Economies Must Hibernate
But a debt-based economy can't rest...
HERE is the central difficulty of economists, says Brian Maher in The Daily
Reckoning.
They are not women and men of science.
They believe they are. Yet they are
not.
"Science" binds back to the Latin scientia – knowledge – "to know".
The
practitioner of the astronomical
sciences, for example, is merely out to comprehend the universe he infests.
He
is not out to change or
influence it. He is not out to engineer it. He is merely out to study it.
What
he is after is
knowledge.
Now consider practitioners of the economic "sciences".
The heaping
majority are not after knowledge for its own sake – unlike the astronomer. They are instead out to
tinker...to meddle...to
engineer...in pursuit of a cherished result.
What is that cherished result? The
answer is generally an
expansion of the gross domestic product.
"Growth, growth, growth!" is their
eternal mandate.
Thus the economic apparatus must hum perpetually at a very high pitch.
If it slackens, if it
sheds steam, if it wobbles, the economic engineers leap immediately to action. They will not permit the
thing to go along on its
own.
Thus their skulls are scenes of dizzying and delirious neurological
activity. They whir with
prescriptions to elevate the economic level, to elevate consumption, to elevate investment.
To this end they
suppress interest rates. They fabricate oceans of credit – that is, debt – from the great abysm of
nothingness.
They seek to bend economic law to their defiant and hubristic will. That is, they do not
simply observe the economic laws
at work upon the human subject.
Thus they are not scientists. They are
engineers. And their engineering is
nearly always botchwork.
Imagine converting a heavenly observer – an astronomer
– to a heavenly
engineer.
That is, stuff his head with the economist's aspirations. Here is
what he will tell
you:
"We have established that the gravitational constant is inadequate to our
economic needs. If we can
simply alter this so-called constant through wise, applied intervention, we could expect a 10% annual
increase to GDP. We must
therefore rearrange the gravitational constant to produce the desired economic result."
Here you have the
psychology of an economist. It is not the psychology of a scientist.
Now
imagine that the astronomer acquires
the tools of manipulation in his sphere...that the economist has acquired in his.
He can distort gravity, he
can alter the planetary orbits and the like.
Within no time the planets would
be veering from their courses,
the stars would go plummeting, entire galaxies would be set upon collision courses.
After all: Look what his
economist counterpart has inflicted upon this world.
Because of his counsel it
is a world deluged by debt,
financial fragility and related evils.
We are infinitely fortunate that the
means of astronomical
manipulation remain beyond human reach.
Here is a point the economist must
consider...
When he ceases to merely observe a thing, in this instance an economy – and attempts to
influence it – it is no longer
the same thing.
It is now an economy under intervention. The economist has
transformed it from its original
condition. It has become an instrument of politics – and the perpetual cry for growth.
Yet must an economy be
slave to growth?
Nature runs to cycles. The tides wax and wane, animals
hibernate, the seasons roll into one
another.
Left undisturbed, an economy likewise runs to the cyclical
orientation.
Why
not let it?
If an economy enters hibernation, permit it to enter hibernation.
It will emerge with energetic
vigor when the time is proper. It will be keen to get going.
Meantime, the
economy under habitual
intervention is forever denied the rest and recuperation it requires.
And so it
can merely gutter along under
chronic fatigue.
Let us revisit – briefly – the Great Financial
Crisis.
The Federal
Reserve intervened massively to cage the menace of depression after the 2008 wobbles. Quantitative
easing, zero interest rates and the
rest of the central banker's emergency kit came to bear.
The heroics "worked".
And the menace
passed.
What if the Fed didn't intervene? Yes, the central bank may have saved
the present with its emergency
medicine. Yet its medicine worked a massive heist of the future.
Absent
gargantuan intervention, interest
rates would have likely soared in the crisis' wake. Many businesses reliant upon cheap debt and low
interest rates would have died the
death. Yet the pain – though acute – would have likely been brief.
Sound
business erected upon sound
foundations would have endured. The economy would have entered the hibernatory state, yes. Yet higher
interest rates would have
encouraged savings...and gradually rebuilt the capital stock.
Hibernation would
have ended. The economy would
emerge with fresh, rested legs and a vast energy reserve.
It was not to
be.
The
Federal Reserve denied the economy its necessary hibernation. Because, alas, our debt-based economic
order cannot grant hibernation.
It requires perpetual expansion in order to service the perpetual accumulation of debt it
spawns.
That is
precisely why this preposterous system requires "growth, growth, growth".
And
so we are set eternally upon
the hamster wheel.
Daily Reckoning contributor Charles Hugh Smith:
"Borrowing money
to consume something in the present brings forward consumption and income...
"If we choose to consume now, we
have less income to save for future consumption or investments. If we sacrifice consumption today, we
have more money in the future
for consumption or investing...
"Those who brought their consumption forward
can no longer add to present
consumption, as their future income is already spoken for...
"A 'recovery'
based...on cheap credit and an
artificially stimulated 'wealth effect' was inherently weak, for the stimulus effectively hollowed out
the productive economy in favor
of the financialized, speculative economy...stripping future demand to create the illusion of growth in
a stagnating
economy..."
Let us return to our scientific theme.
We
propose that economists
observe economies as the astronomer observes the celestial realms.
They must
abandon their engineering
experiments at once.
Once economists assumed their exclusively observational
role...the economic system would
restore to a pink state of health...which the engineers claim is the very purpose of their
interventions.
That is because an independent economy is a self-repairing economy. It is not given to the fantastic
imbalances and distortions of the
economy under intervention.
And the greater the intervention, the greater
requirement for greater
intervention to address the high distortions of the original intervention...
And the greater the magnitude of
the next crisis...which requires greater intervention yet.
It is a cycle truly
vicious.
Thus it is time to banish the economists – and to the outmost darkness.











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