By Jeffrey Tucker
There was a brief moment of joy at the news that
retailers hired 206,000 new people in November. But only one day later, the
other shoe dropped: Jobless claims are, again, past the 400,000 mark — meaning
that the unemployment problem is, overall, getting worse, not better. The
broadest measure of unemployment exceeds 17%. It is much higher among new
college graduates. And this doesn’t even speak to the larger problem of job
downgrades; there’s a personal tragedy embedded in each one.
The longer the unemployment problem
persists, the more we are seeing oddball theories and proposals for dealing
with it. Ben Bernanke remains enthralled with the antique view that the way to
cure unemployment is to depreciate the value of money. You have to blow the
dust off some old Keynesian macroeconomics texts, surely to be found in some
dingy library somewhere, to see his rationale.
I’ll cite two additional cases in point
(one news story and one commentary) as indicators of a more widespread problem.
A New York Times news story by Adam Davidson regrets how the economic changes of the last
half-century have made job opportunities fewer than ever. He cites the common
complaint about international trade. Steel, textiles, toys, furniture,
electronics were once domestic industries, but these goods are, mostly, made
overseas now, presumably, leaving less for us to do.
This is the common protectionist line,
and it is rooted in fallacy. Offloading these industries where they can thrive
more efficiently does two things: saves American consumers money so that they
can save or spend on different things, and saves American workers from wasting
time making things that can be made more cheaply elsewhere, so that they can do
things that are more productive, rewarding and remunerative.
The end result should be more and better
jobs at home. (I’ll get to why that is not happening in a bit.)
His second complaint is straight out of
the Luddite playbook. Davidson regrets how technology (capital) has replaced
human hands with machines. This isn’t about technology only recently online. He
regrets that “countless secretaries were replaced by word processing, voice
mail, email and scheduling software; accounting staff by Excel; people in the
art department by desktop design programs.” It gets worse. He seems to regret
even your ability to buy a bookshelf at OfficeMax because there are no longer
“a bunch of people…helping measure things and making sure everything worked
correctly.”
My goodness. He might as well regret the
invention of the wheel, because those employed to carry others around on their
backs are now out of work. If we take this logic far enough, we would be back
to the Stone Age, when, it’s true, everyone had jobs to do. Then again, the
living standards were rather low.
It seems trivial to point it out, but
market-created technology is not violence to society. It appears because we
want it, and we want it because it helps our lives. We become better at what we
do. The outmoded technology no longer needs to be made — shed a tear for
typewriter manufacturers! — but there are new jobs in making the new
technology, and industries that use that new technology can expand because they
are more efficient than ever.
I’m sorry for wasting your time by pointing out some
commonplace refutations of brainless nostrums, but apparently, there is nothing
so brainless that it is unworthy of being featured in The
New York Times. And if it is being featured there, it strongly
suggests the need for refutation. So let us visit yet another piece along these
lines, this one even wackier and more wicked than the last one.
In “The Age of the Superfluous Worker” by Columbia sociologist Herbert Gans, we discover an
even-more-bizarre explanation of why unemployment persists. He begins by
pointing out that having surplus workers is hardly a new problem; it has been
an issue faced by all countries in all times. But in the old days, he writes,
surplus workers were afflicted with “illnesses” that caused them to be
“incapacitated” or were otherwise “killed off.”
Wow, bring back the old days, huh?
What’s more, he writes, wars were a blast, because they “absorbed the surplus”
of labor by employing people to kill or be killed. Ah, the salad days of mass
bloodshed when “sufficient numbers of those serving in the infantry and on
warships were killed or seriously enough injured so that they could not add to
the peacetime labor surplus.”
Sadly, those days are long gone, he writes, because
people are so much healthier now. Not even war works its magic on the labor
pool anymore: “Iraq and Afghanistan wars have left many more service members
injured than killed.” (This whole line is based on a myth that war and death have an economic upside.)
So we are in a pickle. Gans says that we
need an “industrial policy” that brings together government and business to
make new jobs. An example he offers: “Reducing class sizes in all public
schools to 15 or fewer would require a great many new teachers, even as it
would raise the quality of education.”
We could have government employ some people to dig
holes and other people to fill them back up again. Laugh if you want, but this
is precisely what J.M. Keynes suggested in his General Theory. His plan was to
have government fill up bottles with money, throw them into mines, fill the
mines with trash and have private enterprise set loose to find them. Voila, no
unemployment. He failed to add that this would be incredibly stupid and a
ghastly waste of resources. (Thebest refutation of this fallacy should be distributed by the case.)
Gans ends his theorizing with the
suggestion that government restrict everyone to working only 30 hours per week.
When that time is done, presumably, others will be standing right by to step in
to fill up the rest of the week, while the first workers go home to vegetate
and wait for their turns at the wheel again. Actually, I don’t know why he says
30 hours per week. We have a growing population. Maybe we should all be
forbidden by law from working more than 10 or five hours per week! That would,
surely, bring prosperity.
All these cockamamie theories are deeply
dangerous, and they evade the incredibly obvious point as to why there is
unemployment in the first place. If you read economics books from the 15th-19th
centuries, there was hardly a word written about unemployment at all.
Why is that? Because there is more than enough work to
do in this world. There is no shortage of jobs, now or
ever.The only question concerns the terms of exchange between
the worker and the person who is being hired. Only in the 20th century and, mostly, beginning during the Great
Depression has
there been widespread unemployment, and that is because of the government’s
interventions in the relationship between workers and employers.
What kinds of intervention? There are
legal restrictions that make hiring and firing a litigator’s paradise. There
are high payroll taxes that vastly increase the cost of new works. There are
minimum wage laws, labor union privileges and “child” labor laws that cartelize
the workplace to benefit the few at the expense of the many. There are
restrictions on immigration that make it very difficult for many businesses to
function and expand. If you could somehow get rid of all these problems in one
fell swoop, the so-called unemployment problem would vanish rather quickly.
The problem of unemployment is not really an economic
problem; it is a political problem. It is one of the many costs imposed by a
state that involves itself in things it ought to leave alone. But rather than
eliminating these costs, there is a growing fascination with wacky ideas, which
will only guarantee that a bad problem grows ever worse. If you know aNew York Times editor,
send him or her a book on the basics of economics, and soon.
As for Bernanke, he has never met a
problem in life for which he doesn’t see the solution as more paper-money
printing. If he could find a way for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to
hire 7 million people, and another 6 million to fly the helicopters needed to
distribute the new bills, we’d had full employment, and absolutely no reason to
work.
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