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What must be done to recover from this financial crisis? Barack Obama rightly
stresses that we first must understand how today's problems emerged. It is "only
by understanding how we arrived at this moment that we'll be able to lift ourselves
out of this predicament."
Unfortunately, Obama (along with most of the Washington establishment) has
created only misunderstanding. In calling for a massive increase in government
control over the economy, he has evaded the mountain of evidence implicating
the government.
For example, Obama's core explanation of all the destructive behavior leading
up to today's crisis is that the market was too free. But the market that led
to today's crisis was systematically manipulated by government. Fact: this
decade saw drastic attempts by the government to control the housing and financial
markets--via a Federal Reserve that cut interest rates to all-time lows, and
via a gigantic increase in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's size and influence.
Fact: through these entities, the government sought to "stimulate the economy" and
promote homeownership (sound familiar?) by artificially extending cheap credit
to home-buyers. Fact: most of the (very few) economists who actually predicted
the financial crisis blame Fed policy or housing policy for inflating a bubble
that was bound to collapse.
How does all this evidence factor into Obama's understanding of "how we arrived
at this moment"? It doesn't. Not once, during the solemn 52 minutes and 5,902
words of his speech to Congress did he mention the Fed, Fannie, or Freddie.
Not once did he suggest that government manipulation of markets could have
any possible role in the present crisis. He just went full steam ahead and
called for more spending, more intervention, and more government housing programs
as the solution.
But a genuine explanation of the financial crisis must take into account all
the facts. What role did the Fed play? What about Fannie and Freddie? To be
sure, some companies and CEOs seem to have made irrational business decisions.
Was the primary cause "greed," as so many claim--and what does this even mean?
Or was the primary cause government intervention like artificially low interest
rates, which distorted economic decision-making and encouraged less competent
and more reckless companies and CEOs while marginalizing and paralyzing the
more competent ones?
Entertaining such questions would also mean considering the idea that the
fundamental solution to our problems is to disentangle the government
from the markets to prevent future manipulation. It would mean considering
pro-free-market remedies such as letting banks foreclose, letting prices reach
market levels, letting bad banks fail, dismantling Fannie and Freddie, ending
bailout promises, and getting rid of the Fed's power to manipulate interest
rates.
But it is not genuine understanding the administration seeks. For them, the
wisdom and necessity of previous government intervention is self-evident; no
matter the contrary evidence, the crisis can only have been caused by insufficient
government intervention. Besides, they are too busy following Obama's chief
of staff's dictum, "Never let a serious crisis go to waste," by proposing a
virtual takeover of not only financial markets, but also the problem-riddled
energy and health-care markets--which, they conveniently ignore, are also already
among the most government-controlled in the economy.
While Obama has not sought a real explanation of today's economic problems,
Americans should. Otherwise, we will simply swallow "solutions" that dogmatically
assume the free market got us here--namely, Obama's plans to swamp this country
in an ocean of government debt, government controls, and government make-work
projects. But alternative, free-market explanations for the crisis do exist--ones
that consider the inconvenient facts Washington ignores--and every American
should seek to understand them.
Those who do will likely end up telling our leaders to stop saying "Yes, we
can" to each new proposal for expanding government power, and start saying "Yes, you can" to
Americans who seek to exercise their right to produce and trade on a free market.
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