Stimulus
or Sedative?
by
Thomas Sowell TownHall.com
Abraham Lincoln once asked an audience how many legs a dog has, if you called
the tail a leg? When the audience said "five," Lincoln corrected them, saying
that the answer was four. "The fact that you call a tail a leg does not make it
a leg."
That same principle applies today. The fact that politicians
call something a "stimulus" does not make it a stimulus. The fact that they call
something a "jobs bill" does not mean there will be more jobs.
What have been the actual consequences of all the hundreds of billions of
dollars that the government has spent? The idea behind the spending is that it
will cause investors to invest, lenders to lend and employers to employ.
That was called "pump priming." To get a pump going, people put a little
water into it, so that the pump will start pumping out a lot of water. In other
words, government money alone was never supposed to restore the economy by
itself. It was supposed to get the private sector spending, lending, investing
and employing.
The question is: Is that what has actually happened?
The stimulus spending started back in 2008, during the Bush administration,
and has continued under the Obama administration, so it has had plenty of time
to show what it can do.
After the Bush administration's stimulus spending in 2008, business spending
on equipment and software fell-- not rose-- by 28 percent. Spending on durable
goods fell 22 percent.
What about the banks? Four months after the Trouble Asset Relief Program
(TARP) poured billions of dollars into the banks, the biggest recipients of that
money made 23 percent fewer loans than before. A year later, the credit extended
by American banks as a whole was down-- not up-- by more than $20 billion.
Spending in general was down. The velocity of circulation of money fell
faster than it had in half a century.
Just two weeks ago, the Wall Street Journal reported, "U.S. banks posted last
year their sharpest decline in lending since 1942." You can call it a stimulus,
if you want to, just as you can call a tail a leg. But the actual effect of what
is called a "stimulus" has been more like that of a sedative.
Why aren't the banks lending, with all that money sitting there gathering
dust?
You don't lend when politicians are making it more doubtful whether you are
going to get your money back-- either on time or at all. From the White House to
Capitol Hill, politicians are coming up with all sorts of bright ideas for
borrowers not to have to pay back what they borrowed and for lenders not to be
able to foreclose on people who are months behind on their mortgage payments.
President Obama keeps telling us that he is "creating jobs." But more and
more Americans have no jobs. The unemployment rate has declined slightly, but
only because many people have stopped looking for jobs. You are only counted as
unemployed if you are still looking for a job.
If all the unemployed people were to decide that it is hopeless and stop
looking for work, the unemployment statistics would drop like a rock. But that
would hardly be a solution.
What is going on, that nothing seems to work?
None of this is new. What is going on is what went on during the Great
Depression of the 1930s. Money circulated more slowly during the 1930s than
during the 1920s. Banks lent out a smaller proportion of the money they had on
hand during the 1930s than they did in the 1920s. Anti-business rhetoric and
anti-business policies did not create business confidence then, any more than it
does now. Economists have estimated that the New Deal prolonged the depression
by several years.
This is not another Great Depression, at least not yet, and the economy may
recover on its own, if the government will let it. But Obama today, like FDR in
the 1930s, cannot leave the economy alone. Both have felt a need to come up with
one bright idea after another, to "do something."
The theory is that, if one thing doesn't work, it is just a matter of trying
another. But, in an atmosphere where nobody knows what the federal government is
going to come up with next, people tend to hang on to their money until they
have some idea of what the rules of the game are going to be.
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