Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Is consumerism essential to a healthy economy?

NO!

Lately, liberal/progressive bloggers got their marching orders from their masters and put out essays declaring that consumption needs to be pushed by all means necessary to jumpstart the economy. Liberals/progressives are clinging to any straw to justify an ever growing welfare state.

The following are some the bloggers' statements and my replies.

"The U.S. economy depends upon steady consumption by working-class Americans."
Looking at it ass backwards. One cannot consume what is not produced. One can eat so much bread, wear no more than 1 pair of pants at a time (so to speak). Product first. Consumption second. People were NOT clamoring for automobiles before the automobile was invented. People were NOT dying for a personal computer before the PC was invented.

If consumption is the engine of an economy then there would not have been any famine anywhere at anytime. But this is evidently incorrect by just looking at the historical record. There is ALWAYS a drive to consume food and drink, and yet famines had occurred and will occur in the future. So what is missing? PRODUCTION. Even a knucklehead like Karl Marx knows the main focus has to be the means of production.

Consuming is easy. Producing is hard.

Returning back to the famine scenario: bad weather is such that production is incapacitated. What part of the economic activity can save the day? SAVINGS and PROFITS, which can be used to buy food elsewhere - which does not suffer famine -and to provide transport of bought food to the hungry. In terms of importance to an economy, PRODUCTION is most important, followed closely by SAVINGS/PROFIT, with CONSUMPTION as a distant third. Any economy where consumption plays a predominant role is a sick economy.

Sweeping the issue of production in order to promote cosumerism goes against human nature. Ask a person who they are and almost always they will announce what they produce: carpenter, plumber, lawyer, mother. Some often identify themselves by what they believe: Christian, Conservative, Progressive. Meet someone who first identifies themselves by what they consume and meet a liberal/progressive idiot.

"Conservative economic theory incorrectly assumes that rich folks buying yachts and vacation homes catalyze the consumer economy."
Ignorance of conservative economic theory is evident. Bill Gates may have a great big house near Seattle but that mansion is nothing compared to the 1,000-odd people who became millionaires and the 100,000-odd more people who are living the good life because of Microsoft. In addition, Bill Gates and most filthy rich people set up foundations for good causes. Bill Gates did not build his mansion all by himself; it took a lot of blue-collar workers to build it.

"Working folks aren't consuming so businesses aren't hiring."
Repeating the same previous inanity but in a different form. Let us be honest here. The libtards such as this blogger want to suggest that giving "free" money to people will make them spend on item X and the business producing item X will hire people. A short-sighted view. First, the "free" money is not free: it is either taxed (and the savers have less disposable income to buy the big-ticket items Y) or is printed, thus devaluing the currency bringing about misdirected spending. So any increase in jobs to produce item X is negated by the loss of jobs producing items Y. In the case of increased taxation, the decrease in spending of the savers is larger than the increase in spending of the welfare recipients. The effect of inflation through fiat money is quite insidious: the individual is forced to live large - spending on inappropriate goods - and go broke: the Weimar Germany is a good example of people buying hundreds of dresses and dishes (and other such items since by then there was no more gold to buy) as a hedge against inflation. Consumer economy run amok. As they say: do not sell the wine before its time. A sustainable economy is one where the consumer buys what it needs and desires in the amount, quality, and at the time which befits the consumer, not some government bureaucrat.

"Every American has the right to a decent job paying a living wage."
A lot of undefined words here. First, does one has a "right" to a job? According to the 1936 Constitution of the Soviet Union, article 118: "Citizens of the U.S.S.R. have the right to work, ..." The article continues: "The right to work is ensured by ... the elimination of the possibility of economic crises ..." The Soviet era was one long, uninterrupted period of economic crisis.

First, what is a "decent" job? Hayek, in "The road to serfdom", looked at this issue. There is always a need for people to clean the gutters and sewer lines. So there is a list of jobs/professions and if the individual has a choice of jobs, no one will take the position of gutter cleaner. Second, what is "living wage"? In the same city/locale, one says: "I cannot live on this wage" and another says: "I can live on this wage". Here is where the libtards can learn from the illegal immigrants.

"If the marketplace won't supply these jobs, then government has to be the employer of last resort."
One word: Cuba. There, since 1960 the non-existant free market cannot (it is not an issue of won't) supply these jobs, the Cuban government was not only the employer of last resort, it was the ONLY employer. Now, the Cuban government has to lay off more than 500,000 people. And that is just the beginning. Under FDR, the WPA and the CCC employed at best 10% of the unemployed but there was a hidden cost: since FDR's government agency clashed with private enterprises in many areas such as construction and power, private companies lost business and layed off people and during the 1930's. Loss of private jobs was greater than the gain in public jobs.

"There must be a jobs-oriented stimulus package that not only supports America's teachers and public safety workers but also strengthens the U.S. infrastructure, in general. (Bring back the WPA!)"
Ass backwards and inconsistent logic. If one goes along with the imbecilic idea of the consumer economy, there is no pent-up demand for more roads so why go on a road-building binge? One may say: "the roads and bridges are in great disrepair!" The roads and bridges were mismanaged during the good times and what makes one think that management will improve during the bad times? Look at the "Big Dig" project in Boston. Let us go back to FDR's public works in hydroelectric: here is where private companies wanted to partner with the federal agencies and FDR refused but the ironic thing is that the hydroelectric works made energy CHEAP where Obama and the enviro-nutjobs want energy to be EXPENSIVE.

"We can pay for the new stimulus package by increasing taxes on both the wealthy and financial institutions."
Yep. You wish. See the tax revenues decrease and capital leaving the country. Sweden has a lower capital gains tax than the US and a higher personal tax rate than the US. Why is that? A swedish economist said that rich people and companies can leave the country much easier than common people.

"The Federal government has to be involved in economic policy."
At best, minimally. Look at Somalia: many parts are receiving foreign investment despite the lack of government in Mogadishu (piracy nonwithstanding).

"It has to intervene and create the jobs that the greedy, shortsighted private sector hasn't provided. (Even if this means restricting trade with countries like China.)"
A lot of ill-defined buzzwords. What is greed? A small business owner has to take a long-term view, knowing fully well that there are times of feast and times of famine: when large profits happen said profits need to be safeguarded for the bad times. For a corporation, the CEO is focused on the stockholders and the CEO's compensation is determined by the board of directors who are themselves elected by the stockholders. If there is anyone shortsighted, its is the stockholders. But who are these stockholders? Many of them are public employee unions who invested their pension funds with these corporations. Given the currently bad economy, the public employee unions are demanding greater short-term returns to meet their pension obligations.

As far as restricting trade with countries like China, the law of unintended consequences comes into play. If China holds back on rare earth elements like neodymium, the US can mine it in the US but then the enviro-nutjobs get all riled up. Even if you sedate the enviro-nutjobs, there is so much red tape few companies want to venture in this area.

Want to produce jobs? Cut taxes. Cut government spending. Cut regulations.

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