, and Robert M. Whaples offers leading-edge insights on today s most critical issues in economics, healthcare, education, law, history, political science, philosophy, and sociology. Thought-provoking and educational, The Independent Review is blazing the way toward informed debate! Student? Educator? Journalist? Business or civic leader? Engaged citizen? This journal is for YOU! *Order today for more FREE book options Perfect for students or anyone on the go! The Independent Review is available on mobile devices or tablets: ios devices, Amazon Kindle Fire, or Android through Magzter. INDEPENDENT INSTITUTE, 100 SWAN WAY, OAKLAND, CA 94621 800-927-8733 REVIEW@INDEPENDENT.ORG PROMO CODE IRA1703

REVIEW ESSAY A Crisis of Authority Pierre Lemieux s Somebody in Charge: A Solution to Recessions? F JOHN P. COCHRAN On January 9, 2009, President-elect Barack Obama stated, There is no disagreement that we need action by our government, a recovery plan that will help to jump-start the economy. A month later, in a full-page response paid for by the Cato Institute (2009), more than two hundred prominent economists responded, With all due respect, Mr. President, that is not true. The economists statement, which in retrospect proved much more prophetic than the administration s claim that the stimulus bill was necessary to keep the unemployment rate from reaching 8 percent, went on to argue that it is a triumph of hope over experience to believe that more government spending will help the U.S. today. Three years later, despite massive actions by the authorities to stimulate, direct, guide, or jump-start the economy, unemployment remains persistently higher than not 8 percent, but 9 percent. Because of regime uncertainty, the prospects for significant job creation in the current recovery remain bleak (Theroux 2011). The calls for urgent action, for somebody to be in charge, during this national job emergency continue. [S]itting by passively is no longer acceptable. In fact, it constitutes cruel and unusual punishment of the American workforce (Blinder 2011). Are such calls for additional action justified, or do policymakers have blinders on in regard to the ineffectiveness and counterproductiveness of the ongoing attempts to have take charge? Pierre Lemieux asks precisely this question: [D]o we John P. Cochran is a professor of economics at Metropolitan State College of Denver. The Independent Review, v. 16, n. 4, Spring 2012, ISSN 1086 1653, Copyright 2012, pp. 591 598. 591

592 F JOHN P. C OCHRAN need somebody in charge to control economic crisis? (p. 155). He argues that the continuing call for action, for somebody to be in charge of recovery, rests on two hypotheses that are too often taken for granted: [T]he economic crisis would occur without the authorities guiding hand, and these authorities know how to manage the economic cycle (p. 39). Supported by a blend of theory and historical evidence, Lemieux argues convincingly that having somebody in charge is not only not a solution, but most often (everywhere and always?) a factor in generating the crisis and in postponing or stifling recovery. Lemieux s book Somebody in Charge: A Solution to Recessions? (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011) is a very useful contribution to the literature on the recent financial meltdown, recession, and slow recovery. More important, the work considers the broader question of government s appropriate role in generating prosperity. Lemieux springboards from the analysis of current conditions to consider a much broader and in the long run much more important question: A modern economy is an incredibly complex system. Can Authority manage it? (p. 9). This question of the government s role in determining the causes of the wealth of nations dates to the origins of economics or political economy as a discipline. According to Edward Prescott, [S]tandards of living were more or less constant from the beginning of civilization until the industrial revolution [sic]; then something changed (qtd. in Snowdon and Vane 2005, 354). Adam Smith was one of the first to come to a judgment of what had changed. The emerging prosperity in Great Britain began around 1700 (Skousen 2001, 15) and was proceeded and accompanied by a lessening of authoritarian control of economic activity. Smith observed in 1755, Little else is requisite to carry a state to the highest degree of opulence from the lowest barbarism, but peace, easy taxes, and a tolerable administration of justice; all the rest being brought about by the natural course of things (qtd. in Cannan 1976, xliii, emphasis added). Smith later elaborated: All systems of either preference or of restraint, therefore, being thus completely taken away, the obvious system of natural liberty establishes itself on its own accord. Every man, as long as he does not violate the laws of justice, is left perfectly free to pursue his own interest his own way, and bring forth both his industry and capital into competition with those of any other man, or order of men. The sovereign is completely discharged from a duty, attempting to perform which he must always be exposed to innumerable delusions, and for the proper performance of which no human wisdom or knowledge could ever be sufficient; the duty of superintending the industry of private people, and of directing it towards the employments most suitable to the interest of society. ([1776] 1976, 650 51) The Smithian vision of prosperity tied to individual planning and initiative did not go unchallenged. The world was then, as now, not an unhampered market, but THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW

ACRISIS OF AUTHORITY F 593 a heavily interventionist (mercantilist) economy. Mixed economies have much in common with the free-economy ideal. They are based on the division of labor, exchange, and (nominally) private property. An interventionist economy does provide opportunities for production, exchange, and wealth creation, especially for the politically connected (Osterfeld 1992). Interventionist systems do create wealth especially relative to nonmarket systems, which can function only at low subsistence levels for most of the population. A mixed economy, however, is still a system of restraint and privilege, so freedom and wealth creation are limited relative to a less-restricted economy. But to those who would be in charge, the observed wealth creation is the consequence not of the enhanced liberty, but of the direction of economy by an authority, the somebody in charge. Brink Lindsey (2002) has labeled the intellectual movement that supports planning and directing the economy in order to harness individualism to the car of collectivism (Lemieux, p. 63) the industrial counterrevolution. The consistent pattern of the critique of free markets (1) during periods of economic growth and expanding prosperity attributes that prosperity to elements of control the adults in charge (Boettke 2011); (2) during a crisis defines the current interventionist system, whether it be mercantilism, state capitalism, or some other form of mixed economy, as a free-market economy and attributes the crisis to the market elements, not to the preferences and restraints of the existing controls that caused the crisis to develop; and (3) uses the crisis as a platform to expand control and give more power to the government for superintending the industry of private people. Lemieux demonstrates how the recent financial crisis reinvigorated this delusion of good government, which sees the solution to any real or imagined crisis not in private initiative, but in more authority. The financial crisis of 2007, which grew out of problems in the real economy that were the consequence of distorted mortgage, housing, and real-estate markets (p. 122), brought to a halt the most recent period of market-driven economic success based on liberalization. From 1980 to 2005, the authorities relaxed controls and adopted more market-friendly policies, and, as a result, economies expanded and living standards improved. Control was reduced, not eliminated. Andrei Shleifer describes the period [b]etween 1980 and 2005 as one in which the world embraced free market policies, living standards rose sharply, while life expectancy, educational attainment, and democracy improved and absolute poverty declined. He then asks, Is this a coincidence? After reviewing the competing claims of those who attribute the success to expanding economic liberty and those who attribute the success to authorities in charge, he concludes, On strategy, economics got the right answer: free market policies, supported but not encumbered by the government, deliver growth and prosperity (2009, 135). Lindsey s 2002 book Against the Dead Hand: The Uncertain Struggle for Global Capitalism appeared near the end of this twenty-five-year era. He argues that the adoption of market-based reforms did not spring from broad acceptance of the VOLUME 16, NUMBER 4, SPRING 2012

594 F JOHN P. C OCHRAN Smithian vision but was driven by sheer pragmatism (x). The effects of failed collectivist policies left many who would have preferred to be in charge with no alternative but to explore market friendly alternatives. He warns that the reforms were too often half-hearted, and therefore tentative and incomplete (xi). The potential harm from the significant antimarket policies remaining in place was being ignored with the risk that needed continuing economic liberalization would be slowed or past reforms reversed. Lindsey s warning was prophetic. The prosperity being generated by worldwide liberalization was at first slowed by the 2000 2001 recession in the United States, then derailed or side-tracked by the current crisis. The U.S. reforms were truly incomplete and were being reversed. Prior to the 2007 2009 recession, the U.S. system was an entrenched mixed economy with, as Lemieux puts it, the line between politicians and bureaucrats on one hand and tightly regulated private companies on the other hand... blurred (p. 82). The regulatory climate, from at least the mid- to late 1990s, was not pro-business, free market, or antiregulatory. In fact, the George W. Bush years were one of the most regulation-heavy periods in American history, with an American banking system and financial system that certainly could not be described as laissez-faire. It was tightly supervised and controlled by the authorities in the spirit of the times (p. 102, emphasis added). One major financial institution of central control was mostly unaffected by the liberalizations of the 1980s and actually ended the era with enhanced prestige and power the Federal Reserve System (the Fed). Once the crisis hit, many economists (pp. 83 102), pundits, and political opportunists such as the democratic majority on the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission jumped to the conclusion that the banks led us into the financial crisis (Wallison 2011). According to this faulty representation of the events leading to crisis and recession, blame lies with a malfunctioning private sector, driven by unconstrained greed and supported by a laissez-faire ideology (Wallison 2011). However, this crisis was not one of capitalism, but of regulated capitalism (Friedman 2009). Lemieux debunks the markets caused the problem literature (see chapter 4, The Laissez- Faire Scapegoat, and chapter 5, The Crime Scene ). Lemieux systematically develops his case step by step. Building on Friedrich Hayek s work and using elements of public-choice theory, he establishes that insurmountable challenges confront efforts to control a complex system inhabited by inconvenient individuals (p. 27). Appealing to historical evidence of the success of liberalizing societies and of the failures and limited success of attempts at control, he demonstrates how a complex, prosperous society depends on markets and individual planning embedded in a proper institutional framework, not on centralized control. He concludes: Authority is limited by its necessarily imperfect comprehension of the complexity of the world, the impossibility of obtaining the information necessary to plan in any rational way, and the inconvenient individual. The impotence of Authority is most obvious in a [Hayekian] Great Society offering large and THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW

ACRISIS OF AUTHORITY F 595 growing opportunities to all. Authority can certainly try to be in charge by flexing its coercive muscles, but it will be at the cost of liberty and prosperity (p. 38). Lemieux next provides a crash course in modern macroeconomics (pp. 39 62). Keynesian theory is shown to be an error-filled diversion, a theoretical basis to... old ideas, mending the old clothes of popular economics (p. 49); it is in many ways a primitive way of looking at society and the economy (p. 56). Keynesian economics dominated the teaching of macroeconomics from the 1950s to the 1980s, but the first attempts to use the theory for policymaking resulted not in the end of the business cycle as predicted, but in the stagflation of the 1970s and early 1980s. Professional economists then engaged in a policy-effectiveness debate based on the revival of old non- Keynesian approaches to macroeconomics and the development of new ones, including a revival of the Austrian approach (pp. 123 31). Lemieux concludes: First, it is not totally obvious that serious recessions would occur without government. At any rate, it must not simply be assumed. Second, the diversity of serious macroeconomic theoriesshowshowuncertainisourknowledgeofbusinesscyclephenomena...how pretentious it is for parties of politicians or committees of bureaucrats to claim they know how to prevent or dampen recessions! (p. 62). With this foundation established, Lemieux proceeds to make the case that the roots of the crisis lay not in greed and self-interest running amok in unhampered markets, but in the policy and regulatory structure that created and enabled the excessive leverage and risk taking. Responding to comments by Congressman Barney Frank (D Mass.), a contributing architect of much of the institutional framework that misdirected economic activity onto unproductive and even destructive sidetracks, who asserted that the subprime crisis demonstrates the serious negative economic and social consequences that result from too little regulation (qtd. on p. 121), Lemieux writes: It is difficult to be more wrong. A home market artificially stimulated by government and a residential mortgage market half nationalized had led a large number of people to buy houses they could not afford, contributing to a housing bubble and its unavoidable crash with widening financial consequences. There was somebody in charge: for decades, the government had been the main cheerleader, mover, and shaker in the housing market. It regularly bullied private sector participants into abiding by its regulations, defective research, and whims (p. 121). Lemieux concludes his examination of the crime scene, the events of the mortgage-market-driven financial crisis of 2007, with a key insight: It was a financial crisis only in a derived sense in the sense that finance is tied to the real economy and reacts to it.... [P]roblems still originated in the real economy. And he makes a judgment: All these problems did not come from a shortage of interventions by public authorities. There was somebody in charge, and that was precisely the problem (p. 122). In a section titled Monetary Meddling (pp. 123 31), Lemieux takes what appears to be a sidetrack but in reality pertains to an extremely important issue: the role of the central bank, the Federal Reserve System, which he examines in light of VOLUME 16, NUMBER 4, SPRING 2012

596 F JOHN P. C OCHRAN Austrian business-cycle theory. The previous portrait of the crime scene remains incomplete without a thorough examination and appreciation of the enabling role that this major authority played in banking and financial markets. Lemieux unfortunately appears to have been heavily influenced by David Henderson and Jeffrey Rogers Hummel (2008). Their analysis, if correct, would have left the Fed as virtually alone in being one institution in charge not to have contributed to, or worsened the crisis (p. 131). Use of George Selgin s (2008) response might have led to a more balanced assessment. However, based not on Austrian analysis, which is indispensable for a proper understanding of the nature of the crisis and the slowness of the recovery (Cochran 2010), but on the more traditional analysis by John B. Taylor (2009) and Charles W. Calomiris (2009), Lemieux does concede that it is difficult to believe that the central bank had no influence at all on interest rates and on the housing bubble. The balance of the arguments suggest that the Fed did contribute to the low interest rates that made the housing bubble possible, although it was not the only factor (p. 131). Garrison provides a much better summary of the Austrian view and a more realistic picture of the Fed s actual impact on the bubble and the crisis: The broader lesson in all this is one that gives us a greater appreciation of the perils of centralization and the merits of decentralization. The old Mises Hayek theory of the business cycle, which looks beyond the simple two-dimensional metric of inflation and unemployment, allows us to understand how risk-related distortions in mortgage markets were leveraged by the Federal Reserve into an economywide unsustainable boom. Executive and legislative attempts to stabilize the economy after the bust have decreased rather than increased our confidence that the economy s problems can be fixed by centralized authority. (2009, 198 99) Garrison has more recently been even more emphatic about the Fed s impact on the crisis. Without the Fed, the impact of the distortions in the housing market would still have been significant, but they would also have been much more limited. The fact that the Greenspan Fed adopted a loose monetary stance in the wake of the dot.com bust and well into the century s first decade was a game changer. The accommodation freed the housing sector from having to draw investment funds from other sectors. It fueled an economywide boom the housing bubble leveraged by practitioners of Modern Finance being the most dramatic aspect of it. And he concludes, [T][he fact that the bubble was doubly artificial provided a strong hint about the difficulties inherent in the subsequent recovery (2012, 449). Lemieux is correct that the authorities in charge messed up in more than one way (p. 131), but he understates the role of a key player. The Fed messed up in a big way, generating back-to-back cycles driven by monetary excesses that turbo-charged misdirections of economic activity. The Fed s actions and expanding THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW

ACRISIS OF AUTHORITY F 597 power since the onset of the crisis are even more alarming. To criticize the Fed and the Treasury s response to the financial crisis, John Taylor has coined the term mondustrial policy, which describes not a monetary framework, but an intervention framework financed by money creation (qtd. in Hilsenrath 2009). Hummel argues that the policy responses to the crisis resulted in another Fed failure and have also resulted in a dramatic transformation of the Fed s role in the economy. [Ben] Bernanke has so expanded the Fed s discretionary actions beyond controlling the money stock that it has become a gigantic, financial central planner (2011, 485 86). Recognition of the Fed s new role reinforces Lemieux s conclusion that [t]he causes and legacy of the economic crisis of 2007 2009 reveal a deeper underlying crisis, which is a crisis of authority (p. 162). If this book were widely read in and out of classrooms, it might be very useful in awaking more of the public to the fact that we do not need somebody in charge. Instead, we need Wicksteed s car of collectivism to be stored on a sidetrack (p. 163). References Blinder, Alan S. 2011. Our National Jobs Emergency. Wall Street Journal, July 12. Boettke, Peter. 2011. Tigers, Dragons, and the Spirit of Capitalism. Coordination Problem (March 23). Available at: http://www.coordinationproblem.org/2011/03/tigers-dragonsand-the-spirit-of-capitalism.html. Calomiris, Charles W. 2009. The Subprime Turmoil: What s Old, What s New, and What s Next. Journal of Structured Finance 15, no. 1 (Spring): 6 52. Cannan, Edwin. 1976. Editor s Introduction. In An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, by Adam Smith, xxiii lvi. Dunwoody, Ga.: Norman S. Berg. Cato Institute. 2009. [Response to statement by President Barack Obama.] Wall Street Journal, February 9. Cochran, John P. 2010. Capital in Disequilibrium: Understanding the Great Recession and Potential for Recovery. Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics 13, no. 3: 42 63. Friedman, Jeffrey. 2009. A Crisis of Politics, Not Economics: Complexity, Ignorance, and Policy Failure. Critical Review 21: 2 3, 127 83. Garrison, Roger W. 2009. Interest-Rate Targeting during the Great Moderation. Cato Journal 29, no. 1: 187 200.. 2012. Alchemy Leveraged: The Federal Reserve and Modern Finance. The Independent Review 16, no. 3 (Winter): 435 51. Henderson, David R., and Jeffrey Rogers Hummel. 2008. Greenspan s Monetary Policy in Retrospect: Discretion or Rules? Cato Institute Briefing Papers no. 109. Washington, D.C.: Cato Institute. Available at: http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9756. Hilsenrath, Jon. 2009. Outspoken Fed Critic Taylor Coins Mondustrial Policy. WSJ Blogs (January 5). Available at: http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2009/01/05/the-fedsoutspoken-critic/. VOLUME 16, NUMBER 4, SPRING 2012

598 F JOHN P. C OCHRAN Hummel, Jeffrey Rogers. 2011. Ben Bernanke versus Milton Friedman: The Federal Reserve s Emergence as the U.S. Economy s Central Planner. The Independent Review 15, no. 1 (Spring): 485 518. Lemieux, Pierre. 2011. Somebody in Charge: A Solution to Recessions? New York: Palgrave Macmillan. Lindsey, Brink. 2002. Against the Dead Hand: The Uncertain Struggle for Global Capitalism. New York: Wiley. Osterfeld, David. 1992. Prosperity versus Planning: How Government Stifles Economic Growth. New York: Oxford University Press. Selgin, George. 2008. Guilty as Charged. Mises Daily, November 7. Available at: http://mises. org/daily/3200. Shleifer, Andrei. 2009. The Age of Milton Friedman. Journal of Economic Literature 47, no. 1: 123 35. Skousen, Mark. 2001. The Making of Modern Economics: The Lives and Ideas of the Great Thinkers. Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe. Smith, Adam. [1776] 1976. An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Dunwoody, Ga.: Norman S. Berg. Snowdon, Brian, and Howard R. Vane. 2005. Modern Macroeconomics: Its Origins, Development, and Current State. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar. Taylor, John B. 2009. Getting Off Track: How Government Actions and Interventions Caused, Prolonged, and Worsened the Financial Crisis. Stanford, Calif.: Hoover Institution Press. Theroux, David. 2011. Robert Higgs on Why Government Is Prolonging the Economic Crisis. The Beacon Blog, March 17. Available at: http://blog.independent.org/2011/03/ 17/robert-higgs-on-why-government-is-prolonging-the-economic-crisis/. Wallison, Peter. 2011. Government-Sponsored Meltdown. Wall Street Journal, July 12. THE INDEPENDENT REVIEW