There has arisen a recent controversy over the direction of the U.S. economy.
Many analysts point to the potentially negative impact that a rising rate of
interest has had over the past two years and also the real estate market slowdown.
The real issue at stake, however, is that of production and that will be the
focus of this article.
The popular press likes to present a bleak picture of U.S. manufacturing,
but as the American Institute for Economic Research recently pointed out there
is more to this story than is being presented in the mainstream media.
Reports in recent months have focused on the woes of GM and Ford and other
automobile manufacturers in the U.S. as more plants are closed and thousands
are laid off. As the Institute report pointed out, "Some analysts point to
the record U.S. current account deficit, almost seven percent of Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) and widening, as further evidence of the decline in manufacturing." But
as the report details, "the focus on manufacturing jobs and on the declining
fortunes of particular companies and industries can be deceptive." According
to the report, manufacturing output actually been growing and in 2004 reached
a record high in spite of a general decline in manufacturing employment. Increased
reliance on technology and automation are responsible for the huge increases
in productivity growth.

Does increased production through automation help or hinder an individual's
economic prospects? History shows that it helps by increasing the aggregate
standard of living. As long as industrialization is increasing within the boundaries
of a given economy (as opposed to being outsourced to foreign countries) the
rising level of automation will only increase productivity along with the standard
of living.
In eighteenth century England the invention of the "spinning jenny" promised
to revolutionize the cloth making trade and free up man hours for other, less
toilsome enterprises. This labor-saving device could make clothes 10-to-20
times faster than could be spun by hand. At that time the "home factory" system
was prevalent in England and women were principally engaged in this productive
endeavor. The invention of the Spinning Jenny, far from being greeted with
open arms, became an object of revile and thousands rose in protests against
the machine. The common argument leveled against the Spinning Jenny was that
it would ruin the economy of England to have a machine that would make more
clothes than could be produced by hand.
Clearly this was a fallacious argument, a point that becomes clear with the
benefit of hindsight. In subsequent generations other labor-saving devices
have been greeted with the same fear and rejection that was cast upon the Spinning
Jenny: mechanized harvesting implements, industrial robots, computers, etc.
In France a machine that was designed to produce tapestries was destroyed because
the French feared this would hinder their hand-made tapestry industry.
Today tapestries are produced in France with machines at a huge savings in
cost-per-unit and man hours. Workers in general have always feared new inventions
that promise to increase production at the expense of cutting man hours. But
as the American Institute for Economic Research aptly states, "[T]he goal of
economic activity is not to employ as much labor as possible to produce something,
but to produce more from a given amount of labor."
This latent fear of labor-saving devices is a product of Keynesian economics.
The reasoning behind this fear is lacking; the assumption is that people don't
want more things than they already possess. In 1932 the arguments of Keynes
was that the Great Depression was caused by over-production and only by controlling
industrial output could future depressions be averted. Dr. Stuart Crane addressed
this fallacy in one of his lectures back in the early 1980s: "This idea of
satiation economics or over-supply economics is what is taught today - the
idea that we must control and regulate what is being produced in order to make
sure they don't get out of balance - fails to realize that production is always
out of balance."
No one understood more clearly or preached more fervently the basis of production
as a standard of monetary wealth than Henry Ford. The great American industrialist
and innovator fought against the Keynesian concepts of his day, particularly
during the Great Depression era. In his recent Ford biography, "The People's
Tycoon," author Steven Watts summarized the economic philosophy of Ford in
the following words:
"He relentlessly insisted that Americans confused money with wealth. Though
money needed to circulate freely in order to facilitate the buying and selling
of goods, he admitted, it had no intrinsic value. 'Money...may represent wealth,
but it is not wealth itself,' Ford wrote. In the 1920s, however, businessmen
had sought profits rather than producing solid products. The result had been
disastrous, because 'wealth consists of useful goods, and money which is made
out of thin air does not add to the stock of goods and therefore does not add
to wealth.' This trend also increased the power of financiers and bankers,
the old ideological bogeymen in Ford's populist worldview. For Ford, the economic
crash had demonstrated that a 'system of business in which the money lender
too conspicuously thrives is not a truly prosperous system.'"
Ford's solution for the socio-economic malaise brought on by the Depression
could be summarized in a single word, according to Watts: production. Watts
highlighted Ford's core belief that the production of "tangible goods to meet
the demand of consumers provided the bedrock of American prosperity. In Ford's
words, 'Plenty means production and still more production; production means
wealth, and scarcity means poverty; and the entire social problem is poverty....Production
and the effects of production give the answer to practically all the things
that trouble us."
A socialist-type government such as the U.S. government embraces the Keynesian
economic view. It not only attempts to control production but also the capital
and labor of the individual participants within the economy, regulating their
liberties to produce when and what they want and in whatever quantities they
desire. "The key to production," writes A. Ralph Epperson in his book, The
Unseen Hand, "is the incentive of the marketplace, the right to keep what is
produced, the Right to Private Property! The right of the individual to better
his life by producing more than he consumes and to keep what he produces." Government
economic policy that has been contaminated with Keynesian thinking will always
be at odds with this.
Contrary to what contemporary economic theory teaches, in the supply/demand
equation it is usually demand over against supply that is the culprit in economic
downturns. More specifically, the problem usually lies in the failure of the
money supply to keep up with production and not in oversupply (which economists
are too quick to blame).
To former U.S. President James Garfield is attributed the following quote: "Whoever
controls the volume of money in any country is absolute master of all industry
and commerce." This statement is self evident and has reached its apotheosis
in our day under the Federal Reserve's control of our monetary system.
What happens when the money supply is expanded out of all proportion with
the demands of industry and commerce is that money quickly loses value and
the prices of goods and services rise to exorbitant levels, in other words,
hyper-inflation. Notice that it isn't "inflation" that is the great evil, only
hyper-inflation. Inflation, which is to say expansion, of the money supply
when commerce and trade are growing is a vital necessity to ensure the economic
health of any nation. This is true as long as the inflation isn't allowed to
exceed the demands of commerce.
It follows then that the best measure of whether the money supply should be
expanded or contracted is taken by measuring productive output and keeping
a pulse on the needs of the marketplace as measured by production. This can
never be adequately undertaken by out-of-touch bureaucrats or Ivory Tower economists.
Nor can it be based on the whims of a central bank unconcerned with the everyday
needs of individual capitalists.
Thomas Jefferson clearly had this view in mind when he said, "If the American
people ever allow private banks to control the issue of currency, first by
inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that grow up around
them will deprive the people of their property until their children will wake
up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered."
While visiting London, Benjamin Franklin was once asked what accounted for
the prosperity of the American colonies. He replied: "That is simple. It is
only because in the colonies we issue our own money. It is called Colonial
Scrip and we issue it in the proper proportion to accommodate trade and commerce." As
one writer has pointed out, the colonies didn't abuse their power to create
inflationary monetary conditions; rather, the issuance of currency was done
so according to the current demands of the market and not according to the
immoral socioeconomic schemes of corrupt men. Would that our present monetary
authorities could regulate money supply the way it was done in Ben Franklin's
day! Then the roller coaster cycle of boom-bust-boom could be mitigated to
a large degree and allow for a smoother, more extended wave of prosperity than
the Fed's monetary policy allows for.