An Economic 'Plan'?
by Thomas Sowell
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by Thomas Sowell: Obama's
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Former president
Bill Clinton told the Democratic National Convention that Barack
Obama has a plan to rescue the economy, and only the fact that the
Republicans stood in his way has stopped him from getting the economy
out of the doldrums.
From all this,
and much else that is said in the media and on the campaign trail,
you might think that the economy requires government intervention
to revive and create jobs. It is Beltway dogma that the government
has to "do something."
History tells
a different story. For the first 150 years of this country's existence,
the federal government felt no great need to "do something" when
the economy turned down. Over that long span of time, the economic
downturns were neither as deep nor as long lasting as they have
been since the federal government decided that it had to "do something"
in the wake of the stock market crash of 1929, which set a new precedent.
One of the
last of the "do nothing" presidents was Warren G. Harding. In 1921,
under President Harding, unemployment hit 11.7 percent – higher
than it has been under President Obama. Harding did nothing to get
the economy stimulated.
Far from spending
more money to try to "jump start" the economy, President Harding
actually reduced government spending, as the tax revenues declined
during the economic downturn.
This was not
a matter of absent-mindedly neglecting the economy. President Harding
deliberately rejected the urging of his own Secretary of Commerce,
Herbert Hoover, to intervene.
The 11.7 percent
unemployment rate in 1921 fell to 6.7 percent in 1922, and then
to 2.4 percent in 1923. It is hard to think of any government intervention
in the economy that produced such a sharp and swift reduction in
unemployment as was produced by just staying out of the way and
letting the economy rebound on its own.
Bill Clinton
loudly proclaimed to the delegates to the Democratic National Convention
that no president could have gotten us out of the recession in just
one term.
But history
shows that the economy rebounded out of a worse unemployment situation
in just two years under Harding, who simply let the market revive
on its own, as it had done before, time and time again for more
than a century.
Something similar
happened under Ronald Reagan. Unemployment peaked at 9.7 percent
early in the Reagan administration. Like Harding and earlier presidents,
Reagan did nothing, despite outraged outcries in the media.
The economy
once again revived on its own. Three years later, unemployment was
down to 7.2 percent – and it kept on falling, as the country experienced
twenty years of economic growth with low inflation and low unemployment.
The Obama party
line is that all the bad things are due to what he inherited from
Bush, and the few signs of recovery are due to Obama's policies
beginning to pay off. But, if the economy has been rebounding on
its own for more than 150 years, the question is why it has been
so slow to recover under the Obama administration.
The endless
proliferation of anti-business interventions by government, and
the sight of more of the same coming over the horizon from Barack
Obama's appointees in the federal bureaucracies, creates the one
thing that has long stifled economic activity in countries around
the world – uncertainty about what the rules of the game are, and
the unpredictability of how specifically those rules will continue
to change in a hostile political environment.
Both
history and contemporary data show that countries prosper more when
there are stable and dependable rules, under which people can make
investments without having to fear unpredictable new government
interventions before these investments can pay off.
A great myth
has grown up that President Franklin D. Roosevelt saved the American
economy with his interventions during the Great Depression of the
1930s. But a 2004 economic study concluded that government interventions
had prolonged the Great Depression by several years. Obama is repeating
policies that failed under FDR.
Despite demands
that Mitt Romney spell out his plan for reviving the economy, we
can only hope that Governor Romney plans to stop the government
from intervening in the economy and gumming up the works, so that
the economy can recover on its own.
September
11, 2012
Thomas
Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.
To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other
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