-Caveat Lector-

~~for educational purposes only~~
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]

Blaming Business
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.

Forget gridlock and partisanship, the US Senate
has found something besides attacking other
countries to agree on: attacking business right
here at home.

No one can accuse these guys of being soft on
crime, so long as the alleged crime occurs within
the private sector, and involves the always-vulnerable
businessman.

Should supposedly defrauding shareholders be a distinct
crime punishable by up to ten years in prison, thereby
replacing the existing system in which defrauding
shareholders falls under the category of mail and wire
fraud? Yes, said the Senate in a 100-to-0 vote.

Should the government prohibit companies from docking
the pay of employees who scheme with government
investigators? Yes, 100 to 0.

Should the period of time in which investors can file
lawsuits against companies to recoup losses due to
alleged securities fraud be extended? Yes, 100 to 0.

Should it be easier to prosecute people for altering or
destroying their records when a government agency is
investigating a corporation, even if the investigation isn't
yet official? Yes, 100 to 0.

Should all penalties of all sorts be expanded? Yes, 100
to 0.

John "The Bomber" McCain caught the reigning fascistic
spirit of the moment: "Until somebody responsible goes
to jail for a significant amount of time, I'm not sure these
people are going to get the message."

The message is: all the crooks are in business, and only
great government can save us.

The proposals to crush, thrash, smash, and otherwise
slam business are raining down hard, with Republicans
joining with Democrats in sheer demagogic hatred of the
capitalist system itself.

None of this has to do with a conviction that WorldCom
and Enron and the rest really committed fraud in the usual
sense. The problem with these companies (and they are
not typical) is that they took part in a more general fraud
called the New Economy: the idea that the Federal
Reserve can create limitless prosperity through money
creation and lower interest rates.

Had these companies' forecasts of infinite product
demand, and thus infinitely increasing stock prices
panned out, nobody would be complaining. But the Fed's
boom turned to bust, as it must, and the political parasites
had to find someway to deflect the blame.

Remember the scale of what we are dealing with. By the
late 1990s, tens of millions of people had grown
accustomed to checking their online holdings daily, and
watching them grow. Regular citizens became
day-traders. Folks were exuberant as their portfolios rose
to double and triple expected figures. Visions of early
retirement and the lush life danced in their heads.

Everyone was a financial genius.

But by this year, these same people have seen their
once-fat portfolios grow shockingly skinny. While people
can deal with stock-market losses, they cannot understand
how in a mere 12 to 19 months, trillions could have
vanished, and their exuberant visions too.

There is something intuitively correct about the average
person's suspicions. It doesn't make sense that so much
could be wiped out so quickly, and people are right to
assume that powerful people are rigging the game. The
business cycle isn't an act of nature. It is brought about by
shady characters working behind the scenes.

So Washington is attempting to turn public anger away
from the guilty  the Federal Reserve and the politicians
who cheered on its credit runup  to business. All this hot
air about corporate fraud is designed to permit people to
believe that their portfolios were looted by CEOs with
shredding machines.

You say: nobody is stupid enough to believe that!

Think again. In the early 1930s, this was precisely the
view promoted by FDR and widely believed among the
general public. This was also the import of Bush's
anti-business rave on Wall Street, which Republicans
celebrated and Democrats denounced for not going far
enough. This is why the Senate is passing stupid
resolutions and voting on bad legislation, which will
muck matters up further in predictable and unpredictable
ways.

Not even Wall Street experts have a clear fix on why
markets fall, other than some general lack of confidence
that plays on itself. Not one in a thousand would identify
the loose credit of the 1990s as the cause of the boom,
and fewer still could explain how that boom unraveled
and why.

Every economic downturn in modern history has been
accompanied by a boom-time accounting scandal, leading
to more regulation. This is why ignorance of economics
in particular Austrian economics  is so dangerous.
Something about the business cycle seems fishy, even
crooked, but precisely what does not flow from intuition
alone.

It's time to buy copies of Gene Callahan's smart and
funny Economics for Real People for your friends and
family, and your stockbroker and congressmen too.
Knowledge may be the only way to stop the government
from blaming everyone but itself for the meltdown
nobody but it brought about.

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