A debate is raging
among free market advocates regarding the proper posture to take with respect
to Too Big to Fail (TBTF) banks. This has become an increasingly important
issue as the financial sector has grown to take up an unprecedented share of
our economy. While cleaving to tried-and-true libertarian defenses of finance
as vital to the economy, some of us fear that the machinations of the crony
capitalists running the TBTF banks—in cahoots with their allies in the Treasury
Department and the Federal Reserve—will result in not only another global
financial collapse, but a populist anti-capitalist backlash that could destroy
what’s left of our free enterprise system.
But before we can
tackle this problem, we must figure out what is really going on. In all public
policy debates, perceptions matter, and public perceptions are often driven by
the leading narratives that gain cultural acceptance. Let’s look at what these are.
The prevailing
narrative on the left is that we are locked in a two-sided conflict pitting
greedy capitalists against the working man. Within this narrative noble
legislators and wise regulators must accumulate power unto themselves in order
to: 1) rein in the capitalists’ depredations; 2) balance the playing field to
offset “market failures;” and 3) “invest in the future” to compensate for the
shortsightedness of profit-seeking investors. Success requires waging a
permanent campaign against corrupt political opponents doing the dirty work of the
wicked 1 percent—who if left to their own devices would accumulate all the
wealth leaving the 99 percent destitute.
The prevailing
narrative on the right is that we are locked in a two-sided conflict pitting
American business against ham-handed legislators and clueless regulators whose
well-intentioned but misguided laws, regulations, taxes, and mandates threaten
to kill the goose that lays the golden eggs. Within this narrative, free market
advocates must fight every attempt by tree-hugging Luddites and their socialist
fellow travelers to interfere in the free flow of information, goods, and
services that are responsible for driving innovation and creating all the
wealth the left is trying to redistribute. Failure will leave the working man
unemployed, American businesses crippled, and the global economy in perpetual
recession.
Both of these
narratives are oversimplifications, and both contain elements of truth. How can
that be? Because they both miss the key point that the battle we are in is
actually a three-sided struggle. Why is this
important to realize? Because attempts to defend capitalism strictly within the
bounds of a two-sided dialectic can only accelerate the emergence of a populist
regime that fuses the centralized economic controls of fascism with the income
redistribution of socialism. We are already more than halfway there with
today’s “mixed economy”—a pale shadow of the laissez faire system that serves
as the libertarian ideal.
In one corner we
have the traditional market capitalists,
the bedrock of American exceptionalism and the source of our prosperity. These
businesses, both large and small, pursue profits by trying to do a better job
than their competitors at pleasing customers. Often referred to by the press as
“Main Street,” most market capitalists seek neither special privileges from
government nor regulatory shackles for their competitors.
In an adjacent
corner, claiming a common heritage, are the crony capitalists.
These are generally large companies with substantial lobbying operations.
Contrary to popular belief, crony capitalists love regulations—especially when
they get to write them. Nothing chokes off up-and-coming competitors better
than a thicket of incomprehensible and expensive new rules. Crony capitalist
enterprises have a well-oiled revolving door that allows their key people to
seamlessly enter “government service” (sometimes taking huge severance bonuses with them),
while welcoming former
bureaucrats, congressional staffers, and elected officials
seeking to cash in on their connections. And while crony capitalists have been
with us since the friends of Alexander Hamilton cornered the Revolutionary War
bond market, never before has their raiding of the public till so focused the
public’s attention.
This brings us to
the third member of the triad—the federal Leviathan.
Bloated beyond recognition, the beast in Washington has reached the point where
it can only be kept alive using borrowed and printed dollars. Contrary to some
Republicans’ small-government rhetoric, both parties have contributed to its
growth over the last half century. And neither is doing anything substantive to
restore fiscal sanity, as they engage in cosmetic battles that do nothing more
than tinker around the edges. Even worse, while Congress claims to maintain
oversight, it is no match for the crony capitalists and career bureaucrats who
run the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve, particularly when they
join their corporate brethren to shout “crisis” and demand more of the bailouts
that have allowed firms to socialize losses and privatize gains.
The Leviathan’s
business model is simple: 1) Collect tribute in the form of taxes from market
capitalists and redistribute it to favored constituents in return for votes;
and 2) collect campaign donations from crony capitalists so that incumbent
politicians can remain in office and expand their power. In return for said
contributions, those politicians regale their crony capitalist supporters with
special favors, including subsidies, tax loopholes, and regulations designed to
cripple their competitors.
And so the
question arises: What are free marketers to do? There is no question that
market capitalists deserve our support. But even crony capitalists deserve to
be defended against regulatory depredations when these are clearly
counterproductive and being used by demagogues like Elizabeth Warren as
convenient tools to expand their power base. While coming to their aid can be
the right thing to do, it risks doing tremendous damage to the free-market
brand. So how do we counteract that?
Quite simply, we
should not shy away from tarring and feathering any supposed “capitalist” who
goes to Washington hat in hand, looking for favors to “save” America’s
financial sector, auto industry, “green” energy economy, or what have you.
Whether it’s Goldman Sachs, General Motors, or General Electric, we need to
shout to anybody who will listen that any one firm imploding will not blow up the economy. Being pro-business is not the same as being pro-market. There is no reason why defending the right
of money changers to operate free from onerous regulations should translate
into letting the counterfeiters run amok and the temple priests loot the public
treasury.
Finally, it’s
worth noting that the oversimplification of our political landscape into a
false right/left dichotomy presents us with an opportunity to better inform
members of the general public who are seriously looking for answers, because it
partly explains why a record number of our fellow Americans are disengaging
from both the Democratic and Republican parties. They are baffled, frightened,
and lurching right and left depending on the calamity du jour. Desperate for
practical guidance, they are met with demagoguery. Free market advocates have
the information and insight they seek, as well as practical solutions that can
help guide our nation out of the statist morass it is in. But to do so we must
not be afraid to name and shame false practitioners of capitalism whose
behavior threatens the entire economy. Are
we ready to take up that challenge?
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