A
Sensible Economic Policy: Laissez Faire
The Misesean insight that all economics is based upon methodological individualism
plus the no
harm principle calls into question the raison
d' entre of the regulatory state, including legal tender laws; i.e., the
mandatory and exclusive use of state produced and controlled money within the
sovereign boundaries of the state.
Since every economic transaction is between private parties who believe
that they will benefit from the transaction, how can any other individual--much
less some remote burreaucrat--even know what these transactions might be or
their terms? All that is required for peaceful cooperation among people
everywhere is ordinary commercial law to define contracts, fraud, etc. and the
law of torts to define harms. These laws arose out of the common law over the
centuries and not out of the hubris of self-aggrandizing bureaucrats.
There is no harm that can be visited upon the population that the
common law has not addressed. It follows, then, that the people should take the
following actions to defund and remove from power the expensive and
business-stifling regulatory state.
1. Eliminate all federal cabinet
level agencies related to regulating economic life.
Of the current cabinet level bureaus, the following should be
eliminated immediately, including all departments within these bureaus, such as
OSHA (within the Department of Labor) and the EPA (customarily accorded cabinet
rank):
a. Agriculture
b. Commerce
c. Labor
d. Energy
e. Education
f. Housing and Urban
Development
g. Transportation
The above seven agencies spent $667 billion in 2010, representing 23%
of all federal spending.
2. Eliminate the central bank--the
Fed--and scrap legal tender laws.
Of course, a free market must include freedom of its participants to
use whatever medium of exchange--money--that it chooses. Money is part and
parcel of the market economy. It arises naturally to break the limits of a
barter economy, also known as direct exchange. Commodity money becomes indirect
exchange, whereby market participants trade for the most widely accepted
commodity rather than trade directly to satisfy their ultimate goals. There is
no need for the state to dictate what may be used for indirect exchange. Market
participants themselves are in the best position to determine which commodity
makes the best money.
Furthermore, central bank produced and controlled money has allowed government
to act like a common counterfeiter, producing money out of thin air to fund its
own spending programs and/or reward its supporters, all at the expense of
society as a whole. It is much easier to fund wars and welfare out of printed
money than taxes, or borrowing from real savings. The steady erosion of money's
purchasing power hits retirees the hardest, diminishing their ability to plan
for a retirement of comfort and dignity. Furthermore, the Austrian Theory of
the Business Cycle places fiat money expansion as the root cause of the Boom/Bust
cycle that misallocates and eventually destroys capital.
3. Eliminate government
licensing of occupations and products.
The best regulator of occupation quality is the free market. Government
agencies protect the status quo, erecting unnecessary barriers to cheaper,
affordable alternative services. There is no objective standard for determining
service quality. This is a judgment of market participants themselves. In a
free market unscrupulous and incompetent practitioners are weeded out by
competition and ordinary commercial and tort law.
4. Eliminate standing in court
of third parties.
Environmental groups and other anti-business, anti-development groups
file suits to stop projects over which they are not parties; i.e., they do not
own property, cannot show that they are suffering real, as opposed to
hypothetical or psychological harm, such as the loss of scenic views. Such
groups are always at liberty to solicit funds from their members to buy and set
aside what they consider special, scenic areas. Like licensing of occupations
under the banner of consumer protection, there is no objective standard of what
is and is not a scenic view or special area. Only the market can decide such
things. Environmental groups cannot assume to have a superior, or more
insightful position outside the market, because there is no standard for
determining such things as beauty. These are subjective evaluations which
change constantly. If you think this is not the case, just study the rural cemetery movement of
the nineteenth century in which the world's best landscape architects were
hired to design cemeteries where families would spend many hours each weekend
among their ancestors.
5. Restrict monetary damages for
violations of commercial law, torts, and other harms.
Only the parties to a dispute who have standing in court as suffering
real damages should be compensated financially for violations of the common
law, and these compensations should go entirely to the parties involved, not
third party whistleblowers and/or their attorneys. Current friend-of-the-court
rules allow meddling by third parties who can delay business projects almost
indefinitely or drive up costs until the projects are abandoned. Those who suffer are the project developers,
of course, plus all the unseen employees who never became employees and all the
projects' happy customers who never became happy customers.
6. End all subsidies.
If a business cannot produce a profit acceptable to its investors, then
the investors should close it down and invest their scarce capital in a
business whose product is more highly desired. Businesses that produce losses
are prima facie evidence that capital is being consumed rather than
accumulated. Private investors will close down such businesses or lose all their
capital. Government subsidies plunder existing capital in order to prop up
those businesses that are consuming it. But subsidies do not stop capital
deccumulation, only those who suffer the loss. Typically high profile
businesses, those with large union workforces, or those politically connected
are the recipients of capital provided by common, working people. In other
words, subsidies are theft.
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