Your Kids Will Have It Better Than You Do
by
Gary North
Tea Party Economist
Recently
by Gary North: Why
We Are Not on the Road to Serfdom
I read that Americans who have spoken to poll-takers express the
fear that their children will not live as well as they have. Here
is an example. The poll was taken in October 2011.
More
than two-thirds of voters say the United States is declining, and
a clear majority think the next generation will be worse off than
this one, according to the results of a new
poll commissioned by The Hill.
A resounding
69 percent of respondents said the country is "in decline," the
survey found, while 57 percent predict today's kids won't live
better lives than their parents. Additionally, 83 percent of voters
indicated they're either very or somewhat worried about the future
of the nation, with 49 percent saying they're "very worried."
The results
suggest that Americans don't view the country's current economic
and political troubles as temporary, but instead see them continuing
for many years.
The usual
explanation relates to the poor economy. Other explanations include
the environment, the educational system, the national debt, Asian
competition, illegal immigration, and moral decline.
I have not
seen any poll relate this pessimism to concern over declining medical
technology, rising computer prices, a crash of the Internet, rising
bandwidth costs, declining automobile safety, dead spots in cell
phone communications, rising book prices, declining IQ scores, or
astronomical plane fares.
In other words,
Americans think their children will live longer, enjoy better communications,
travel more inexpensively, and not get dumber. The better informed
respondents know of the Flynn effect. It appears that people born
later over the last century keep getting better at taking exams,
or else they are actually getting smarter. Wikipedia summarizes.
The
Flynn effect is the name given to a substantial and long-sustained
increase in intelligence test scores measured in many parts of the
world. When intelligence quotient (IQ) tests are initially standardized
using a sample of test-takers, by convention the average of the
test results is set to 100 and their standard deviation is set to
15 IQ points. When IQ tests are revised they are again standardized
using a new sample of test-takers, usually born more recently than
the first. Again, the average result is set to 100. However, when
the new test subjects take the older tests, in almost every case
their average scores are significantly above 100.
This has taken
place in other countries. It means that each generation does better
at taking exams. Since there is no inheritance of acquired characteristics,
we must seek other explanations for this rise. One explanation surely
does not fit: children keep getting less intelligent.
Before a child
is born, parents hope for two things: (1) the child will be healthy;
(2) the child will be of normal intelligence. Parents of teenagers
can be confident that the nation's children and grandchildren will
live longer, be healthier, and be better at taking IQ tests. So,
why the pessimism?
Let us discount
the likelihood of the following: (1) a pandemic, (2) nuclear war,
(3) a collision with an asteroid.
This leaves
the following: (1) the rising cost of energy, (2) rising taxation,
(3) Federal Reserve policy, (4) tighter job markets (immigration
and Asian competition), (5) the federal debt, (6) cultural and moral
decline.
I will skip
over cultural and moral issues, because most of these issues are
separate from government policies. I can think of no federal program
that will reform Americans' morals, and I shudder to think of the
bureaucracy that would be set up to try.
Oldsters have
been complaining about moral and cultural decline ever since the
Puritans arrived in Massachusetts. At some point, it's old news.
If there is a looming tipping point, we can't forecast it accurately.
Surely, an agency in Washington can't.
I am in favor
of closing down government welfare programs that subsidize personal
irresponsibility. This should begin with crony capitalism. Some
single mother in Detroit is not the primary source of moral hazard
in America. Let's start with the FDIC, the Import-Export Bank, farm
price supports, Social Security, Medicare, and the Federal Reserve
System.
RISING
ENERGY COSTS
This threat
is real, but we have a price system to deal with it.
For anyone
who has invested in natural gas over the past few years, the energy
crisis seems to be on hold. He has lost a great deal of money. Prices
have collapsed.
There may
be a technological breakthrough. I hope so. Meanwhile, the price
system offers us ways to cut consumption. Worldwide oil consumption
peaked in 2004. It is still high: about a billion barrels every
12 weeks. But the free market provides incentives for consumers
to conserve and inventors to get busy.
This much
is clear: rising energy costs are the result of increased consumption,
which is the result of increased production. We have to get richer
to afford expensive oil.
We will cut
back on some consumer goods in order to buy energy. We will have
time to adjust our budgets. This is a long-term problem.
In any case,
the high cost of energy is going to hit the Third World and Second
World before it hits America.
RISING
TAXATION
Not for Americans.
Americans will not tolerate rising taxes. The most that the federal
government has extracted out of Americans since 1947 is 20% of GDP,
and usually this has been lower. Here
is a chart that shows this.
What about
total taxation? It
has risen to the 35% range. (This does not count the cost of
regulation.)
Government
expenditures have risen since 2000. But this has been covered by
borrowing.
Parents should
not worry about their children's growing tax burden. One election
cycle can take away that burden. A new Congress comes in and pulls
the plug on any program that a majority of voters "the kids"
decide is squeezing them.
Think of this
as the ice floe solution. Some tribes in the arctic used to stick
granny on a floating piece of ice, gave her three days' rations,
and wished her bon voyage.
My recommendation:
Don't worry about the kids. Worry about your golden years.
FEDERAL
RESERVE POLICY
Our kids are
not going to take the brunt of this. We are. What the FED has created,
in conjunction with fractional reserve banking and the FDIC, is
a system of moral hazard and crony capitalism on a scale never before
seen. Add to this witches brew the European Central Bank, the Bank
of Japan, and the People's Bank of China. Don't cry for the kids.
Our problems are more immediate.
TIGHTER
JOB MARKETS
With every
extension of the division of labor since the day that Cain went
off to seek his fortune, job markets have been tightening. There
are more people looking for work. But an amazing phenomenon has
paralleled this development. More employers are looking for workers.
Markets clear
when left free to clear. Employers bid against employers. Workers
bid against workers. Employment remains high as long as employers
and workers are free to bid, free to choose, free to move away,
and free to start a business. I mean "free" as in "under no legal
restrictions."
Lots of Chinese
workers want to compete to sell us trinkets that we don't need and
parts that we can hire others to assemble. China is a nation that
sends out boxes with this sign: "Some assembly required." The money
is in the assembling and marketing. Think iPhone. Think iPad. For
that matter, think "Detroit Big Three."
Dell Computers
is in trouble, according to its recent share price. Hewlett-Packard
will lay off 27,000. What does that mean for you and me? Cheaper
computers.
Agriculture
has faced this problem for 300 years. "How ya gonna keep 'em down
on the farm, after they've seen Paree" or any other town
larger than 500? Answer: you aren't. This is why 2% of Americans
live on farms, and why food is so small a portion of our household
budgets. If we were willing to stick with unprocessed foods, that
portion would be even lower. A
"paleo" diet which is not paleo; it's capitalist
could be based on eggs and not much else. Eggs are cheap.
Tighter job
markets are great for people who specialize. This takes productivity.
There is increasing productivity. It also takes capital. It takes
education. All of these are available at some price.
For unproductive
people with poor work habits, low IQs, and no skills, times will
get tougher. But why shouldn't they get tougher? The market rewards
workers who produce efficiently. That is what free market pricing
is all about: incentives to produce more efficiently.
This was what
uncompetitive farmers have faced. We need incentives to go out and
find some way to serve customers. Necessity is the mother of invention.
Go to the Book of Proverbs for insights here. Or go to my
commentary on the economics of the Book of Proverbs.
Some parents
are worried about the fact that the $100,000+ they spent to send
a child to college to get a degree has not paid off. The job market
is rotten for people with useless B.A. degrees in the humanities.
Furthermore, the child could have gotten this degree on his own
for under $15,000. All this is a commentary on the lack of parental
financial wisdom, not a comment on the child's future at age 40
or 50. Maybe the child will know better than to follow his parents'
example.
Year after
year, decade after decade, for over two centuries, economic growth
in the northern hemisphere of the West has increased by at least
2% per year. This has made every generation richer than the previous
one. Bad government policies have slowed this down (1929-47). World
wars have slowed this down. But it has continued most of the time.
Now the process
has spread to China and India. There will be more people with output
to trade with. This is like getting a better class of people moving
into the neighborhood. Property values will rise.
THE
FEDERAL DEBT
See "Rising
Taxation."
LIBERTY
Liberty is
what enables people to improve their situations. Liberty is increasing.
As I wrote
recently, we are not on the road to serfdom. We
are on the road out of serfdom.
We have been
on this road out of serfdom for a thousand years. We are not going
to turn around and go back. The nation that adopted Marxist Communism
first was Russia in 1917. Serfdom had been abolished in Russia only
since 1861. Capitalism had barely begun in cities. It was nonexistent
in rural areas, where most Russians lived.
As for Communist
China, Mao's triumph in 1949 was not a triumph over capitalism.
It was a triumph over traditional bureaucracy the oldest
and most developed bureaucracy on earth. The only bureaucracy to
come close to matching it was the Czar's in 1917. Marx was completely
wrong about the future. Communist revolutions came in nations that
had not yet adopted bourgeois capitalism. The mode of production
did not produce the inevitable revolution: from feudalism to capitalism
to socialism to communism.
The revolutions
were not led by proletarians. Educated bourgeois sons led peasant
societies into Communism in the name of proletarianism, just as
a pair of educated bourgeois sons invented Communism in the first
place.
We are seeing
the extension of economic liberty in Asia. Asia is booming. We are
seeing the contraction of economic liberty in Western Europe. It
is in a recession.
The United
States has lower taxes than most industrial nations. It is easy
to start a business here. Innovators still come here to prove their
points in the market.
If California
tightens the screws, Texas beckons. If Vermont tightens the screws,
New Hampshire beckons. We
can click a link to find out which state is where a small businessman
wants to be.
CONCLUSION
Whether our
children will be better off than we are has far more to do with
their morals than the federal government. The federal government
can be evaded. It can be replaced. It can be de-funded. It can go
belly-up.
The
heart, mind, and soul of a nation are the hearts, minds, and souls
of its people.
The problem
with big government is bad morality.
The problem
with central banking is larceny in the hearts of the voters. They
want bailouts. Who gets bailed out? Rich bankers. Surprise!
The problem
with public education is tax funding. That can be cured by a few
dozen sites like Khan Academy's site.
What we need
is a moral transformation, We need voters who will vote against
"except." "Thou shalt not steal, except by majority vote."
May
26, 2012
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2012 Gary North
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