Let the Markets Clear!
by
Ron Paul
Recently
by Ron Paul: Government
Dependency Will End in Chaos
French
businessman and economist Jean-Baptiste
Say is credited with identifying the fundamental economic principle
that aggregate demand for goods in an economy will equal the aggregate
supply of goods when markets are permitted to operate. Or in Says
words, products are paid for with products.
English classical
economist David
Ricardo, among others, more fully developed this principle into
what has become known as Says
Law. Says Law, according to Ricardo, leads us to
understand that market equilibrium for goods is constant. This simply
means that markets, when left alone by government planners or other
fraudulent actors, inexorably tend toward an equilibrium price
which eventually balances supply and demand for any particular good.
Thus markets
will clear themselves of any surpluses or shortages in the form
of excess supply and demand.
This important
corollary of Says Law that markets clear is critical to
understanding the moribund US housing market. In housing, perhaps
more than any other good, we see the terrible consequences of government
and central bank interference with market forces.
First,
the Federal Reserve Bank relentlessly increased
the money supply over the last few decades. Much of this newly
created money and credit flowed from Fed member banks into the residential
and commercial real estate markets, causing prices to rise dramatically
prior to the housing bust of 2007.
At the same
time, the Fed systematically suppressed
interest rates for decades. This led to tremendous malinvestment
both by homebuilders and individuals, and encouraged a seedy subprime
mortgage industry to make nonviable loans that would not make economic
sense under market interest rates.
Congressional
meddling in the mortgage market also added tremendously to the problem.
Inane legislation like The Community Reinvestment Act literally
forced banks to make thousands of loans to bad credit risks. Similarly,
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac put taxpayers on the hook for millions
of mortgages that never would meet market underwriting criteria.
And of course the real estate and homebuilder lobbies made sure
mortgage interest debt (unlike most personal debt) remains tax-deductible.
The ultimate
result of these interventions by our caring friends in Congress
and the Fed has been the biggest housing bubble and crash in US
history, leaving millions of Americans underwater on their mortgages
if they have not already lost their houses altogether. Congress
and the Fed are directly responsible for millions of shattered lives,
and almost unknowable economic damage in the form of trillions of
dollars in mortgage backed securities.
The
only solution to this mess is to allow the US housing market to
clear. All of the bad mortgage debt must be liquidated, whether
via foreclosure or bankruptcy. Banks holding substantial mortgages
or mortgage backed assets must face the music and adjust their balance
sheets to reflect todays reality. Undoubtedly this will force
many banks into immediate insolvency, but such banks must be allowed
to fail without receiving another nickel of taxpayer money. Banks
took the risks and made money during the bubble years; those who
exercised bad judgment must now accept the consequences of their
actions.
Never in American
history have we needed to adopt a policy of laissez faire more desperately;
never has government seemed more determined to artificially prop
up an industry. But only by allowing the housing market to clear
can we hope to rebuild our shattered economy from a stable foundation.
Clearly there will be pain in the short term, but we owe it to younger
Americans and future generations to allow the reemergence of a rational
housing market.
See
the Ron Paul File
October
30, 2012
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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