The reason why people don’t need to pay any attention to the likes of Hazlitt, Sowell, Von Mises, et al, is that because after spending about 35+ years of implementing their ideas on deregulation, government defunding, free markets, principles of self-interest, etc. etc., they brought the world to the very brink of an utter total irreversible financial ruin.
When you screw up like that you are no longer allowed at the grown up table, and yes, you are going to have start using a sippy cup again.
It all started as some sort of comic masquerade in the form of the Laffer curve, which purports to show that a reduction of tax rates would result in an increase in government revenue. Laffer claimed that the idea came to him at the kitchen table in California one morning while he was trying to recover from a slight hangover, or just the morning mist before the coffee kicks in (take your pick I guess), when EUREKA it came to him!
As he recalled it, he grabbed a napkin (a paper one I assume) and proceeded to draw an X Y axis, labeling one Government Revenue with increasing scale and the other as the Tax Rate, again with an increasing scale. He then plotted down a half circle, and well the rest is history as they say!
Public figures loved what he had to say. I’ll cut your taxes and we will all have more bounty.
A couple of problems; macro-economic theory says that one of three things can happen: revenues can go up, revenues can stay the same or revenues can go down.
Another problem, after implementation, except for the already converted evangelists, not many people agreed that the effects that Laffer had predicted came about. As I recall, the most generous thing a kind person could say was, that if it had had an impact it was slight and short lived.
Anyway, for several years, from time to time, I could humor myself by reading a piece here and there in the NYT or WSJ about supply side theories while downing a morning coffee and donut. (Actually I was much more of NYT/Nation guy and my wife was the WSJ/Economist reader).
Not too long ago I saw a debate which included Laffer where he said with a straight face, that the prosperous swinging ‘20s were all made possible because of aggressive tax cuts.
OK, so did you happen to turn the page to the next chapter to find out what happened in the next decade?
I don’t know, maybe he grew up in a school district that in the name good stewardship, frugality and economy, the local council cut the school budget such that they were only able to afford volume I of American history which ended with the ‘20s.
A final note on Laffer, by all accounts he is a kind and well-meaning individual. I just think that it would have been better for us all if he had pursued a degree in say Sociology or anything else, as long as it didn’t scare the children or startle the horses as they say.
So let us fast forward to today. After 35+ years of:
• - Deregulating industry and financial sector
• - Defunding government oversight
• - Bashing unions to a pulp
• - Defunding schools
• - Failing to pay for infrastructure
• - Squandering the country’s inheritance of physical natural resources and air spectrum
• - and of course handing over one bloated government contract after another to the “efficient and effective” private sector
after all this, and a hundred other self-emasculation acts in the name of a free market,
what other reasonable set of outcomes could one have expected other than what happened in 2008?
Don’t try to say that it was too much regulation that brought on the crisis and that too much regulation will cause another crisis.
If it didn’t work with everything that you guys got these past 30 years, it is never going to work.
And I am not going to accept some modern day variant of Zeno’s The Tortoise and Achilles Paradox as an excuse to just keep pursuing the attainment of a free market Nirvana.
And BTW, an argument that says “Hey it wasn’t us” is not going to wash.
Here is probably one of the most stunning moments of the aftermath of the 2008 crisis.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R5lZPWNFizQIt is really is like the Pope saying that he has just figured out that there is no God.Alan Greenspan, a Chicago School guy was an admirer of Milton Friedman, the original tax-cutting and antigovernment economist.
Greenspan was also quite literally a disciple of Ayn Rand, a Soviet immigrant and author of The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged. (Rand’s objectivist philosophy gave a sort of moral license to sadists who masquerade around as human beings.
My favorite quote attributed to her was when she was asked, given her fierce antigovernment positions, why she was accepting Social Security and Medicare -- she replied that she was only accepting the payments as reparations. Usually it is white adolescent middle class males who become enamored with her works. A boost to their libertarian proclivities at a young age I suppose. It is unquestionable that large segments of society would be spared countless hours of dribble if these young men instead found their way to their father’s private magazine collection.)
And let’s not forget Greenspan’s admiration of Friedrich Hayek of the Austrian School.
Greenspan, by far, has been the most influential and most prolific free market guy in a position of real power in the 20th century. Deregulate everything; defund the government, let the free market reign supreme and have enlightened self-interest to be our only guide.
Upon retirement in 2006, he is reputed to have said of his unfinished goals that most things were set on a trajectory towards a desired state.
One of his biggest regrets: that he didn’t get to privatize social security. Good Lord above!