By Peter Schiff
Last week in an interview on CBS Network News, Economist Mark Zandi,
the chief economist for Moody’s, unwittingly revealed a central error of
the global economic establishment. Zandi has made a career out of
finding the middle ground between republican and democrat economic
talking points. As a result of this skill, he has been rewarded with
large quantities of airtime from media outlets that want to appear
non-partisan, despite the fact that his supposedly neutral analysis
often leaves listeners frustrated.
When asked about the recent deterioration in the global economy,
Zandi said that “the worst possible scenario” at present would occur if
Greece were to leave the Eurozone. He claimed that the economic
gyrations and liquidations of bad debt that would result from such an
exit would be sufficient to create a vicious cycle that could drag the
global economy back into recession. As a result, he urged policy makers
to take whatever steps necessary to maintain the current integrity of
the 17 nation Eurozone.
Given what most economists now know, few would actively argue that
Greece’s entrance into the Eurozone back in 2001 was a good idea. In
fact most concede it was a terrible idea based on bad forecasting and
outright fraud. There is little disagreement over the fact that Greece
grossly misrepresented its financial position in order to gain initial
entry into the monetary union. It is also widely agreed upon that in the
ensuing decade Greece exploited its monetary advantages to borrow
irresponsibly.
Much has been written about how the fundamental misfit between
Greece’s economy and currency gave birth to a deeply flawed system that
was destined to run off the rails. Most also agree that the countries
like Greece and Germany are too economically and culturally disparate to
exist under the same monetary umbrella. But despite all this, Zandi
wants to maintain the status quo. In his opinion, it is so imperative to
prevent the deflationary consequences of an economic restructuring that
it is preferable to prop up a failed system, perhaps indefinitely,
rather than allow a newer, healthier system to replace it. In the
process, the moral hazard created not only assures that Greece will
become an even greater burden on Europe, but so too will other nations
whose leaders will be emboldened in their profligacy by the anticipation
of similar help.
From Zandi’s perspective (and he is certainly in the majority on this
point) the goal of economic policy is to keep GDP growing. It follows
then that he will oppose large-scale debt liquidations which drag down
GDP in the short term. But sometimes debt needs to be liquidated. Bad
ideas need to be abandoned. Once economies stop throwing good money
after bad, capital is freed up to flow into more economically viable
purposes. But economists and politicians never look at the long term.
Their job seems to be to manage the economy for the next election.
The same “damn the torpedoes” mentality dominates economic thinking
with respect to the U.S. economy as well. Years of artificially low
interest rates, and government subsidies that direct capital towards
certain sectors and away from others, has created an economy with too
little savings and production, and too much borrowing and consumption.
The ultra-low interest rates currently supplied by the Fed serve to
perpetuate this unsustainable artificial economy. Higher rates would
work quickly to redirect capital to the more productive sectors. But
high rates could bring deflation and liquidation, which few economists
are prepared to risk.
We have too many shopping malls selling stuff, but not enough
factories making stuff. We have too many kids in college studying
liberal arts, and not enough in the workforce acquiring skills that will
actually increase their productivity. Banks are loaning too much money
to individuals to buy houses, and not enough money to entrepreneurs to
buy equipment. We have too many tax-takers riding in the wagon, and not
enough taxpayers pulling it. The list is long, but the solutions are
short.
We need to let interest rates rise to market levels, and allow the
economy to restructure without government interference. We need to stop
beating a dead horse and hitch our wagon to an animal that can really
pull. The process will be painful for many, but like ripping off a
band-aid, the pain will be over relatively quickly. However, since a
painful restructuring means recession, politicians resist the cure with
every fiber of their beings. So instead of a genuine recovery, one that
will provide productive jobs and rising living standards, we get a phony
recovery that produces neither.
Preserving a broken system merely to avoid the pain necessary to fix
it only makes the situation worse. Propping up sectors that should be
contracting prevents resources from flowing to other sectors that should
be expanding. eeping workers employed in nonproductive jobs prevents
them from gaining productive employment elsewhere. Encouraging activity
or behavior the market would otherwise punish discourages alternatives
that it would otherwise reward.
Unfortunately, leaders on both sides of the Atlantic put politics
above economics, and economists like Mark Zandi provide the cover they
need to get away with it.
Source: marketplayground.com
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