|
This report was originally sent to GoldenBar subscribers on 15 Oct 2004
In the wake of the fateful demolition of the twin towers on September 11th
2001, oil prices plummeted to US$17/bbl within weeks.
Wait.
Rewind.
After tripling to peak at US $35 by October of the prior year (2000) they
then began a year long correction that culminated in the panic sell off lasting
a month past the 9-11 attacks; stoked by fears that the event would cause a
recession in travel, as well as the economy - falling stock prices were after
all a bearish development for economic growth and in particular "demand."
For, it was demand that everyone was forecasting to drop off, which at the
time was convenient because the market was worried over supplies even back
then.
But we argued that could not happen; that putting aside the advent of alternative
fuels or a dramatic change in the mode of civilization as we know it the only
way you would see a demand shock (meaning a softening of final or aggregate
demand, in Fedspeak) was by a price hike and that any fall off in prices caused
by participants speculating on a fall off in demand would actually boost
real demand especially since, we concluded, oil was too cheap already. Our
conclusion from the September 27, 2001 issue of The Goldenbar Report was:
"Oil markets are about as strong a buy as The Goldenbar Report can issue...
There is a way to make money hedging this scenario, if we are correct about
a rally in oil prices that is. If the Dow rallies, oil (and gold) shares
have been the leadership, and should get impetus from the rising price
of oil. If the Dow does not rally, it is still likely wise to own oil shares
as a countertrend sector... The potential for a sustainable demand shock
to affect the price of oil is low on the probability scale compared with
the effect from potential supply problems in both the short and long term" -
Ed Bugos, September 27 2001
Unfortunately, oil was still trading at $22 when we published that buy, just
before plummeting further to a low of about $17 on the front month Light Crude
contract. In any case, our first target was $40, and it went there 16 months
later even while stock prices fell, confounding all predictions for
a wealth-defect related demand shock.
Those analysts predicting demand retrenchments later shifted gears and jumped
on either the supply story or the Iraq story; I don't recall that the China
story was making the rounds quite as noisily yet. After peaking at $40, a top
which we called on account of our target and the behavior of the market, oil
prices collapsed to about $25 in Q1 2003 as the war premium deflated. Our interest
shifted increasingly to gold "equities" by then but soon afterwards we put
out a new target: $50.
All along our long term target has remained at US$100 / bbl., meaning that's
where this oil bull is ultimately headed, baby.
But today everyone's talking about oil. I would be careful in that market;
most commodity bull markets are very volatile - especially on the way down
- and even in a bull cycle. The market could go to $35 in a heart beat and
still not break the long term uptrend. Or it could pop another $10, like a
tech stock.
The way it's been trading I just don't know which way the next $10 might be,
though I would suggest that a stock market rout if not the China interest rate
story would reinvigorate the demand shock theorists - overbought or oversold
markets are susceptible to knee jerk reversals in sentiment.
There are three reasons that I wanted to reference our 2001 call on the oil
sector besides self promotion: 1) we perceive the correction risk in oil to
be high and wanted to remind our readers we don't only make gold calls, 2)
the "demand shock" talk is already coming out now in regards to China for many
commodities, and if our stock market call is right it'll be aggravated in relation
to that event also, and 3) so that you can contrast how conservative our $50
oil call looks today compared with how it might have looked back in 2001.
I'm telling you, I have this history of making aggressive calls that end up
looking conservative by the end of it all. I think part of the reason is that
in my position, if I'm going to convince anyone about a bull market in gold
when nobody wants to hear of it I won't get anywhere forecasting $5000 or $10000
per ounce.
The same goes for brokers or anyone that deals in raising money. For this
reason most people in the financial business are liable to tell you what is
within the bounds of "plausibility." They want the sale. Of course, the easiest
money has always been in discovering and telling people what they really want
to hear. I've never been particularly good at that. I prefer to see that look
on your face; you know, the one that Wile E. Coyote used to get just when he
realized that he missed the Roadrunner and ran past the edge of a cliff. I
like the hard money!
Our long term $2,000 gold target might still look nuts today.
But I bet our $100 oil price target seems more reasonable - in fact analysts
have been saying that at $80 it just gets back to where it should be on an
inflation adjusted basis! Hah. Call it keeping you from panicking.
In any case, perhaps it's as good a signal as you'll get that the best trade
now is to sell oil and buy gold.
Having said that, it is probably unlikely you'll see an oil price correction
until stock prices start heading down convincingly and even then maybe not
until after the election. The noise is so loud it's too hard to tell what all
has been factored. And this week's action is encouraging for the bearish case
on stocks but far from decisive.
The
Oil Rally Is Already Monetized, Stupid
So where exactly was the top end of that OPEC price band? $28? Now it's the
low end. Pretty soon the Fed will have the same trouble with interest rates.
The oil bull is behaving as if its sole goal was to topple the Dow.
But, 'they' say it has nothing to do with inflation, still denounced
regularly.
Note the performance of the entire commodity complex in the table to the right
ranked according to three year returns. It should be clear from that alone
that the oil price move is not an isolated incident even if it has the spotlight
today. The common thread is not China, fundamentally.
It is the US dollar and monetary policy regardless that it is denied, or perhaps
especially is a better word.
It's like, everybody knows that an increase in the supply of something relative
to demand leads to a decline in its price; but as regards the good, money,
politicians and central bankers just stand there and say, no it doesn't,
fool... for one thing, our mandate ensures that any unwelcome price fluctuations
in anything (caused by the volatile/irrational market of course) are stabilized
according to plan:
The Federal Reserve, the central bank of the United States, was founded
by Congress in 1913 to provide the nation with a safer, more flexible,
and more stable monetary and financial system - FRB website
Recall the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe's mission statement (where it's quite
common for prices to soar six-fold annually - wages too, nominally at least,
since real wages tend to fall in any inflation):
...Bank maintains the internal value of the Zimbabwe currency by ensuring
stable interest and inflation rates and by providing appropriate management
of the monetary system. The Bank enhances safety of banks through prudential
supervision, and acts as a banker to the State - Zimbabwe R.B. website
Obviously there are plenty of differences between the two banks, and even
in the statements. But there are similarities too - they both avoid taking
credit for inflation and its consequences, and they both lie about the true
reason for the existence of a central bank. Sorry, there is no euphemism for
the word "lie."
There are lots of reasons why the inflation in Federal Reserve Notes does
not manifest as does the inflation of the Zimbabwe currency. Many of them may
be related to property (or economic freedom) to the extent it unleashes productive
forces that cause prices to fall and offset the effects of the inflation in
the United States.
Others may be related to the structure of the banking system - the more developed
the easier to hide inflation. But in no way do the advantages of the Fed and
US economy in this respect change the fact that money supply
expansions tend to cause the currency to depreciate (though not uniformly),
because they invariably outpace any growth in the demand for money. Nor does
it change the fact that most central banks would deny the fact that
through interest rate policy (and other avenues) they influence credit
demand and thereby indeed maintain control over the issue of notes...
and that their reason for existing is not to fight deflation or facilitate
elasticity, but rather to sustain inflation.
The mandate, "price stability" as is the "full employment" doctrine, is a
front.
I know you know. So get the word out, in order that the Yardeni's of the world
can feel stupid denying it on TV.
Oil is a good example of something monetary officials claim certainly has
nothing to do with their inflations. As a result, its affect on the
economy is reasoned to be deflationary in terms of other prices and profits,
which might be true if money expansions weren't the norm. If money supply
was constant an increase in some prices would come at the expense of other
prices, and maybe profits.
But the Fed exists to alleviate such hard choices.
With the influx of fresh money, instead of causing other prices to fall, the
oil price spike is accommodated, and more easily transmitted to other prices.
Eventually such trends will overcome the productive capacity of the strongest
economy, and translate into higher final prices despite offsetting competitive
pressures.
The primary cause of the widening US trade deficit, for instance, is not China's
inherently better competitive position; it is inflation which just happens
to be eroding America's competitive position in the international market for
goods and services.
If the value of the dollar has dropped 30 percent and wages were to rise by
30% in the US, real wages could be said to have not changed. In other words,
it wouldn't "really" cost 30 percent more to employ workers in the US than
in China. The real impact on labor costs might be more or less depending on
other prices and currency relationships.
However, this is only true to the extent that markets are allowed to reflect
such things freely. Since China's currency is still pegged to the US dollar,
any price increases in the US economy due to inflation are going to result
in a growing trade gap to the extent they are not matched within the Chinese
economy. Thus we would attribute the resistance to stronger wage growth in
the US to the USd-Yuan peg, which in light of the monetary trends has the effect
of 1) making it more attractive for US interests to invest in (or move jobs
to) China, 2) making Chinese goods cheaper to import, 3) sustaining pressure
on US wages.
The blame for the thinning of capital and loss of jobs is shared equally between
US-Chinese economic policies. But the fact is protectionism is on the rise
in the United States; the blame has gone to the government for not "protecting" industry
enough.
If the US government gives in to these political pressures America will become
less competitive and lose more jobs, and then, if the government's original
policies don't change, it will become more protectionist, and on and on. Economists
can claim that unions don't have the power they did in the seventies - we'd
argue that the way things are going they will rise again. Or maybe not; but
money wages will!
The Chinese economy is growing and probably will grow faster than most for
years to come. More and more goods are becoming available. If money were sound,
prices would fall as a result because there would invariably be more goods
than money. But that's not going on. The Chinese central bank is as profligate
in its monetary policies as the Fed is, though it is clearly more willing to
take a tightening position from time to time.
The point is that the global commodity boom is the result of monetary factors,
not economic growth as such... the latter probably exists on some level and
explains the growth in trade overall, but it is money that explains the commodity
bulls. Nevertheless, consistent with its modus operandi, the China story
is a convenient one for the Fed to the extent that the blame for price increases
- ACROSS THE BOARD even - can be pinned on it; and it can because most people
are probably convinced that economic growth is GDP and does indeed cause
prices to rise.
In an interview last week on CNBC Ron Insana asked Morgan Stanley's Stephen
Roach, who I think is still bearish on everything, about the impact of oil
prices on the economy... importantly, he asked him something like, "why
wouldn't the Fed just monetize the oil price rise rather than introduce a whole
bunch of other complications by raising interest rates." Now, since you
know that monetary policy is partly responsible for the oil price shock in
the first place this question may seem counterintuitive, because you should
see the policy of monetizing oil as further increasing the pressure particularly for
rates to rise. In other words, we'd see it as the cause of making the complications
which he seeks to avoid inevitable and ever more forceful.
The trouble is, that's exactly what the Fed has already done effectively.
Their broadest measure of money supply has increased by $3 Trillion (or 50
percent) since January 1999 when the price of oil was bouncing around $12.
That's huge. 50 percent! Think about it.
They've been monetizing oil for years. And this they would call news on CNBC.
Insana pretends he does not understand that the monetary impact on prices
exists and originates from an entirely independent source - the change in the
quantity of money supply relative to demand - that has nothing to do with economic
growth. I use the word pretend loosely. That's just what it feels like when
I watch those people tell the news these days. But in any case, such a point
of view if it is representative is dangerously bullish for gold, for bond yields,
and you know the rest...
The Trouble with US dollar Bulls is that they're Long Stocks and the Economy
It makes them particularly willing to embrace an easy Fed (as opposed to a
rate hike). Monetize oil recall.
We all live in a yellow submarine, yellow submarine, yellow submarine.
As we live a life of ease, every one of us has all we need, sky of blue
and sea of green, in our yellow submarine... Sing it Alan!
That's
why the dollar's falling. 'Cause we live in a yellow submarine in a "sea
of green." 50 percent!!
Remember, that's how much the total stock of money (M3) has expanded since
Y2K. Maybe gold should just double, like in a month. That would hurt. I wouldn't
be surprised that my medium term targets are conservative. It's the consequence
of battle wear that I'm probably a little gun-shy. The break down out of the
small triangle you see in the graph of the dollar index here in mid September
has neither been confirmed (with follow through below 87) nor rejected.
The highs continue to occur successively lower and the tone (the way it reacts
to news and other market events) is bearish.
Weighing on the dollar is the fateful combination of weak share prices, falling
bond yields, and strong commodity markets. The news itself turned bearish for
it again on Thursday with the release of yet another record trade gap. I can't
imagine that the PPI is going to be bullish for the greenback almost regardless
of what it reads - nobody will believe anything less than or equal to status
quo and upside surprises would be unwelcome in my assessment of the tone and
chart. Maybe the best that dollar bulls can hope for there is that somehow
it turns into a non event, whatever actual number or distraction that would
take.
No Sell Signal for Gold in COT's
As reported yesterday, the commitments of traders' report revealed that the
commercials (bullion banks and hedgers) got more bearish and the funds more
bullish since the May low - the next release is due out this afternoon.
They
haven't reached any extremes but they are rising off extremes, within
a bull market, so they could stay up here for a few months. The small odd-lot
positions (figuratively) in the third graph to the bottom right are up from
then as well but they have yet to recover to the haute levels of early 2003
when the noise was all about the Iraq invasion. I'm not sure what it means
but it can't be bearish.
This odd-lot category has been a surprisingly strong leading indicator in
gold at crucial points in the past - note for instance that it turned up before
the others in 2001. Perhaps the best way to use this data is in order to gauge
an entry point, once the main trend has been determined independently.
In a bull market, for instance, the COT's would invariably cause premature
sell signals but the buy signals are quite reliable. Vice-versa in a bear -
the buy signals would be premature; the sell signals would probably be reliable.
On the other hand, and extending that line of thinking, if a sell signal turned
out to be right on time maybe the bull should be presumed over. Okay okay,
I didn't mean to twist both our brains in a knot. I'm just hypothesizing from
anecdotal experience since I devote a slight eye to these reports on occasion.
At any rate, the COT's for the US dollar index continue to favor the bears
generally, even more so than when we last reported on them in early September,
while in bonds they're moving to the bulls' favor. In other words, if you discount
the gold COT's as neutral the data for the other "financial" markets is basically
dollar bearish.
Uh, What's A Bearish Monetary Environment?
It's time to find out since the stock and bond markets are not exactly priced
for one.
It is truly amazing to see how stock bulls can stomach pricing earnings at
levels (PE ratios and such) that are known historic extremes, even as one
by one the pillars of justification crumble. One of the predominant themes
that characterized bullish sentiment in the nineties was the idea of a Goldilocks
Economy - low inflation and interest rates. Or, it would be more correct to
say the strong dollar and low interest rates, or the "perception" of low inflation
and the resulting decline in interest rates. In any case, the main feature
was an ostensibly benign, or stable, monetary environment - strong economic
growth amid falling commodity prices, and falling interest rates.
The monetary climate was perceived so safe that the equity risk premium fell
below 1:1 (earnings yields relative to bond yields). It was this misleadingly
labeled disinflation that justified low dividend yields and high PE ratios (note
the inverse correlation between PE ratios and commodity returns in the graph
below - this statistic in my opinion almost completely characterizes stock
bull and bear cycles).
If you breezed over this chart, stop, go back, and study it. It'll be the
most important thing you do today (unless of course you already know the implications).
Now, as suggested by the current upturn in the bottom statistic above, the
impetus to the illusion of disinflation is disappearing. The monetary environment
has changed.
The baby boomers and their governments are now in hock because their expectations were
inflated throughout the nineties; technological advances did little to really
improve either the predictability of earnings or their consistency; the peace
dividend fund has ran out of money; most earnings gains amount to recovering
past losses - the big profit gains that were expected during the new economy
bull have yet to materialize in the broad sense or for those issues where they
were expected to come; the thrust of the productivity benefit from the Internet
climaxed years ago; and because the government itself is trying to recreate all
of these things artificially it is quickly eroding the last remaining pillar
of the goldilocks environment that explained the record low equity risk premiums
and record high earnings multiples - the strong dollar, low inflation and interest
rates. Naturally, one could conceive that if all of these things occurred and
the only thing that didn't was that interest rates stayed down, then there
would be no compelling reason for the PE ratio to contract but speculation.
We have noted in the past that gold tends to lead the interest rate cycle
by up to two years and that this cycle has been anomalous in that the lag between
gold-CPI-interest rates is longer than most. It is irrelevant what the explanation
for it is - whether productivity, hedonic accounting, or the management of
inflation expectations (our favorite). The main point is that the fact that
interest rates have refused to rise as fast as is usual in such an environment
explains exactly why the bear market in stocks generally is progressing so
slowly.
In other words, PE ratios can stay high despite their strong negative correlation
to commodity returns as long as interest rates don't rise to fully reflect
the inflationary facts. Nobody is in a rush to discount a bearish monetary
environment without being pushed a little. So, to sum up, the bearish monetary
environment needs to see confirmation from interest rate trends perhaps in
order to become more manifest in stock values (earnings multiples).
It is inevitable (by most measures it is already en route) as long as the
monetary environment remains bearish; but so long as higher rates can be forestalled
it's possible that high multiples sustain. A monetary environment that is typically
bullish for PE ratios, on the other hand, is one where commodity prices are
generally in decline and the dollar is strong.
In such an environment interest rates can stay low or fall... few opposing
forces exist to disagree with the Fed's downward interest rate trajectory
(by the way, that Goldilocks environment, as defined here, is typically
what the monetarily challenged confuse with deflation).
The last remaining variable that the Fed can still control to keep the empty
bull market nostalgia alive is the interest rate. As long as rates don't rise
as fast as gold bulls say they should, and the dollar doesn't fall as fast
as they say it should, investors can stay focused on earnings even if their
dollar quality is already deteriorating.
The stock and bond markets are overvalued in light of the sort of monetary
trends that have become ever more apparent and gradually more entrenched since
the turn of the millennium. It's just a matter of time before interest rates
reflect it and accordingly that stocks do too. For, those trends can now only
change at great cost to the stock market, and at the same time, the longer
they last the more bearish they are for the bond market.
50 percent!! That's your post 2001 earnings recovery - it's purely inflation
and debasement.
Central banks cancel gold sales agreement; join IMF in dumping all their
gold!
Relax; I just wanted you to consider for a moment the psychological impact
of such a headline. Now that it's out of your system, forget about it. It won't
happen if only because the most devout gold bulls among us would welcome it
as signaling the approaching apocalypse for central banking... and "they" know
it.
But there is also more pragmatic resistance, notably the political ramifications
of the impact on the gold market of such a decision, at least insofar as the
purpose of the move would be to help poor countries out. To be sure, if they
wanted to I think they could get a mandate for it, so the pragmatic political
considerations have limits.
For instance, they could elaborate a nice argument for the sterilizing economic
effects, as the relief of debt obligations would offset the negative impact
on gold prices from selling IMF gold. The arguments would necessarily be fallacious
and indefensible but that's par for the course.
Less cogent lobbies have succeeded in rallying democratic populations.
At any rate we're getting ahead of ourselves.
There's no sign of real conviction on anything like that and as of this week
gold bulls were wondering why there hasn't been an official announcement signaling
the start of the second gold sales agreement which many thought would be disclosed
at the G-7 two weeks ago. According to a press release in March, the agreement
was definitively signed and stipulated terms, including a ceiling.
However, no minimum was announced, and only the Swiss and Holland have disclosed
final intentions to sell under the agreement.
The main conclusion being drawn is that either there has been a change in
policy with respect to transparency (i.e. announcing the sales ahead of time)
or the banks aren't eager to do much of anything beyond talk. Or they could
be biding their time for a more convenient moment. Who knows who cares?
Just keep it simple and buy the corrections. The answer is blowing in the
wind.
Concluding Remarks
We see no sustainable relief in oil prices ahead of the US election on account
that the supply news will likely not improve much in the seasonal transition
and that the geopolitical risk premium will stay sticky.
Although the correction risk is high, moreover, it appears as if energy prices
are unwilling to relent at least until the stock market capitulates to the
related pressures. Furthermore, the US dollar is behaving poorly on the charts
and a break down could be imminent. Fundamental factors (stocks, yields, news)
are weighing too.
Gold bounced off nearby support yesterday so we still favor our bullish runaway
scenario. The structure of the market is neither bullish nor bearish; there
is scope in either direction in terms of the COT's.
The stock market, which has been stressed by the daily new highs in oil & gas
prices, was hit by news yesterday that Eliot Spitzer was going to announce
the details of a lawsuit on Friday against American International Group, an
insurance company and Dow component. An already ailing insurance sector turned
down sharply, and took the financials down with it. The weak economic news,
strong oil, and the Spitzer news proved too much to bear and the Dow ended
well below 10000.
Consequently, despite the recovery in gold prices even the gold shares mostly
ended down on the day yesterday. There was the scent of a crash; it was faint
but perhaps strong enough to jolt the PPT into action again.
I don't want to predict a crash - unless it is event driven. But we do believe
that this could be the beginning of a new bear market leg we're witnessing.
Thus, unless something happens to change the direction in the dollar, stock
market, oil, and gold itself, we're still betting on the gold shares to buck
the broad market trend.
APPENDIX
Capitalism IS But the System of Voluntary Exchange, Nothing More
Lew Rockwell, president of the Mises Institute and editor of Lewrockwell.com,
has a terrific knack for lifting the veil on the shallow free market rhetoric
which just happens to so permeate the leading business papers.
Lew makes sure that you see through the actions of politicians dishonestly
crediting liberty or freedom as their ideological basis (usually republican);
he undresses those private entities that benefit from government subsidies
and monopoly privileges while masquerading under the pretense of free enterprise.
To paraphrase a quote from Dennett that I've used for gold, there's probably
nothing he likes less than bad arguments for a view he holds dear. However,
I believe he is trying to head off the probably inevitable attacks on capitalism
bound to come when people look to blame someone or something for their growing
economic misery.
In an article he published at Mises.org last week he wrote a rejoinder to
a Wall Street Journal editorial that came to the defense of Halliburton, which
the Kerry-Edwards ticket dragged through the mud on account of Cheney's past
employment with the firm. The Journal's defense amounted to defending Halliburton
on the grounds that Kerry's charges are just an example of socialist mudslinging
at free enterprising success stories.
But Rockwell, with the advantaged insight of a lighthouse on a dark rocky
shore, said this to the Journal's rendition, making a sharp distinction between
free enterprise and government-big-business cronyism:
"If that's all you knew about the company, you might think that this
was Federal Express or a cell-phone company that picked up the pieces after
the government failed, instead of the largest corporate welfare client
in the history of the world. For the two years following September
11, the company enjoyed at least $2.2 billion in military subsidies. Overall,
it enjoys $18 billion in government contracts to support its offices in
70 countries. To look at the details (there are hundreds of sites and organizations
that track its activities) is to see into the heart of the modern state
run amok. The history of Halliburton makes the food-stamp program look
like good government. Halliburton makes a mockery of the term private enterprise. The
profits are private, to be sure, but the risk is socialized. It has
very little to sell you and me or any other member of the consumer class.
It has vast amounts of stuff to sell the state, and what it produces it
does with that goal in mind. Call it the leading industry in the military-industrial
complex. Regard it as the prime player in the great government-business
partnership. View it as illustrative of the reality that the real scandals
in government are not what is illegal but what is considered wholly legitimate.
But whatever you do, don't call it private enterprise" - Lew Rockwell
Jr.
You tell 'em Lew!
I could not have said it better me self (note: Rockwell is not arguing
whether or not the Democrats are right about Cheney's current relationship
to the company, but rather that it doesn't matter if they are because Halliburton
isn't an example of free enterprise to begin with). The reason it's in
today's report at any rate was that you often hear me talk about free markets
and capitalism on a different plane than contemporary conservatives and conventional
republicans.
And I thought it might be relevant to show that I'm not just throwing out
random opinions in order to take a contrary viewpoint.
There is an army of statists out there operating under the facade that they
are representing free enterprise; and whenever it falls apart, they are more
than happy to come out of the closet to give their account of the evils of
capitalism. It won't matter that what is actually falling apart is the progressive
era (or delusion might be more accurate) and its medieval cartel-like
organizations, since because they all claim to be practicing capitalism - which
to them is simply a system where greed is okay - it'll be capitalism as always
that the vast majority of populists and demagogues will blame.
Capitalism is under attack because its phony reps are losing credibility.
Lew and others of his ilk are trying to head it off as best they can.
In his concluding remarks, Rockwell says:
"Indeed, to call such companies as Halliburton great examples of capitalist
success is a sure-fire way to discredit free enterprise. For the right
to do this is nothing short of a gift to the socialist left, which wants
to characterize all business and market exchange as an expression of a
power relation. This is why socialists have focused so heavily on the role
of corporations in assisting the warfare state in its dirty business. It
is also why so many socialists have written passionately against the "merchants
of death." Let us rephrase a point Mises often made: the problem isn't
the merchant part of the phrase; it is the death part. If Halliburton were
cut off the government payroll, I have no doubt that many of its intellectual
and physical resources could be profitably employed in a genuine market
setting. Let's forget about privatizing the warfare state and privatize
Halliburton instead. Let it, and all its far-flung clients the world over,
sink or swim in a genuine free-market economy. At that point, we'll raise
a glass to its profitability. Until then, it deserves all the disdain ever
heaped on any able-bodied welfare cheat" - Lew Rockwell Jr.
What people have to understand about free market capitalism is that it works
through competition. No one individual or corporation could wield the kind
of power that many do today if it weren't for the special legal and monopoly
privileges and other subsidies they seek in order to protect their interests
from "competition."
Capitalism, in its pure application, is still the unknown ideal even though
it can be credited solely for bringing the human species so much daily satisfaction
- from the toilet paper, tooth paste, and coffee you consume each morning to
the car that gets you to work to the multitude of amenities in your home to
the entertainment that helps you escape from the daily rat race to the cozy
Simmons mattress we lay to sleep on.
No other country in the world offers as many conveniences and options to the
individual than the one in which capitalism is most pronounced. Yet in most
countries the state still subjugates the only basis of capitalism - the sovereign
right of individuals over their own persons and property - rather than secures
it. Thus cartels can exist, including labor cartels of course - it's not just
big business that rapes the state.
As the libertarian economist Frederic Bastiat said, and I paraphrase, the
state is that great fiction allowing everyone to live at the expense of everyone
else.
People generally just do not understand what capitalism is, which is what
is dangerous.
They prefer to put faith in the state's ability to finance their delusions
rather than accept that while the market means tougher medicine in the short
term, in the long run our children will appreciate it. They will not believe
the market could possibly deliver cheaper healthcare, less volatility (financial
and political), higher "real" wages, more job opportunities, more and cheaper
everything, almost, more peace, more equality between races and sexes, and
longer lives for even the laziest and least motivated members of society simply
by applying the contemporary liberal idea that whatever two adults consent
to is okay beyond the social sphere and into the economic one.
Before Marx branded it capitalism, it was known as the system of voluntary
exchange. No liberal, republican, or democrat today would want it called that
today because then it would be clear on which side of freedom they really stand,
all of them... they just have different "plans." This doesn't mean to argue
that government has not brought any good. I would argue merely that it necessarily
brings a lot of evil if it is not restricted in scope; and that whatever it
can do, private enterprise can do better.
Let all businesses - banks as well - be subject to the market's discipline.
That would be fair, and would fit best into what capitalism truly is: voluntarism
and free exchange - not this regulated and controlled contraption, which does
not level the playing field but rather tilts it to the advantage of players
like Halliburton. The world's largest problems can all be traced to the abuses
stemming from this widely misunderstood issue.
According to Rockwell:
"Murray Rothbard asked the burning question in his 1974 book For a New
Liberty: "how can the rightist favor a free market while seeing nothing
amiss in the vast subsidies, distortions, and unproductive inefficiencies
involved in the military-industrial complex?""
Wake up world!
|