• "Well written, well researched, and the thesis put forth is well argued.... Woods has opened up an area of historical analysis that should invite further study."
    -Journal of American History

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    -Barry Goldwater Jr.
    Former Member of Congress

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    -The Honorable Ron Paul,
    U.S. House of Representatives

  • "Written with great clarity and fluency, making the complex philosophical and theological concepts approachable."
    -Journal of American Studies

  • "A must-read."
    -Barron's

  • "An excellent reading source for anyone interested in financial markets, and much more so for anyone interested in learning about capitalism without all the misinterpretations being thrown about in the financial media."
    -Asia Times

  • "Provocative, well-written, and deserves to be read."
    -Catholic Historical Review

  • "An engaging and important contribution to scholarship on the history of American Catholicism."
    -Journal of the Historical Society

  • "Woods and [co-author Kevin] Gutzman appeal to both left and right in this constitutionalist jeremiad…. The authors' exegeses of the Constitution and court decisions, heavy on original intent arguments, are lucid and telling."
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  • "A marvelous read. Every chapter taught me something new and unexpected."
    -Tom Bethell, senior editor,
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  • "Should be required reading."
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Conservatives and the Elephant in the Living Room

One of my pet peeves is the conservative who lectures us on the “limits” of markets and looks with a self-satisfied and condescending shake of the head upon the stupid rubes he must endure who persist in supporting the market all the same. Why, haven’t these dopes read Wilhelm Roepke, whose views are to be considered definitive?

In this unfortunate post, we get the usual laments about what “capitalism” has done to the public. If only banking had stayed local we wouldn’t have had all these problems, etc.

Absent as always from these critiques is any discussion of the Federal Reserve, the elephant in the living room, which is a friend neither of localism nor the free market. Likewise absent is any acknowledgment that to call the banking system of today a “free market” is at best an expression of one’s sense of humor. As I’ve noted elsewhere, the current system is rather far from the Misesian ideal; it includes:

(1) a coercively imposed monopoly on the production of money;

(2) monopolistic legal tender laws, which artificially privilege the money issued by the government-established central bank;

(3) a central bank with the monopoly power to create legal-tender money out of thin air, a power granted to it by the government, and with a mandate to manipulate the money supply in the purported service of maximizing output and minimizing unemployment and price inflation;

(4) interest rates influenced by a monopoly monetary authority instead of by the free market;

(5) implicit and explicit bailout guarantees for large financial institutions;

(6) artificially low borrowing costs for large institutions, since the public knows these institutions will be bailed out;

(7) artificial protection of the banks, in the form of government deposit insurance and various Federal Reserve mechanisms, thereby keeping afloat a fractional-reserve system that would be radically different under a free market; under the existing system the banks will therefore create more money out of thin air than they otherwise would.

This is just off the top of my head. A free-market banking system would have no central bank and no “monetary policy.” It would not rely on politicians to print up “interest-free money.” It would not require any guns or badges. It would preserve the purchasing power of people’s money, as it did even under the classical gold standard. It would make entrepreneurial profit-and-loss calculation far easier, without the white noise introduced by the monetary manipulations of the government or its privileged central bank.

Second, the idea that if only “capitalism” hadn’t created mortgage-backed securities, we wouldn’t have had this problem, amounts to an especially defiant refusal to consider the role of the Fed. Consider this description of events (trust me: it’s worth reading the whole thing):

Rising prices affected both banks and their customers with an optimism which swept aside the conservative standards of experience and promoted extravagance and speculation. Whatever the customers purchased, whether merchandise or land, they were able to sell at an extraordinary profit; whatever was produced on their farms brought unusual returns. Some few persons, uncertain of what disposition should be made of the unexpected harvest, began reducing their fixed indebtedness. It was not long, however, until the continuously rising prices, the encouragement of the bankers, and the methods used by the government in selling war securities, had convinced the majority that debt was a blessing in disguise, as it became progressively easier to liquidate and offered a means of extending profit-making activities. Under the urge of these influences, industry expanded and thrived, promoters of all types came into their own, and thrift gave way to extravagance. Bankers found their accustomed standards of credit analysis growing obsolete, for values increased automatically with the passage of time. Hence it was that, as the speculative fever gained a foothold and grew and the demands for bank funds enlarged, credit was extended to all manner of persons on — or without — all kinds of security, excess lines became commonplace, customers’ notes given to promoters of questionable and fraudulent enterprises were discounted for rich rewards, and large sums were advanced to land speculators. Borrowing for the purpose of relending became an established practice. Time and time again the banks were saved from the effects of their ill-advised acts by the continued growth of deposits.

This must be a commentary on the recent economic boom that came to an end in 2007-08, right? Actually, this passage appeared in the Journal of Land & Public Utility Economics in 1926, and it’s a description of how the credit expansion of 1914 to 1920 affected Iowa.

Finally, surely there ought to be some admission that any “limits” on the market necessarily strengthen the political class. This is usually not acknowledged. I see no reason to consider it self-evidently desirable, especially for a conservative.

(For more on the elephant in the living room, see the free chapter of Meltdown, my 2009 book on the subject. Note also that I love The American Conservative, where I am a contributing editor, but all friends disagree from time to time.)

Unlearn the Propaganda!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Robert-Nabakowski/1452262840 Robert Nabakowski

    Fantastic job, Tom, at once again reiterating the problems of the Federal Reserve (the greatest elephant of them all). It’s as if people don’t even allow the thought in their heads that the Fed is the problem, that banking and commerce can be done without this horrific central planner. The history of its machinations are out there and it’s plain to see how it destroys wealth (for the non-elites) and blows away any notion of a free market. This stuff isn’t hard to see for the non-elitist, who isn’t benefiting from it.

    As an aside, what is it with the American Conservative? It seems they have more statist lefties in their comment sections than actual conservatives, classical liberals or libertarians. I just thought that strange.

  • scum

    Wow, shame on TAC!

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=806135203 Patrick Hatten

    “And yet I don’t think I’d lose a bet that a solid majority of those who describe themselves as conservative today would recoil at those words.” – linked article on Roepke

    > I would hope that they would, but alas. Conservatives are supposedly defenders of the free market, but will only take it so far. This is a bet that the author would lose. Such a shame.

    This is a fantastic piece btw.

  • http://www.MacStartup.com Kevin Cullis

    Always LOVE a twist of history. Been there, done that, but have not learned.

  • http://www.facebook.com/isaacgsmith Isaac Smith

    How about information asymmetry? Certainly there should be limiting factors on the abuses of such a fundamental flaw in the free market, eg. small claims court.

  • TJ

    Sadly, this just goes to show that all the economic lessons learned from the Great Depression have been totally ignored.

  • http://www.TomWoods.com Tom Woods

    More specific, please. Or give an example of such information asymmetry.

  • http://www.facebook.com/shawn.ritenour.1 Shawn Ritenour

    As with almost all posts like Galupo’s I am left thinking, so what is his point. If it is that the market does not solve every problem a human being has, well that indicates he does not understand what the market is, an institution of voluntary exchange. The market is not meant to solve all of our problems. That is like saying a hammer is a failure because you can’t use it to spot weld two pieces of metal together.

    Galupo seems to not recognize that the market is always limited by the people in the market. He also, as you point out, fails to recognize that using state power to intervene in the market in order to fix alleged failures only makes things worse by further centralizing political power.

    Ropke’s main argument is that if participants in the market are not themselves humane, the result will likely be unsavory. Ropke is at his worst when he advocates state intervention to make things better. Even he himself seemed to recognize this. He was too good of an economists not to recognize the dangerous and destructive nature of government intervention as well as the practical problems in trying to solve an economic problem with political means, yet his sentimentality, if that is the right word, sometimes got the better of him.

  • Anonymous

    The market is not meant to solve all of our problems
    Which is precisely what’s wrong with public perception and central banking; they hold the erroneous view that an economy should strive for perfect employment, stability and competition. That this is a socialistic egalitarian romance, doesn’t seem to worry people (especially conservatives), but when it fails to create perfection, they blame markets.
    The indoctrination runs deep.

  • http://profiles.google.com/patrokov Pat H

    How about power asymmetry, like when Congressman can make market trades based on inside information, but no one else is allowed to do so.

  • Mike

    Yeah, really. That kind of hypocrisy is sickening. I am still stunned that the entire country (or at least those who have an internet connection) is not absolutely furious at the criminal gang in the Imperial City.

  • BrunoT

    So who ya voting for in November, Tom?