The debate in Europe over what policies
the debt ridden countries should pursue is being falsely constructed as a
choice between austerity and growth. Not
only is there another, more appropriate alternative, but these two alternatives
themselves are not properly defined. The
misconstruction of the euro has led to unsustainable debt levels. The simplistic alternatives offered are (1)
cutting spending and raising taxes--the austerity option--and (2) even more
monetary stimulus--the growth option--which promises that even more credit will
stimulate an economy to higher levels of production from which debt can be
amortized. These alternatives emerge out
of a failure to understand why the countries are in debt in the first place and
why previous credit injections have failed to ignite increased production. Therefore, if the problem is not understood,
the solutions offered are likely to fail.
The Real Cause of the Euro Debt Crisis
The original sin was a scramble for more
euros, a classic tragedy-of-the-commons, whereby the debt guarantee created an
unprotected common resource--the euro--for all to plunder to extinction. This fiat money credit expansion led to
misallocation of resources that caused disequilibria in the structure of
production. There were no real savings
by real people, who preferred to sacrifice in the present for greater economic
benefits in the future. In other words,
individual time preference--the relationship of one's preference for present
vs. future goods--remained unchanged.
This led to the economic crisis, whereby rising prices in consumer goods
forced the abandonment of longer term projects due to lack of adequate
resources for their profitable completion.
The commonly stated alternative
solutions, austerity or stimulus, do not address the source of the problem. Austerity proponents offer increased taxation
and reduced government spending to reduce the deficit. This is half right as far as it goes. Government spending must be cut, since this
reduces the drain on resources from productive, private, and profitable uses to
non-productive, unprofitable, government ones.
But raising taxes diverts these resources right back to government. Growth advocates want even more credit
expansion, which amounts to little more than a denial of cause and effect and a
belief that more of the same somehow will produce a different result.
Indeed, growth is the key to solving the
euro debt crisis, but it will not be the result of increased credit
expansion. The first order of business
must be to stop credit expansion in order to end the misallocation of resources
that disrupts the structure of production and leads, instead, to economic
contraction. This problem must be solved first, either through
a rededication of the ECB to monetary stability (very unlikely, given the
common ownership of the bank by irresponsible governments with a vested
interest in monetary expansion) or through reinstating national currencies tied
to gold. Then the governments must
remove the barriers that stifle the components to real economic growth.
The Three Components of Real Economic Growth
Conclusion
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