Stimulating Nonsense
Opinion Editorial by John Stossel -
Feb 14, 2008
25 ratings from readers
The new "economic stimulus" package being promoted by Congress and President Bush is more than suspicious — it is based on fallacious assumptions about how governments and economies actually work.
The hottest buzzword of the day
is “economic stimulus.” Virtually every politician and pundit agrees the
government must act quickly to forestall a recession by increasing consumer
spending.
President Bush and the Democratic leadership in the House quickly got
together on a $150 billion package that also includes tax incentives for
business investment.
The Republican and Democratic
presidential contenders back “stimulus” too. (Ron Paul is the exception.)
Any government program that
wins the support of the political class and media commentators makes me
suspicious.
The economy does seem to be
slowing, and there was a net loss of jobs in January. The housing industry is
sluggish and the credit market tight because of the subprime-mortgage problems.
So, to “get the economy moving,” the anointed experts want the government to
quickly put cash in our hands. When we rush out to spend it, the story goes,
the economy will get out of the ditch.
Interesting theory, but it’s
hardly new, and it’s been demolished many times before by free-market
economists. One problem, which George Mason University economist Russell
Roberts observed, is that the money that will allegedly be “injected” into the
economy is already in the economy. So how can it be a stimulus?
“The politicians are always
going to inject some amount of money into the hands of consumers and into the
economy, like a doctor giving a lifesaving blood transfusion,” Roberts says.
“But where does the economic
injection come from? It has to come from inside the system. It’s not an outside
stimulus like the chest paddles or the transfusion. It means taking money from
someone or somewhere inside the system and giving it to someone else.”
The federal government is in
the red. Bush’s new budget has a $400 billion deficit. There’s no lockbox with
$100 billion in it. So to give everyone a tax rebate, the government will have
to borrow more money. But that only moves the cash from one part of the economy
to another.
As Roberts says, “It’s like
taking a bucket of water from the deep end of a pool and dumping it into the
shallow end.”
Unless the government cuts
spending, which the theory says would neutralize the stimulus, the only other
way to get the money will be to raise taxes or to have the Fed create money —
inflation — which would raise the price of everything.
How will that stimulate
anything but the politicians’ short-term approval ratings?
Supporters of the stimulus only
consider it’s “seen” affects. If government takes or borrows money from Jones
and gives it to Smith, Smith’s spending will be visible for all to see. Not so
visible is the “unseen” affect: What Jones would have done with the money but
didn’t because it was transferred to Smith.
Economists call this the “broken
window fallacy.” In the 19th century, French economist Frederic Bastiat
illustrated it with the story of a boy who breaks a shop window.
At first the
townspeople lament the loss, but then someone points out that the shopkeeper
will have to spend money to replace the window. What the window maker earns, he
will soon spend elsewhere. As that money circulates through town, new
prosperity will bloom.
The fallacy, of course, is that
if the window had not been broken, the shopkeeper would have “replaced his
worn-out shoes ... or added another book to his library.” The town gains
nothing from the broken window.
This logic is lost on the stimulus
promoters. I’m surprised they don’t suggest that we prevent recessions by
breaking lots of windows.
The other forgotten principle
is that consumption can’t cause prosperity. Yes, consumer spending is 70
percent of GDP, but consumption is the result — not the cause — of economic
growth. You can’t consume what hasn’t been produced.
Milton Friedman was right.
There really is no such thing as a free lunch.
I’m not saying the government
can do nothing about the economy. The best thing it can do is get itself out
the way.
Economies boom when governments
remove impediments to production: high taxes, regulations, subsidies, trade
barriers, manipulation of the money supply, etc. Removing those should be
permanent — not temporary — measures.
John
Stossel is co-anchor of ABC News’ “20/20” and the author of Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media (January 2005) as well as Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the
Shovel — Why Everything You Know Is Wrong (May 2007), which is now available in paperback.