The Reregulation Mantra
Opinion Editorial by John Stossel -
Nov 28, 2008
38 ratings from readers
In response to the economic crisis, many politicians say the problem has been
"too much deregulation." But when did this vaunted "deregulation" ever take
place? Are more regulations likely to help?
“It’s deregulation’s fault!”
That’s the conventional
explanation for the economic mess.
Barack
Obama said, “This is a final verdict on the failed economic policies of the
last eight years ... that essentially said that we should strip away
regulations, consumer protections, let the market run wild, and prosperity
would rain down on all of us.”
Is deregulation is the
culprit? It can’t be. There was no relevant deregulation in the last 25 years.
Meanwhile, highly regulated institutions eagerly bought risky
government-guaranteed mortgages, stimulating excessive housing construction and
an unsustainable price bubble.
Deregulation wasn’t the
problem, and reregulation isn’t the solution.
It’s intuitive to
assume that regulation prevents problems, but it’s rarely true. First, how
would regulators know what to do? Leaving aside the bias they might have and
the brutal fact that regulation is physical force, how can a small group of
people understand the workings of a market sufficiently to regulate sensibly?
Markets, especially financial markets, are far more complicated than any mind
can grasp. They consist of many millions of participants making countless
decisions on the basis of unarticulated know-how and intuition. To attempt to regulate
such activity requires knowledge no one can possess.
To seriously regulate
those markets you’d have to impose the “precautionary principle,” a favorite
idea of some environmentalists, especially in Europe. The principle prohibits
any product or activity not proven 100 percent safe.
It sounds so reasonable.
But Ron Bailey of Reason points out
what it really means: Don’t do anything for the first time.
Bad idea. The world
needs innovators and inventors. We need people who try things for the first
time.
Nobel Laureate F.A.
Hayek emphasized that government planners suffer from a “knowledge problem”
because “the knowledge of the circumstances of which [they] must make use never
exists in concentrated or integrated form but solely as the dispersed bits of
incomplete and frequently contradictory knowledge which all the separate
individuals possess.”
In other words, the
planner or regulator can’t possibly know what the multitude in a market “knows.”
So what regulators really do is straitjacket market participants, preventing
innovators from creating prosperity for us all.
Another “Austrian
school” economist, Israel Kirzner, applied Hayek’s insights to typical
regulation, showing how it must interfere with the market’s discovery process,
the profit-and-loss system that uncovers information vital to making consumers
better off:
“Even if current market
outcomes in some sense are judged unsatisfactory, intervention ... cannot be
considered the obviously correct solution. Deliberate intervention by the state
not only might serve as an imperfect substitute for the spontaneous market
process of discovery; but also might impede desirable processes of discovery,
the need for which has not been perceived by the government.”
Kirzner’s point is that
even if our problems are the result of market failures — and with so much
intervention, how could they be? — there is no reason to believe that
government could do a better job. Quite the contrary.
The relevance of his
ideas to what ails the economy now should be clear. The current interventions
prevent market participants from adjusting to new conditions.
Banks might be
willing to sell their shaky loans to investors at a steep discount, but why do
that if the government might bail them out? Why not wait to see if you can get
a better price?
With the politicians constantly changing the details of the
bailout, selling at a discount today might get you accused of fiduciary
malpractice later.
Uncertainty over what
further new regulations may be imposed only stifles the market’s search for
solutions.
Markets are never
perfect. They are made up of people making their best judgments, and people’s
judgments are never perfect. Yes, under some circumstances market activity such
as speculation and short-selling could harm innocent bystanders. But those who
say government is the best protector are wrong because the knowledge problem is
an insurmountable obstacle.
There is only one
genuine protection for the public: the discipline of profit and loss. Nothing
concentrates the mind like the prospect of bankruptcy.
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.