Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Monday, December 30, 2019

The Chinese Plan to Put 300 Million Chinese in Africa and Takeover the Continent


In an interview, Doug Casey comments:
 I’ve said for years that China is in the process of taking over Africa. In fact, that was a subtheme in my first novel Speculator, about the gold mining industry and bush war in Africa. Some years ago, a Chinese high government official said that their plan was to move 300 million people from China to Africa. That’s an incredible number of people; the Chinese think big. But it wasn’t really picked up anywhere in the press. Over the years, every time I go back to Africa I see more Chinese, and when they’re working on an industrial or a mining project, they’re all dressed in the same color jumpsuits. Almost like the Chinese in Goldfinger, if you remember.

From a long-term point of view, China is taking over Africa. It’s a very intelligent plan, and an unspoken part of their “One Belt, One Road” program. They loan money to some backward African government to build a port, railroad, and airport, or what have you. The Africans can almost never pay those loans back, so the Chinese – as part of the deal – take over the facility and staff it with their own people. This is actually going on today. If the African leaders don’t like it – unlikely since they’ve pocketed millions under the table for facilitating the deal – they will likely find their lives are in danger. If that doesn’t work, the country may have a visit from the Red Army.

I suspect that this facial recognition thing in Zimbabwe is just part of a much bigger plan that relates to the social credit system that is instituted in China now.
Interesting.

This may indeed be the plan but a lot can go wrong when attempting to take over an entire continent--and I hope something goes terribly wrong for the plan.

-RW

Dumb Economic Policy: 26 States and the District of Columbia Will Raise the Minimum Wage in 2020

Click for larger view

Come the new year, California is going to raise minimum wage rates by $1 on January 1 ($12.00 per hour for employers with 25 employees or less, and $13.00 per hour for employers with 26 employees or more), while the highest state rate will remain in Washington at $13.50 per hour.

 At the municipal level, Seattle has the highest minimum wage rate at $16.00 per hour for large employers and $15.00 for small employers. New York City's minimum wage is set at $15.00 per hour for all employers.

Wolters Kluwer Legal & Regulatory U.S. summarizes the states that will be impacted in 2020:




I have discussed the confusion about so-called "benefits" of the minimum wage here:



-RW

Sunday, December 29, 2019

This is What President Trump Did For Government Workers in 2019


The New York Times reports:
It started as one of the worst years for federal employees in recent memory, as President Trump’s demands for billions of dollars for a border wall led to a historic partial shutdown of the government that stretched for 35 jittery days.

It ended on a high note, as the president signed off on 12 weeks of paid leave for new parents, a generous raise and a midweek vacation day before Christmas against the recommendation of his own staff — and as he issued an exuberant letter of thanks to “Our Incredible Federal Workforce.”
The president is really an ad hoc statist.

He has no qualms about expanding government. He just doesn't have a well thought out plan to do so, it is whatever comes into his mind at a given moment based on the situation around him.

The Times again:
Trump struck a deal with House Democrats weeks ago to pass a defense bill that gives federal employees their biggest victory in nearly 30 years, the costly parental leave benefit viewed by many of his top advisers as a momentous concession. The president, however, saw a rare opportunity to win approval for a pet project, his proposed sixth branch of the military dubbed the Space Force, ahead of the 2020 election.
Democrats achieved their goal of a significant raise for the workforce in budget negotiations, in exchange for White House priorities that included border wall funding. The result was a 3.1 percent federal pay hike starting in January, greater than any raises in the Obama era, when the recession led to a three-year freeze.
Great, higher-paid government workers and a new branch of the military.

This is what has occurred to government spending under Trump before the pay hike, the paid leave and the new Space Force.



-RW

Ivanka to Talk Lefty Labor and Education Points in Keynote at Vegas Consumer Electronics Convention

Ivanka Trump 
Ivanka Trump will be on the CES 2020 keynote stage next month in Las Vegas.

She will join a keynote discussion on jobs and the future of work with Gary Shapiro, president and CEO of the Consumer Technology Assn., which produces CES. The talk is scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 7, at 2 p.m. PT in the Venetian’s Palazzo Ballroom.

Of course, it is going to be all about putting restrictions on business-employee relationships by having the government dictate some of the terms and expand government spending on various education programs.

Trump and Shapiro will discuss “employer-led strategies to reskill workers, create apprenticeships and develop K-12 STEM education programs,” according to the CTA.

She is about power, not free markets.

She is worse than her father.

-RW

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Why Should Serious People Take Such Climate Change Reporting Seriously?


Here’s a Don Boudreaux letter to the Program Director of NPR’s Here & Now:
Sir or Madam:
Your segment today on climate change unwittingly offers reasons why so many people not on the political left remain skeptical of entrusting governments with more power to regulate in the name of protecting the environment. Almost every second of this segment’s nine-plus minutes portrayed life today as ghastly, treacherous, and destined only to get more hellish. Yet reality is very different.
Your reporting would be more credible if you at least acknowledged such facts as these – facts that uninformed members of your audience would be shocked to learn:
– Global death-rates from natural disasters have fallen dramatically. This rate is today 1/14th what it was a century ago and ½ what it was a half-century ago.
– Life expectancy today continues to rise and is at an all-time high; today it’s much more than twice what it was before the industrial revolution. This happy trend is due in part to the fact that…
These and many other positive trends in human well-being are the direct consequence of economic growth – most of which is spawned by free markets and powered by carbon fuels. Your apparent blindness to this reality casts doubt, if not on your objectivity, certainly on your sense of historical perspective. (I laughed out loud when host Jeremy Hobson – talking about Europeans who today suffer from heat waves – said that “Many people don’t have air-conditioning because, over the course of centuries, they haven’t needed it.” In reality, of course, pre-20th-century Europeans didn’t have air-conditioning because innovative free markets hadn’t yet made it possible.)
The general public would surely pay more attention to climate reporting if programs such as yours were to substitute realism for incessant apocalypticism.
Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030
The above originally appeared at Cafe Hayek.

Top Ten Posts at 'EconomicPolicyJournal.com' in 2019



1. Tulsi Gabbard Co-Sponsors Audit the Fed Bill

2. An Orthopedic Surgeon Thinks He Understands Entrepreneurship and Economics in General

3. California Governor Names 'Genius' Feminist Studies Graduate to Transform California's Power Sector

4. Vladimir Putin: The US Dollar Will Collapse Soon

5. Harvard Students Are Giving Up Economic Theory For Politically Correct Data Collection as Economics

6. Discussing Paul Krugman's Masterclass

7. On Tyler Cowen's Love Letter to Big Business

8. Malcolm X: "Don't BEG for a Job - CREATE a Job"

9. NIGHTMARE: Treasury Secretary Mnuchin Supports a Global Minimum Tax

10. NYC Mayor de Blasio Goes Full Idiot: ‘We Are Going to Ban’ Glass and Steel Skyscrapers

Friday, December 27, 2019

Washington Post: "The economists are right: Rent control is bad"




Wow, as the year ends, some serious progress in the form of sound basic economics out of the Washington Post:

From the Editorial Board:
RENT CONTROL is back. Economists have long criticized government price controls on apartments, a concept that had its first moment in the 1920s and that some cities reintroduced in a modified form in the 1970s. Now, decades later, California and Oregon are moving forward with statewide rent-control laws. Meanwhile, presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) has made a national rent-control standard the centerpiece of his sprawling new housing plan.
The economists are right, and the populists are wrong. Rent-control laws can be good for some privileged beneficiaries, who are often not the people who really need help. But they are bad for many others...
Research also indicates that landlords have less incentive to maintain their properties in a rent-controlled environment. Governments can impose maintenance requirements on landlords — but they are tough to enforce. Depending on how the policy is designed, stiff rent-control policies with few exceptions could also discourage investors from building new homes, which would also constrain rental unit supply. And since rent-stabilization policies often tend to discourage people from moving, they harm worker mobility and the economic dynamism associated with it.
 I mean they sound like F.A. Hayek and Walter Block  (See: Rent Control: Myths and Realities--International Evidence of the Effects of Rent Control in Six Countries).

“In many cases, rent control appears to be the most efficient technique presently known to destroy a city—except for bombing.”--Swedish economist Assar Lindbeck.

-RW

Fed Chairman Wants Higher Price Inflation


Fed chairman Jay Powell and the Fed Money Pumpettes have no understanding of the nature of price inflation.

First, there is no reason to want any price inflation. You have to be thinking in a Salvatore Dali mode to think price inflation is needed "to get the economy going."

Second, the idea that price inflation is going to climb in some simple linear fashion has no basis in theory or history. Fed members are shallow thinkers to the degree they hold this view.

As I point out in the EPJ Daily Alert, the Fed is not going to get concerned about inflation until it hits 3% but by then the Fed would have to raise short-term rates to around 5% to choke off the inflation and they are not going to do that in the short term. The failure to grapple quickly with 3% inflation could result in it rapidly spiking to 5% (as measured by government price indexes) and then we are off to the races.

The Fed is pretty much run by a group that has economic understanding only a notch above Gideon Gono.

-RW

#SavedForFutureRefernced

Thursday, December 26, 2019

Thank's Lefties: California Sports Bloggers Lose Their Jobs



California legislators recently passed Assembly Bill 5 (AB5).

The bill, which will take effect on January 1, 2020, will make it illegal for freelance contractors who reside in California to create more than 35 pieces of web site content in a year for a single company, unless the outlet hires them as an employee.

The lefty legislation was "intended to limit the ability of large corporations to take advantage of contract workers." What it really did was cost a lot of bloggers their jobs.

Hiring employees instead of using freelancers becomes very expensive and not something that can easily be done in the very competitive blogger industry.

Thus the sports blogger network SB Nation, owned by Vox Media, did what it had to. It announced that it will not be renewing the contracts of around 200 California-based reporters.

The company will replace many of those contractors with a combination of 20 part-time and full-time employees.

Wacko lefty California Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego), the architect of AB5, tweeted "I'm sure some legit freelancers lost substantial income and I empathize with that especially this time of year. But Vox is a vulture."

"These were never good jobs," Gonzalez said in another tweet---even though it is clear the bloggers who lost their jobs are very upset.

-RW

Venezuela's Currency: Worth More as Craft Paper Than as Money



By Sergio Held

Santa Marta, Colombia - Along the cobblestoned streets of the coastal city of Santa Marta, demand for bolivares from Venezuela is skyrocketing, but not for the bills' monetary value.

Instead of using his homeland's money to pay for daily essentials in his native country, Venezuelan immigrant Hector Cordero weaves the currency into wallets and purses, which he sells to tourists in Colombia. His artful crafts underscore the creative methods that Venezuelans are using to extract value from a currency that - amid skyrocketing inflation - many consider worthless.

"These bolivares soberanos notes are worth nothing," Cordero, who is from Caracas, told Al Jazeera. "The notes I use are not circulating any more since last year."

Cordero uses about 70 notes of 100 bolivares each to handcraft a small coin purse, or 100 of the notes to make a larger wallet. A handbag can take up to 1,200 notes to produce. All in all, the artist incorporates 16 different denominations of Venezuelan currency into his crafts, many of them the discontinued bolivares soberanos.

Cordero sells wallets made from hundreds or even thousands of bills of the now valueless currency for about $8; the handbags go for about $12. He says most of his clients are European and North American tourists - people who want to take home a piece of what was once one of the strongest economies in South America.

He learned his technique by watching others in the streets of Caracas and by studying dozens of YouTube tutorials uploaded by fellow Venezuelans to teach people how to make what has become known as origami venezolano.

"When I run out of bolivares, my brother goes to Venezuela and brings more notes," Cordero said. "People have a lot of these notes and we buy them. We give them what they ask for." He explained that people in Venezuela exchange unworthy bolivares by the weight for other forms of currency - usually United States dollars - or for food. People also make the swap for high-denomination bolivares - bills that still hold some dwindling value. The crafts help Cordero and his family get by in their temporary home in Colombia, but he dreams of returning to Venezuela some day.

"I hope things change in Venezuela. I want to go back. There's nothing like our country and I don't feel comfortable living in another country," he said. "The government has let everything break down. I'm only waiting for problems to get solved so I can go back to Venezuela."

The International Monetary Fund estimates that inflation in Venezuela this year will reach 200,000 percent - and that the economy will contract by 35 percent.

The above originally appeared at Al Jazeera News.

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Has a Real-Life Santa Claus Emerged as a Result of Free Markets?


Is it time to believe in a real-life Santa Claus?

Erik Voorhees makes a very interesting observation:
-RW

Lessons About Mises the Man from His Moscow "Lost Papers"



-RW

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

How to Teach Your Mother to Debate a Keynesian College Professor

Henry Hazlitt
At the post, The Great Criticism of Keynes That Every Economist Should Read, where the great Henry Hazlitt book, The Failure of the "New Economics" is discussed, reader Jule Herbert writes in the comments:
Some number of people must have read it, as my original Van Nostrand edition, received by me from FEE in December 1967, reflects that it had gone back to new press runs six times since April 1959. I recall a story: My mother was taking a college extension course, Introductory Economics. I was in high school and discussed her course work with her. I objected to the notion of liquidity preference as the explanation of the rate of interest along with Keynes' claim that money was "barren." I showed her the relevant passages in Hazlitt's _The Failure of the "New Economics"_. She took my volume to class, where the professor, who knew Hazlitt through his Newsweek column, dismissed his view without any substantive retort because "Hazlitt has no PhD in economics." On hearing this, I said, "I hope you replied that Keynes had no such degree either, and was denying the lessons taught by economics." Unfortunately, she was not aware of that fact. 
-RW

A Free Market Solution to Climate Change Dangers

Climate alarmist Greta Thunberg
There are significant questions raised by some scientists as to how much carbon emissions will impact the climate. See for example the views of Richard S. Lindzen, an atmospheric physicist and emeritus professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he was the Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology.

 Lindzen has provided testimonies to the U.S. Senate and House committees numerous times.

In a 2007 interview on The Larry King Show, he said:
We're talking of a few tenths of a degree change in temperature. None of it in the last eight years, by the way. And if we had warming, it should be accomplished by less storminess. But because the temperature itself is so unspectacular, we have developed all sorts of fear of prospect scenarios – of flooding, of plague, of increased storminess when the physics says we should see less [if global warming was actually occurring].
I think it's mainly just like little kids locking themselves in dark closets to see how much they can scare each other and themselves...
This makes no sense, what Mr. Nye is saying. I'm simply saying his comments about the Gulf Stream are wrong. And his comments about heat transport are wrong.
But let's suppose that Al Gore, Bill Nye, Greta Thunberg and the rest of the climate alarmists are correct and that there will be a significant warming that raises sea levels.

Lindzen gets the solution correct here (free markets), where the alarmists never do, when he talks about shifts in the balance of energy sources.

During the Larry King Show, he correctly observed:
Energy sources and balance have changed over time, it will change. I have no idea what the energy mix will be 50 years from now. But I think if what he [Nye] says about profitable, better sources are there, they will come online and they will come online without government fiat.
But even more important, the alarmists never talk about free market solutions which can result in adjustments being made at the local level where potential problems might emerge if the alarmists are correct about climate change.

Consider this recent report in The San Francisco Business Times (my highlight):
Tech giant Google is in talks to lease up to 1.75 million square feet, the entire office component of Brookfield Properties’ Pier 70 megaproject, according to sources familiar with the discussions. No deal has been finalized, but it would be the largest direct office lease in San Francisco history if it comes to fruition...

The $3.5 billion Pier 70 offers calls for a total of 2,150 homes and 2.27 million square feet of commercial space on 28 acres of former industrial land on the city’s southern waterfront in Dogpatch...Last year Brookfield started preparing the land for new buildings, including raising some parts of the site by 10 feet to withstand future sea-level rise.
The Brookefield Properties project
Obviously, Brookfield Properties is buying into the scares of the climate alarmists or the firm believes it needs to provide a solution if it is a concern of potential tenants.

This is how solutions can emerge--for those impacted. A sea-level rise would be of no concern to people living a couple of dozen blocks away on Nob Hill (351 feet above sea level). So in the limited chance that there actually is a threat, the free market would provide solutions in areas where it is needed.

In other words, the alarmists should, at a minimum, leave the people in Wyoming, North Dakota and Alaska alone--and those of us on Nob Hill.

-RW

Monday, December 23, 2019

Biggest Shopping Day in US Retail History


Holiday shopping set records over the weekend, with Super Saturday sales reaching $34.4 billion, the biggest single day in U.S. retail history, according to Customer Growth Partners.

Sorry Austrian-lites, this is not what a recession looks like.

-RW

Greg Ransom: Paul Krugman is an Intellectual Fraud; A Shallow Man With a Shallow Education

Greg Ransom of TakingHayekSeriously has unloaded on Nobel Prize-winning New York Times economist and columnist Paul Krugman:






This might get interesting.

My thinking is that it isn't that Krugman had a shallow education at the start but that he simply has chosen to ignore any sound economics he has learned and instead promotes a Democratic-leaning establishment agenda. He is an apologist for the state.

As for now, it is likely very true, as Ransom speculates, that Krugman hasn't done any serious readings since his graduate schools days. He is surfing on bluff, which can work at The Times, as long as you pick the politically correct establishment waves to ride.

If he were an Ayn Rand character, he would be a duller, less influential version of Ellsworth Toohey.

-RW

The Real Policy Agenda of the New Nobel Prize Laureates in Economics


Back in November, when Abhijit Banerjee and his wife Esther Duflo were named recipients of the 2019 Nobel Prize in Economics, along with Michael Kremer, I called the three "government technocrats who think at the government level rather than at the foundational level where an appreciation for free markets would make their work useless."

Banerjee and Duflo appeared Sunday on the CNN show, Fareed Zakaria GPS.

In their discussion with Zakaria, they revealed the key policy thinking of their agenda. It is to promote government transfer of wealth from the rich to the poor.

Zakaria, who comes off as reasonable but an establishment man, clearly had none of the necessary foundational economic understanding to challenge the wealth transfer-crazed couple.

Banerjee was the more open of the two. He said he was in favor of a universal basic income and also said that if the rich are taxed it does not mean they will work less--as if that is the key point.

The couple claims they reached their conclusions based on experiments but the Nobel Prize winner Friedrich Hayek would surely argue the experimental method to reach grand universal economic tenets is an improper methodology for the science of economics.

Nowhere have Banerjee or Duflo addressed Hayek's critique.

But more significant, in their desire to central plan and transfer wealth from the rich to the poor, Banerjee and Duflo ignore the damage this does to capital accumulation. They simply don't mention it, as if the transfers don't cause a massive hole in the capital structure. The larger the capital structure, the greater the general increase in the standard of living. Shrinking the capital structure by transferring funds to the poor, from the pool of capital, is just about the worst thing you can do for the poor. Capital is the key to producing more goods and more goods are what the poor need more than cash handouts buying a shrinking pool of goods.

Banerjee and Duflo have also never rebutted the observation of Israel Kirzner that an entrepreneur can emerge without the need for his own personal capital. If Kirzner is correct in his observation, and I believe he is, then there is even less justification for transfers from the rich to the poor.

Banerjee and Duflo are just riding the current wave of wealth-hate by coming up with shallow justifications for taking funds from the rich without addressing the fundamental-type objections to such taxation in particular that it lowers the general standard of living.

-RW

Sunday, December 22, 2019

Amazon vs. FedEx


Kevin S. emails:
Robert -

Love your sites and your no nonsense, uncompromising and principled view on the nutty world we live in.

I work for FedEx Freight (we're about 10% of the overall company) and follow a message board where coworkers often speculate about the direction we're headed.  Of course a lot of this is dictated by what Amazon is doing, and with that in mind someone came across this article.

I was previously not familiar with the author (Prof. Scott Galloway) or his site, but it was so well written that even though some of his ideas strike me as potentially far fetched I couldn't get enough his style.  It reminded me of your stuff and I thought you might like it.  Would love to hear your take on his predictions.  Happy Holidays,
RW response:

I have zero understanding of the delivery industry other than as a consumer.

And as a consumer, I have to say that Amazon is the most inconsistent delivery service of all and their consumer complaint system is bizarre. I always get an email questionnaire to rank their service when the delivery was successful but when there is some kind of Amazon screwup (1 in 10 times) and a delivery fails, there is no questionnaire. So you generally can't complain when things go wrong. How nuts is that? Bezos is getting major-league bad data on how well his delivery service is working.

And then there was this doozy: I once ordered an office plant via Amazon. It was about six feet tall. For whatever reason (to hit a delivery quota?), they decided to deliver it on a Sunday when they couldn't get access to my building, so they left it outside on the sidewalk--on a busy street. Fortunately, I just happened to be passing by, saw it, and took it up to my office.

So thanks for giving me the opportunity to comment on the truly despicable Amazon delivery service. I have been looking for a way to work it into a post.

But, as I say, I have no insights into the delivery industry from a business perspective, so I can't comment as to what might occur.

That said, forget about FedEx, what about you? Do you have work skills that are easily transferable if FedEx is taken over and downsizing occurs? If not, think about how you might develop some.

Rendering Unto Caesar: Was Jesus a Socialist?

A perfect read for the Christmas season.

From the blurb:
Rendering Unto Caesar: Was Jesus a Socialist? tackles head-on a persistent myth that has stymied individual freedom in many parts of the world. That myth takes many forms, but reduces to this: “You can’t be for capitalism or free markets and be a follower of Jesus at the same time.” 

For the first time in a short and readable form, Foundation for Economic Education (FEE) president Lawrence W. Reed debunks these misconceptions in powerful, convincing ways. Though he frequently references Scripture, Reed makes it plain at the start that one doesn’t have to be a Christian to understand the importance of proper interpretation of Scripture, as well as history and economics. People who simply want sound analysis or good history will appreciate it. 

By examining the words of Jesus in the context of their time and place, Reed shows Jesus never called for the political process to rearrange wealth. He denounced envy. He stressed choice, accountability and private property. He endorsed keeping one’s word and honoring contracts. He emphasized principles of personal character and the Golden Rule. These things are all difficult to reconcile with political force. 

Now, when anyone suggests that the teachings of Jesus are in any way incompatible with free markets or capitalism, defenders of free markets can provide concise and conclusive responses. There is no other publication that does the job as fully or is as accessible as Rendering Unto Caesar.
Available as a pamphlet or Kindle ebook.


Saturday, December 21, 2019

Top Historians Demand 'Prominent Corrections' From New York Times Re: 1619 Project/Slavery Reporting

Many historians apparently are sick and tired of The New York Time lies and distortions in The 1619 Project and the attempt to dismiss, by the leader of the Project, Nikole Hannah-Jones, the criticisms of the Projects as simply criticisms by “white historians.”

Five top historians are firing back with a letter to The New York Times demanding prominent corrections.

The Times has indicated it will publish the letter of the historians in the Dec. 29 issue of The New York Times Magazine.

Here are key snippets: 
We write as historians to express our strong reservations about important aspects of The 1619 Project. The project is intended to offer a new version of American history in which slavery and white supremacy become the dominant organizing themes. The Times has announced ambitious plans to make the project available to schools in the form of curriculums and related instructional material...
[W]e are dismayed at some of the factual errors in the project and the closed process behind it.These errors, which concern major events, cannot be described as interpretation or “framing.” They are matters of verifiable fact, which are the foundation of both honest scholarship and honest journalism. They suggest a displacement of historical understanding by ideology. Dismissal of objections on racial grounds — that they are the objections of only “white historians” — has affirmed that displacement.
On the American Revolution, pivotal to any account of our history, the project asserts that the founders declared the colonies’ independence of Britain “in order to ensure slavery would continue.” This is not true. If supportable, the allegation would be astounding — yet every statement offered by the project to validate it is false. Some of the other material in the project is distorted, including the claim that “for the most part,” black Americans have fought their freedom struggles “alone.”
---
The 1619 Project has not been presented as the views of individual writers — views that in some cases, as on the supposed direct connections between slavery and modern corporate practices, have so far failed to establish any empirical veracity or reliability and have been seriously challenged by other historians. Instead, the project is offered as an authoritative account that bears the imprimatur and credibility of The New York Times. Those connected with the project have assured the public that its materials were shaped by a panel of historians and have been scrupulously fact-checked. Yet the process remains opaque. The names of only some of the historians involved have been released, and the extent of their involvement as “consultants” and fact checkers remains vague. The selective transparency deepens our concern.
We ask that The Times, according to its own high standards of accuracy and truth, issue prominent corrections of all the errors and distortions presented in The 1619 Project. We also ask for the removal of these mistakes from any materials destined for use in schools, as well as in all further publications, including books bearing the name of The New York Times. We ask finally that The Times reveal fully the process through which the historical materials were and continue to be assembled, checked and authenticated.
Sincerely,
Victoria Bynum, distinguished emerita professor of history, Texas State University;
James M. McPherson, George Henry Davis 1886 emeritus professor of American history, Princeton University;
James Oakes, distinguished professor, the Graduate Center, the City University of New York;
Sean Wilentz, George Henry Davis 1886 professor of American history, Princeton University;
Gordon S. Wood, Alva O. Wade University emeritus professor and emeritus professor of history, Brown University.
 For more on the 1619 Project see here.
-RW

The Great Criticism of Keynes That Every Economist Should Read

John Maynard Keynes
By Gary North


In 1959, Henry Hazlitt's book, The Failure of the "New Economics," was published by D. Van Nostrand Company, a reputable but midsized publishing company. The book was subtitled An Analysis of the Keynesian Fallacies.
This was Hazlitt's magnum opus. That is to say, it was his great work. Yet it was narrowly focused. It was a monograph. In clear prose, he took apart John Maynard Keynes's magnum opus, The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936), the book that indirectly reshaped economic theory in the second half of the twentieth century.

The Book Almost Nobody Has Read

Almost no one has ever read the book. There is good reason for this. Keynes' book is unreadable. Its arguments are incoherent. This is why we rarely see direct quotes from the book. Keynesianism did not become a major factor in the thinking of most economists until 1945. The Keynesian movement accelerated in 1948 because of the first edition of Paul Samuelson's textbook Economics. I own a reprint of that original edition. Keynes is not quoted in the book. Samuelson mentioned him on pages 253 and 303. The book and its later editions have sold something in the range of four million copies. It was the most successful economics textbook of the twentieth century. It shaped the thinking, or rather the non-thinking, of millions of students for seventy years. Yet almost none of these students has ever read The General Theory cover to cover.
Samuelson in 1946 wrote a laudatory assessment of the impact of The General Theory. It was published in Econometrica, an academic journal not noted for its clarity.
In any case, it bears repeating that the General Theory is an obscure book, so that would be anti-Keynesians must assume their position largely on credit unless they are willing to put in a great deal of work and run the risk of seduction in the process. The General Theory seems the random notes over a period of years of a gifted man who in his youth gained the whip hand over his publishers by virtue of the acclaim and fortune resulting from the success of his Economic Consequences of the Peace.
A reprint of his article is here.
The General Theory was not well received at the time of this publication. Richard Ebeling, a Misesian economist, wrote in 2004,
Except for some of Keynes’s young protégés at Cambridge University, most of the reviewers of the book were highly critical of many of its theoretical “innovations,” as well as its inflationary prescriptions for unemployment. Even some economists who later became proponents of Keynes’s “new economics” were initially highly critical of his work. For example, Alvin Hansen, who was one of the leading advocates of Keynesian economics in the United States in the 1950's and 1960's, wrote in late 1936 that The General Theory “is not a landmark in the sense that it lays the foundation for a ‘new economics.’ … The book is more a symptom of economic trends than a foundation stone upon which a science can be built.”
Yet within a few years, and most certainly by the end of World War II, Keynes’s ideas had virtually pushed aside every other explanation of the causes and cures of economic depressions. Keynes’s book became the foundation stone for the new “macroeconomics.”
In contrast to Keynes's book, Hazlitt's book is readable, although not so readable as all of his other books. That is because he had to spend his time trying to make sense out of Keynes's convoluted prose and shifting definitions. But the book is coherent, and his explanations are lucid, as long as he was not directly citing Keynes.
I read the book in the summer of 1963. I know this because I used to write the date on which I had bought a book on the front inside cover page. I did not read Economics in One Lesson until 1971, when I became a senior staff member at the Foundation for Economic Education (FEE). The first book spoiled me. It really is a tour de force. I realize that the second book was his bestseller and is a fine introductory book for people who know nothing about economic theory, but his book on Keynes outshines it. Unfortunately, almost nobody has read it. It remains an unread book that demolishes an equally unread book.
In 1960, Van Nostrand published a follow-up volume edited by Hazlitt, The Critics of Keynesian Economics. It is a compilation of scholarly articles written by critics of Keynes.
The Mises Institute has done yeoman service in making certain that both of these books remain in print, and both of them remain available in PDF format free of charge.

The Memory Hole

Hazlitt's book was not the first full-length book to criticize Keynes or the longest. That honor belongs to Arthur Marget, who was the first economist to devote a book to critiquing a narrow aspect of Keynes's General Theory. It is a two-volume behemoth of over fourteen hundred pages, The Theory of Prices. It also covered Keynes's earlier book, Treatise on Money (1930). The first volume was published in 1938; the second volume was published in 1942. It was unknown when it was published, and it remained unknown after it was republished in 1966. It is not as incoherent as Keynes's book, but it is turgid, prolic, and unread. Almost no economist has ever heard of Marget. That was true in his day, too. There is no Wikipedia entry on him. His book did not go down the memory hole. It was published at the bottom of the memory hole, and it remained there. John Egger wrote a detailed review of it in 1995, which gives you some indication of just how obscure it is. It took over half a century to get a detailed review. Egger concluded, "Labels aside, Marget's work offers scholarship in the history of monetary doctrine that is unmatched, and an analysis of processes that is in some respects unmatched, in explicitly Austrian works. 'Prolixity' or not, it deserves to be recognized as an exciting and significant contribution to the tradition of the methodologically individualistic analysis of monetary processes." The use of the adjective "exciting" to describe this book I regard as exaggerated. The Mises Institute has made a PDF available of each volume.
Hazlitt in 1959 was a well-known economist. He had a regular column in Newsweek from 1946 to 1966. The Mises Institute has reprinted those articles in a massive 800-page book, Business Tides. Yet despite his name identification, the economic guild successfully blacked out references to Hazlitt's book on Keynes. I never recall seeing a footnote to the book in any academic economic article other than those published in Austrian school journals.
The economists' academic guild never took Hazlitt seriously. After all, Hazlitt did not go to college. Keynes did go to college, but he did not major in economics. He majored in mathematics. That certainly did not in any way hamper his capture of the academic guild after 1945.
We have waited for seven decades for some other economist with Hazlitt's ability to penetrate an opponent's arguments, analyze them critically, and report on why they (1) are incoherent and (2) fail to deal with economic reality. W. H. Hutt, did attempt to do this in a 1963 book, Keynesianism — Retrospect and Prospect, and a follow-up book, The Keynesian Episode: A Reassessment (1980), but Hutt's books were turgid and uninspiring. I say this as a fan of Hutt. I had intended to study economics under him. He got me a graduate fellowship when our joint plans fell through in 1967. In refuting Keynes, he allowed Keynes's convoluted arguments to overwhelm his own prose. These two books never gained traction. Even within the free market, anti-Keynes community, they never gained traction. In a 1971 article, Hutt commented on this:
I had expected reasoned objections to my rigorously-stated argument following the publication of my book. None has been forthcoming. Nor has a subsequent article of mine (entitled Keynesian Revisions) which submitted further evidence of a retreat by major exponents of the Keynesian gospel, called forth any reply. In the meantime the retreat has continued although, apart from Leijonhufvud's impressive and scholarly critique, I am aware of no further direct attack on the Keynesian system.
Leijonhufvud's 1968 book, On Keynesian Economics and the Economics of Keynes: A Study in Monetary Theory, is also impenetrable. It was written for his academic peers, but it had no effect in slowing down the Keynesian juggernaut. It was not a hard-core assault on Keynesian economics. It did not get reprinted. It has long since disappeared.
He noted in the book's Introduction that the exegesis of The General Theory had fallen into disfavor. What he did not mention was that this exegeting had been required after 1945 because newly converted young economists felt it necessary to explain what Keynes had really meant. This was because nobody could figure out what he meant. Leijonhufvud wrote:
John Maynard Keynes’ The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money signaled a revolution in economic theory and the beginning of “modem” macro theory. No other economic work in this century has been the subject of anything even approaching the vast outpouring of commentary and criticism that the General Theory has received. But in the last five or ten years, theoretical and exegetical interest in the General Theory has declined markedly. The long “Keynes and the Classics” debate, devoted to the appraisal of the precise nature and significance of Keynes’ innovations, has at last almost petered out. The label “post-Keynesian” attached to much recent theoretical research is symptomatic of the widespread view that the book on the General Theory is closed, that the “Keynesian Revolution” is over, and that what was worthwhile in it has been digested and the rest discarded. The General Theory has itself become a classic — a work which the active theorist need not consult but in which historians of economic doctrines will have a continuing interest.
The General Theory had become a classic in this sense from the day it was published. Nobody consulted it. Nobody quoted it as authoritative. Like the crowd that cheered the emperor with no clothes, the academic world awaited a clear-sighted child who would announce to the world, "The emperor has no clothes."
Hazlitt made this announcement and proved it. But the crowd continued to cheer the emperor. It pushed Hazlitt to the back of the crowd and pretended he had never issued his evaluation.

The Two Core Errors

Hazlitt was always very gracious to me. He was gracious to everybody he met. Therefore, it may be remiss for me to make two observations. But he won't mind. He has been dead a long time.
Hazlitt and all of the other critics of Keynes never did get to the primary points with respect to what was wrong with Keynes. One point was theoretical. The other was practical. Were I to write a book on Keynes, I would begin the introduction with my two observations. Then I would pursue these two observations for several hundred pages. I would not invoke jargon. I would not use any equations. I would simply hammer over and over and over on these two points.
1. Theory. The entire Keynesian apparatus rests on this assumption: the economy needs greater spending in order to pull it out of recession. The system is therefore a demand-side analysis. He argued that investors, fearing the loss of their money, would invest. If they invest, this will lead to reduced consumption and a worse recession. He ignored the obvious: all of money invested goes to other people's incomes. The money stays in the economy, rewarding those with assets to sell, whether labor, capital, or raw materials. This "money disappears" argument was the same conceptual error made by "Major" C. H. Douglas in the years after World War I, whom Keynes praised in the General Theory (pp. 370–71). This was the Social Credit movement's supreme error. I have written a book on this, Salvation through Inflation.
The question, then, is this: "Where will the government get its hands on the money that it will use to spend?" There are only three ways: borrow it, print it, or tax it out of the hands of the public.
Where had the money been before the government borrowed or taxed? It had been in people's bank accounts. The banks were lending out money, and borrowers deposited it in their accounts. If the government had not intervened with massive deficits, selling its IOUs to the banks or to the investors directly, the banks would have had to invest the money somewhere. Money is not stored under mattresses. So, the government simply extracted the money from investors who would have had to seek out profitable avenues of lending, bearing the uncertainty of their actions. The money would have been spent, one way or another. It would have been spent either in forming capital or else providing consumer loans. In other words, the government cannot get something from nothing. This critique should be front and center. The entire critique should rest on this obvious fact: there is no such thing as a free lunch. There is also no such thing as a free investment.
The heart of John Maynard Keynes’ analysis in 1936 was the idea of a permanent free market equilibrium with high unemployment. For some reason, which he never explained coherently, sellers refuse to lower their prices when faced with buyers who refuse to buy at yesterday’s pre-Depression prices. This is especially true of workers who refuse to cut their wage demands.
Keynesianism is based on two fundamental ideas: (1) sellers do not learn that something is better than nothing, and therefore will not lower their selling prices; (2) economists do not learn that government spending that is financed by debt is accomplished in one of only two ways: (a) money lent by savers, which could have been lent to businesses or consumers; (b) money lent by a central bank, which lowers the purchasing power of the currency unit. This is a philosophy of something for nothing.
2. Practice. Keynesianism has always wrapped itself in equations and mathematics. But here is reality: government spending is determined, not by mathematics, but by the ability of politicians to extract wealth from the general public and still get reelected. There is nothing scientific about it.
The entire Keynesian analytical apparatus — which itself is self-contradictory — has never been used by politicians in a scientific way to determine what degree of taxation, borrowing, or inflating will suffice in pulling an economy out of recession or depression. There is no science of Keynesian economics that tells politicians how much taxation or debt, or how much borrowing of newly created money from the central bank, is appropriate. Politicians pay no attention to the recommendations of Keynesian economists, which shows wisdom on the part of politicians. Politicians are far wiser in this regard than economists who have been granted a PhD degree by other economists.

Conclusion

Some bright young economist would be wise to establish his reputation as the premier anti-Keynesian economist of this generation. I proposed this a decade ago, but no one has taken the bait.
The place to start reading for a career-long project along these lines is The Failure of the "New Economics." Then go to Hunter Lewis' Where Keynes Went Wrong (2009). Then go here.


The above first appeared at Mises.org.