Day
of Reckoning
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: Ideas
and the Culpability for Violence
The trigger
that apparently caused the market meltdown was the ever-so-slight
suggestion from Standard & Poor's that the US government’s fiscal
health might not be all that it is cracked up to be.
This was not
a case of the little boy noting the emperor has no clothes. It is
more like the little boy suggested that the emperor's clothes, while
beautiful, might have been more carefully tailored to suit the imperial
dignity. Hysteria followed, and the entire Obama cult called for
the kid to be stoned.
Finally the
emperor himself spoke in defense of his rainment. That’s when the
market crashed.
But the downgrading
of a government’s debt from AAA to AA+ can only have triggered a
market avalanche if the truth is in fact much worse, and most everyone
knows it.
S&P doesn’t
have clean hands, of course. It holds a government monopoly, wants
higher taxes, and rated crazed housing bonds AAA. But imagine, for
just a moment, that US government debt were rated in the same way
that municipal bonds or regular corporate debt are. Imagine that
government bonds, like normal bonds, carried a default premium.
Imagine, in other words, that the Federal Reserve were not in a
position to pay everyone from welfare recipients to banksters with
newly created money.
Under such
actual market conditions, federal debt would not be rated as AA+.
It would be worth even less than junk bonds. In fact, it wouldn’t
even qualify for a market rating at all, because it would be utterly
worthless and the institution that issued it would be in default
and the whole rotten apparatus of the state would be seen to be
bankrupt at its very core, in every sense.
We know this
for one simple reason: There is no way that the government can fund
its debt on taxes alone. There would be a revolution in this country
in a heartbeat, and, probably, the entire American empire, domestic
and foreign, would come crashing down, along with its banking and
monetary systems.
If this actually
happened, there would be no more "ongoing negotiations"
about the budget and the debt. The cuts would be swift, extreme,
gigantic. The federal government would have to behave like state
governments, balancing the budget year to year. There would be no
more plans for fake cuts in the planned increases, gradually phased
in over ten years. The federal government would face actual market
discipline. The S&P downgrade is only a slight taste of what
would follow.
And
let’s not just look at the downside. Hundreds of billions in resources
would be freed from government control. The private sector would
experience a huge infusion of energy. Interest rates would probably
go through the roof, which means that people would actually be rewarded
for saving, and saving is exactly what people would do as hundreds
of banks went belly-up, large portions of the business sector had
their credit lines cut, and merchants of death had to close their
bloody doors.
There would
be wailing and gnashing of teeth, but there would be no turning
back. Within a few months, we would start seeing massive resource
shifts and pockets of growth would return. New jobs would be available.
New businesses would spring up. New financial firms would displace
the old ones. Within a year or 18 months, we would be on a growth
path, and this time it would be real and sustainable.
Of course this
is not going to happen. Instead, the powers-that-be will continue
their long game of "let’s pretend" as the economy sinks
deeper and deeper, incomes fall, and the US gradually heads toward
3rd-world basket case status.
It’s not only
the government that is bankrupt, of course. It’s the entire ideological
apparatus that backs the state and its eternal expansion. The New
York Times
struggled for something to say about the obvious failure of
the second stimulus. All they could come up with was: "shift
every available resource toward jobs," "increased investment
in infrastructure," more relief for homeowners, and another
extension of unemployment benefits.
The only thing
that this asinine editorial left out was the need to lower interest
rates. And that’s because interest rates are already 0%, which has
killed saving, terminated growth, and denied the public the fundamental
freedom to sock away money in time deposits and let it earn something
in exchange. The Federal Reserve is completely out of policy options,
unless it is ready to embrace the Zimbabwe-Weimar solution.
Of
course, the whole theory that the government can stimulate through
control and robbery is wrong and counterproductive. It only ends
up rewarding government and its friends while the rest of us suffer.
If we ever get out of this depression, it will be because government
is forced to stop this nonsense, and the economy really stimulated
by taking a meat axe to the planning-spending-inflating apparatus.
This is the
underlying reality that informed traders understand. The whole system
is being propped up by the power to print, and that power alone.
No matter how many miracles some people think that paper money can
accomplish, there is an underlying realization that the whole system
is a hoax.
But don’t take
my word for it. Let S&P and many more competitive rating agencies
go to town on US bonds and rate them as they would any bond in the
private sector or even the public sector not backed by a printing
press. Let reality speak, and let us listen.
August
10, 2011
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail], former editorial assistant to Ludwig von Mises and congressional
chief of staff to Ron Paul, is founder and chairman of the Mises
Institute, executor for the estate of Murray N. Rothbard, and
editor of LewRockwell.com.
See his
books.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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