by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
All throughout his new book, The Great Deformation: The Corruption of Capitalism in America,
David A. Stockman is critical of the Chicago School, especially its
intellectual leader during the last half of the twentieth century,
Milton Friedman. He captures
the irony of the so-called free-market Chicago School on the very first
page of his introduction, where he writes of the “capture of the state,
especially
its central bank, the Federal Reserve, by crony capitalist forces deeply
inimical to free markets and democracy.”
This is a deep irony because it was Chicago School economists such as
George Stigler who wrote of the “capture theory of regulation” when it
came to the
trucking industry, the airline industry, and many others. That is, they
produced dozens of scholarly articles demonstrating how government
regulatory
agencies ostensibly created to regulate industry “in the public
interest” are most often “captured” by the industry itself and then used
not to protect the
public but to enforce cartel pricing arrangements.
This was all good, solid, applied free-market economics, but at the same
time the Chicago Schoolers ignored the biggest and most important
regulatory
capture of all — the creation of the Fed. The Chicago School simply
ignored the obvious fact that the Fed was created as a governmental
cartel enforcement
mechanism for the banking industry — during an era when many other kinds
of regulatory institutions were being created for the same purpose
(i.e., “natural
monopoly” regulation).
Not only did the Chicago School ignore this glaring omission from its
“capture theory” tradition of research on regulation; it also ignored
the realistic,
economic analysis of political decision making that was an important
part of the research of the two most famous Chicago School Nobel
laureates next to
Friedman — George Stigler and Gary Becker. Stigler and Becker published
some important articles in the field that is better known as public
choice, or the
economics of political decision making. Friedman himself had long been
an advisor to Republican politicians, so no one could credibly argue
that Chicago
School economists were naïve about the realities of politics.
However, if Friedmanite monetarism was anything, it was naïve about
political reality. The fatal flaw of Friedman’s famous “monetary rule”
of constant
growth of the money supply in the 3-4 percent range was premised on the
assumption that a machine-like Fed chairman would selflessly pursue the
public
interest by enforcing Friedman’s monetary rule. According to Friedman,
Stockman writes, “inflation would be rapidly extinguished if money
supply was
harnessed to a fixed and unwavering rate of growth, such as 3 percent
per annum.” This was the fundamental assumption behind monetarism, and
it flew in the
face of everything the Chicago Schoolers purported to know about
political reality. In other words, Friedmanite monetarism was never a
realistic
possibility, for as Friedman himself frequently said of all other
governmental institutions besides the Fed, a government institution that
is not political
is as likely as a cat that barks like a dog. Friedman’s monetary rule,
Stockman concludes, was “basically academic poppycock.” He mocks the
idea of a
“monetary rule” as the “idea that the FOMC [Federal Reserve Open Market
Committee] would function as faithful monetary eunuchs, keeping their
eyes on the
M1 gauge and deftly adjusting the dial in either direction upon any
deviation from the 3 percent target.” This was “sheer fantasy,” says
Stockman, and an
extreme example of “political naivete.”
Stockman also takes Friedman and the Chicago School to task by writing
that “Friedman thoroughly misunderstood the Great Depression and
concluded
erroneously that undue regard for the gold standard rules by the Fed
during 1929-1933 had resulted in its failure to conduct aggressive open
market
purchases of government debt.” Stockman debunks the notion that the Fed
failed to pump enough liquidity into the banking system by merely noting
that
“there was no liquidity shortage” during that period and “commercial
banks were not constrained at all in their ability to make loans or
generate demand
deposits (M1). “Friedman thus sided with the central planners,” writes
Stockman, in “contending that the ... thousands of banks that already
had excess
reserves should have been doused with more and still more reserves,
until they started lending and creating deposits in accordance with the
dictates of the
monetarist gospel.” As a matter of historical fact, Stockman points out,
“excess reserves in the banking system grew dramatically during the
forty-five
month period, implying just the opposite of monetary stringency” (i.e.,
Friedman’s main argument). Thus, “there is simply no case that monetary
stringency
caused the Great Depression.”
The current Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke, based his academic career on the
false Friedmanite theory of the Great Depression, Stockman writes.
Bernanke’s
“sole contribution to this truly wrong-headed proposition was a few
essays consisting mainly of dense math equations. They showed the
undeniable
correlation between the collapse of GDP and money supply, but proved no
causation whatsoever.” Thus, the old saying about “how to lie with
statistics” was
matched by “how to mislead with mathematical models.”
Stockman makes the case that the Austrian business cycle theory is a far
more reliable source of understanding about the Great Depression.
“[T]he great
contraction of 1929-1933 was rooted in the bubble of debt and financial
speculation that built up in the years before 1929,” he writes, and “not
from
mistakes made by the Fed after the bubble collapsed.” Friedman’s
monetary theory, in other words, was not based on “positive economics”
or historical
reality, but was assumed to be “an a priori truth” merely because it was
the “great” Milton Friedman who authored it. In any event, Friedman’s
entire
theory of the Great Depression has been “demolished” by his intellectual
disciple, Ben Bernanke, who increased the excess reserves of the U.S.
banking
system from $40 billion to $1.7 trillion as of 2012 with little or no
recognizable effect on the real economy.
Perhaps Friedman’s biggest sin, according to Stockman, was being the
“brains” behind Richard Nixon’s executive order in 1971 that removed
gold standard
restraints on monetary printing. Friedman therefore assisted in the
institutionalization of “a regime which allowed politicians to
chronically spend
without taxing,” he writes. Ironically, “the nation’s most famous modern
conservative economist became the father of Big Government, chronic
deficits, and
national fiscal bankruptcy.” “For all practical purposes ... it was
Friedman who shifted the foundation of the nation’s money supply from
gold to
T-bills.”
Stockman describes Friedman’s political naivete as mind boggling.
“Friedman never even entertained the possibility that once the central
bank was freed
from the stern discipline of protecting its gold reserves, it would fall
into the hands of monetary activists and central planners” and that the
Fed would
“become a fount of rationalizations for incessant tinkering and
intervention in financial markets.” Printing dollars with reckless
abandon, the Fed fueled
commodity booms in the 1970s, followed by busts and crashes, and then
did the same with stock and real estate markets in the succeeding
decades.
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