Keynesianism has extended downturn, despite recent
praise
We are now approaching the fourth Christmas of the
great debate between the benign supporters of Santa Keynes and the
walnut-hearted acolytes of the Hayekian Grinch. Or at least that’s how Keynesians
seem to see it.
Prominent statist fans of John Maynard
Keynes such as Nobel laureates Paul Krugman and George Stiglitz, and Keynes’
biographer Lord Robert Skidelsky, tend to be moralists who castigate their
opponents as flinty-eyed masochists rather than level-headed students of
immutable laws. Their indignant question is “Would you
have us do nothing?” The response from supporters of Friedrich Hayek and his
“Austrian” free-market economics is: “Yes, since what you are doing is making
things worse. Moreover, it’s your policies that cause crises in the first
place.”
Keynesians don’t just fail to grasp
Austrian economics — which emphasizes that diverting tax
dollars or government borrowing to Santa’s workshop to produce what people
don’t want (such as holes in the ground, pyramids or windmills) will have
painful long-term consequences — they condemn it on the basis that
Austrians rejoice in suffering.
Then again, who doesn’t want to believe in Santa?
(Naughty or nice doesn’t come into it. Just get those elves working). And who
could support the mean green character who wanted to drain all the fun from
Whoville?
The latest champion of Keynes as both
economically benign and more “moral” is Peter Berezin, the managing editor of
the Bank Credit Analyst. In the December edition, Mr. Berezin produces a long piece, Hayek vs. Keynes: Weighing the
Evidence, in which he suggests that Keynes is winning the battle
hands down.
The claim is moot, to say the least.
Keynesianism is essentially a refutation
of the Invisible Hand-driven natural order identified by Adam Smith. Smith
would have spotted Keynes as a “man of system” who mistook the economy for a
machine and economic actors for chess pieces. The Austrians are Smith’s
politically unpopular heirs.
Regurgitating murky history, Mr. Berezin writes “The
apparent success of Roosevelt’s New Deal policies, and the fact that massive
government spending on the war effort did end the Depression, seemed to
validate the views of Keynes.”
Seemed indeed.