By Richard Rahn
Denial is leading to
collective economic suicide in Europe and the United States. The French elected
a socialist president who wants to raise taxes on those elusive rich and keep
spending as if there is no tomorrow.
Many on the left, including
European socialists in tandem with the New York Times and its economist Paul
Krugman, are falsely claiming that Europe and even the United States are being
saddled with "austerity." Their claim is that governments are not
spending enough to reduce unemployment. They want higher taxes on the most
productive plus bigger government.
They all suffer from a collective memory loss. Don't they remember that socialism did not work? Every time the big-government "solution" has been tried for the past two centuries, it has failed, but those on the left seem to be incapable of learning.
When the current economic
crisis began -- largely caused by a government-created housing bubble -- we
were told that if the government spent an extra trillion dollars or so and ran
up the deficit, all would be well. Did it work as advertised in the United
States? No. In the United Kingdom? No. In France? No. In Italy? No. In Spain?
No. And not even the left wants to talk about Greece.
Government spending has risen as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) in all of the major economies. Again, the left said unemployment rates should have come down by now, but the opposite is happening. The U.S. "official" unemployment rate has come down slightly, but the percentage of the labor force at work continues to decline, so the real unemployment rate is approximately 15 percent.
The irony is that the refusal
by those on the left, in both Europe and the United States, to deal with the
"entitlement" problem is going to cause an involuntary austerity in
which real incomes are going to fall for most people. Incomes have not been
rising as fast as inflation in the United States and most places in Europe, but
what has happened is only a very mild introduction to what is going to
happen.
GDP-to-debt ratios keep rising
in all the major economies, and realistically, this will continue until a
reversal in policy or a surge in inflation begins to erode the value of the
debt. Chancellor Angela Merkel in Germany has demanded that her fellow
Europeans reverse the growth in spending to deal with fiscal reality and save
the euro.
The elections in France and
Greece show that Mrs. Merkel's advice will be ignored and the European Central
Bank will be pressured to keep printing money - by sovereign bond purchases
and/or rate cuts on loans to banks - which ultimately will mean a lot more
inflation, resulting in a real drop in incomes.
Of the major economies, only
Germany has managed to reduce unemployment, and that was largely by major labor
reforms, which now make it possible to fire German workers so employers no
longer are so reluctant to hire new workers. Even so, the German economy is
slowing down and may be dragged into the new recession that the other European
economics are in or about to enter.
The next year is not going to
be pleasant. The new European recession will only deepen and spread as, once
again, the socialist "solutions" add to the problems. The United
States is facing a massive 3.6 percent of GDP tax increase on Jan. 1, which
will occur unless Congress extends the George W. Bush tax cuts and the other
major personal and business tax provisions that are set to expire at the end of
the year.
The extensions will require
both houses of Congress to pass them and President Obama to sign them into law.
Even if the Republicans win both Houses of Congress and Mitt Romney is elected
president, the Republicans will not take office until January - after the tax
provisions' expiration date.
There is no guarantee that Mr.
Obama and the Democrat Senate will pass the necessary tax extensions during the
lame-duck session, whether they win or lose. Even if the Republicans win, they
will not have the necessary 60 votes they might need in the Senate if the
Democrats refuse to go along with the extensions.
The uncertainty about what is
going to happen will build through the remainder of the year, which will
inhibit business expansion and job growth. This, coupled with the ongoing
avalanche of new bank regulations, and foreign interest and dividend reporting
requirements, is going to drive productive capital out of the United
States.
The rich in Europe and the
U.S. are not just going to sit around to be fleeced by corrupt and incompetent
governments. Being rich means you and your capital are mobile. There are many
nice places on the globe where rich people and their money are well-treated.
Europe is in recession, and
the odds are that by October the United States will be back in recession. The
central banks will inflate the currency to deal with the government debt
problems, the people will be poorer, and the rich will have left.
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