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In 1929 Hoover's Committee on Recent Economic Changes, under the chairmanship
of Mr. Arch Shaw, wisely observed: "Each generation believes itself to be on
the verge of a new economic era, an era of fundamental change". Unfortunately,
the committee then went on to give support to the theory of underconsumption,
one of the most -- and certainly extremely dangerous -- egregious economic
fallacies. Considering the tragic events that gave rise to the Great Depression
it is worth quoting the committee's opinion at some length.
They [the committee] reported that, from an increase in production efficiency
of some 30 per cent per person during the 1920's, very little had gone to
decrease prices of industrial products. The average price level had remained
about the same from 1922 to 1929. The Committee found that about three-fourths
of the gains from increased efficiency and decreasing costs had gone to increased
industrial wages and one-fourth to increased profits. The buying power of
the industrial workers had been increased, and increased profits had become
a stimulant to speculation. But as labor and business absorbed the benefits
of increased efficiency, such other groups as the farmers and the "white-collar" classes
benefited only by a small increase in buying power. Therefore, these groups
could not absorb the increased production of industry. To put it another
way, had there been a decrease in price levels, the nonindustrial groups
could have bought more goods, thus sustaining production. (Herbert Hoover, The
Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Great Depression 1929-1941, The Macmillan
Company: New York 1952, p.14).
The on valid observation here is the insight that a falling price level would
have been of great benefit to consumers -- and just "farmers and the 'white-collar'
classes". The rest of the quote clearly shows that the committee utterly failed
to recognise the enormous role that 'price stability' played in bring about
the depression. More perceptive economic observers emerged later on. For example,
it was pointed out that the current
...difficulties are viewed largely as the inevitable aftermath of the world's
greatest experiment with a "managed currency" within the gold standard, and,
incidentally, should provide interesting material for consideration by those
advocates of a managed currency which lacks the saving checks of a gold standard
to bring to light excesses of zeal and errors of judgment. (C. A. Phillips,
T. F. McManus and R. W. Nelson, Banking and the Business Cycle, Macmillan
and Company 1937, p. 56).
What the committee overlooked is that if there underconsumption thesis was
correct then the downturn would have first made itself felt in the lower stages
of production, those closest to the point of production. It follows from this
view that consumption should have been particularly hard hit. Yet the production
data clearly shows that it was the higher stages of production, those furthest
removed from the point of consumption, that took the full brunt of the depression.
Moreover, consumption remained 'buoyant' relative to the capital goods industries.
The very opposite of what the committee claimed.
(The underconsumption approach leads to the appalling -- but well-entrenched
-- fallacy that it is consumption that drives an economy and not business spending).
If we look back on the recession that President Bush inherited (despite the
malicious efforts of lefty journalists to claim otherwise) from the Clinton
administration we discover the interesting fact that consumer spending continued
to grow uninterrupted. This raises the obvious question: If consumer spending
really is the engine that drives an economy -- as the vast majority of economists
claim -- why is it that it did not save the US economy from recession?
What all of this really amounts to is that the real lesson of history -- political
and economic -- is that few people ever learn from it. A dismal fact that scholars
-- of which there are very few -- have sadly reflected upon. The question,
as always, is why? This something that history cannot teach. If it were that
easy then its lessons would never be forgotten, making life much better for
the rest of us.
But history, alas, needs to be interpreted, which brings us to the role that
economic history should play. When it comes to this subject observers tend
to focus on two events: the Industrial Revolution and the Great Depression.
Both were seminal and both have been greatly misunderstood. The former is being
used to dismiss concerns about the possibility that American manufacturing
is declining in real terms. The latter is used to promote huge government spending
programs, high levels of taxation and all manner of manner of interventions
in market processes
The blasé attitude that come free market commentators display about
the relative decline of US manufacturing is largely due to the mistaken idea
that because agriculture as a proportion of GDP fell during the Industrial
Revolution as manufacturing's share rose it doesn't matter if manufacturing
shrinks in real terms so long as spending on services rise.
This is a dangerous delusion.
A strong manufacturing base is vital to America's prosperity, just as it is
to Australia's. The idea that an economy can remain prosperous by exchanging
information is sheer nonsense. Those who peddle this dangerous myth obviously
do not realise technical knowledge can only be applied through capital. Computers,
for example, need chips and a whole range of other parts. All of these parts
involve an incredibly complex chain of manufacturing processes involving thousands
of stages of production, which brings us to the concept of capital as a structure.
If anyone mapped out the production structure that makes computers possible
they would be literally staggered by its size and ever changing complexity.
Even something as apparently simple as a loaf of bread requires a highly complex
production structure that is far beyond the mind of any human being to fully
comprehend. Unfortunately the role of manufacturing in raising living standards
does not seem to be greatly understood. As David Friedman pointed out:
Manufacturing has helped equalize US income distribution by creating relatively
well-paid jobs for America's less educated but motivated workers. Service
industries, especially investor-driven New Economy companies, have thus far
been unable to play a similar role in maintaining a balanced labor force.
(THE ECONOMY: The Neglected U.S. Depression, Los Angeles Times 12
August 2001).
The classical economists were able to say with confidence that the "demand
for commodities was not the demand for labour" because they understood that
in the long run spending on consumption does nothing to increase productivity
and hence real wage rates. And yet the lesson has not been learnt. Claudia
Goldin, for example, believes that the wage gap was narrowed in the first part
of the 20th century by a process that changed schools that once taught ancient
Greek into schools that taught the children of the masses how to read blueprints.
(Goldin based her conclusions on 75-year-old state reports that had been locked
up in Harvard University's Monroe C. Gutman Library)
On the other hand, the Austrian school of economics would argue that the narrowing
of the wage gap was brought about by lengthening the production structure which
in turn raised the real demand for labour. This supports Friedman's view on
the role of manufacturing in equalising incomes. The truth is that no matter
how well educated a labour force is, its living standards will be at an appalling
level if it has no capital to work with. A rather lengthy quote from Ludwig
von Mises will explain why:
Let us look at the condition of a country suffering from scarcity of capital.
Take, for instance, the state of affairs in Rumania about I 860. What was
lacking was certainly not technological knowledge. There was no secrecy concerning
the technological methods practiced by the advanced nations of the West.
they were described in innumerable books and taught at many schools. The
elite of Rumanian youth had received full information about them at the technological
universities of Austria, Switzerland, and France. Hundreds of foreign experts
were ready to apply their knowledge and skill in Rumania. What was wanting
was the capital goods needed for a transformation of the backward Rumanian
apparatus of production, transportation, and communication according to Western
patterns. (Human Action, 3rd revised edition, Henry Regnery Company,
1966, p. 496).
If America's capital structure were to be increasingly skewed towards consumption
then one would expect the real growth in wages to turn negative. In addition,
a widening wage gap would also emerge. (One would also expect Democrats to
demand higher tax rates -- particularly on capital gains -- and more and more
government intervention. In short, they would implement policies guaranteed
to savage living standards).
The rapid development of new technologies are always disruptive, leading to
capital losses and gains. They also tend to be marked by a significant demand
for certain types of skills which will, because of the rapid rise of the industry,
result in a labour shortage leading to rapidly rising incomes for the fortunate
few. Eventually, however, this process will, if no artificial barriers are
erected, tend to be reversed when newly trained labour eliminates the shortage.
This process, however, doesn't necessarily mean that the previous earnings
differentials will be restored.
What needs to be stressed is that inflationary booms have undesirable 'distributive
income effects' which cannot be reversed. This is to say that once the boom
has collapsed and the malinvestments have been liquidated the resulting pattern
of incomes and wealth will not be the same as the one that preceded the boom.
Some if not most of those who amassed huge fortunes due to opportunities created
by the Fed's inflationary policy of credit expansion will live to enjoy their
good fortune. Who knows, perhaps they will even celebrate by donating generously
to the Democrat Party?
Unfortunately, what passes for economics and economic history today is simply
unable to correctly interpret economic events even as they unfold before their
eyes. The same thing happened in the 1920s and 1930s, with the exception of
men like Hayek, Mises, C. A. Phillips, T. F. McManus and R. W. Nelson. All
in all, the last boom and its aftermath should not lead observers to ignore
the vital role that manufacturing plays in the US economy.
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