Chrystia Freeland [Love that surname!]

Chrystia Freeland, author of “Plutocrats: The Rise of the New Global Super-Rich and the Fall of Everyone Else” is one of a relatively few analysts who understand how most billionaires make themselves rich at our expense out of our land and natural resource rents.

Probably correctly, she doesn’t see those billionaires who don’t indulge in land and natural resource monopoly as a major concern.

Freeland, Charles Abugre and Jamie Whyte were interviewed today by Justin Rowlatt in the BBC’s “In the Balance” program entitled Sharing the Wealth.

Freeland and Abugre were right onto the problem of rent-seeking, but Whyte just didn’t get it.  Admitting his New Zealand Presbyterian roots may be holding him back, even rent-seeking billionaires didn’t seem to bother Whyte.  He was more concerned that government expenditures have been running amok.

Well, that maybe correct up to a point, Mr Whyte, but you don’t seem to realise that if the social contract didn’t provide a safety net in these misbegotten times, carcasses of billionaires might well be swinging from the branches of sturdy trees right now.

In some ways, that’s why an unsatisfactory status quo persists. Charity and government handouts do mask the untold devastation the big rent-seekers, including banks, have been inflicting upon us.






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“THINGS FALL APART; THE CENTRE CANNOT HOLD”

William Butler Yeats: The Second Coming (1921)

 

We can get out of this one OK. We always do.

You’ve got your experts – the economists. They know how to fix things.

And the politicians will listen to them and get the financial system humming along again. They’re not dills either.

So why all the doom and gloom? Let the party continue. We’ve got to get on with life.

Sure things are tough for some, but we’ve had worse.

She’ll be right mate!

______________________

They’ll write many hundreds of books about this period of insanity  —  and still fail to explain it.






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TAX REFORM DOESN’T MATTER ANYMORE: YOU’RE GETTING MORE GST

How’d you like to abolish more than one hundred taxes on labour, capital and employment in Australia?

–      That’s the proposal of the Henry Tax Review.

How’d you like real tax reform – the abolition of most of our taxes?

–      That’s the proposal of the Henry Tax Review.

How’d you like far cheaper prices as a result of the removal of more than one hundred taxes plus all their cascading deadweight costs?

–      That’s the effect of the Henry Tax Review proposals.

How’d you like to have the 0.1% who’ve been able to avoid paying their fair share to the public coffers paying more?

–      That’s the effect of the Henry Tax Review proposals.

How’d you like to assist productivity?

–      That’s the effect of the Henry Tax Review proposals.

How’d you like the poor and middle class to pay more tax to assist the wealthy?

–      That’s the proposal of the Grattan Institute and of some of the State premiers who want to extend the GST. (They call this ‘tax reform’!)

Why will we have an extended GST, even though the Labor Party claims it doesn’t want to do this? (Really?) And why will our elected representatives mistreat us this way?

–      We cop it in the neck because politicians are too timid to challenge the seat of power and privilege.  …. So we’re no longer their constituents: we’ve become their stooges.  Call them to account!







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Sydney and Melbourne ‘House’ Prices

Trends and Cycles in Sydney and Melbourne House Prices from 1880 to 2011 by Nigel Stapledon.

Congratulations on an excellent contribution to this critically important discussion, Nigel Stapledon!

As for “Some of the probable reasons for that have been explored, but there is scope for further exploration” in the conclusion, I hope that at least a part of any such further exploration finds its way into analysing the public v. private capture of land rent, especially the worldwide fad to down-tax land from the outset of the 1970s.  Is it merely coincidental that average weekly wages have also declined—and the rich-poor gap widened massively—since then?







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Mason Gaffney on Mark Skousen’s “The Making of Modern Economics”

This is much less than a full review of Skousen, but more than a rebuttal to his personal attack on me as a conspiracy theorist.

Skousen’s book is most readable and probably sells well.  It is gossipy, with details on the personal lives of “the great thinkers”.  It brims with illustrations and vignettes, both relevant and not.  I was fascinated to learn about the life and times of Menger, for example, who had been just a shadowy name to me, and is now a real person, with strengths and human flaws – including a sex scandal involving Austrian royalty.  This is juicy tabloid stuff, but it is not economics.  More relevant is his inability to update and republish and translate his pioneering work.

What I do not find is any clear statement of why Menger deserves all the credit for “discovering” marginalism, which is implicit in so much of earlier classical economics.  This is often stated and repeated, as though repetition in tertiary sources makes something true, but has anyone DEMONSTRATED it in a scholarly way?   Skousen has done scholarly digging in the past – his Structure of Production is very useful and documented  –  but the present work is not of the same quality.

In praising Menger, Wieser, and Böhm-Bawerk  (who may deserve it as individuals) Skousen detours into identifying them with Vienna and Austria, which he exalts.  He glosses over the fact that Austria was in a long decline, leading to near-extinction, during their lifetimes, their influence with royalty, and with the repressive statist bureaucracy inherited from Metternich.  He credits them for attacking Prussian-German economists, even as Prussia was displacing Austria as the dominant central economic and political power, defeating Austria and France in battle, and moving into the Balkans, Austria’s turf.  He credits the Austrians for dominating American higher education in Economics, when in fact most American economists found higher education in Germany.  J.B. Clark, German-trained, followed by Knight and Stigler, devoted major efforts to exorcise Austrian capital theory from American thinking.  Skousen exalts Vienna, citing Mozart, Beethoven and Freud to exemplify its cultural leadership, although Mozart had flourished 100 years earlier under the would-be Physiocratic reformer Joseph II, and Freud is now discredited. As for Beethoven, after 1815 and the Congress of Vienna, “Austria came under the stifling rule of Metternich. For the rest of Beethoven’s lifetime and beyond, Vienna crawled with secret police, informers, spies, and repressive bureaucrats hostile to art and freedom.”

Skousen’s bête noir is David Ricardo, first for promoting a labor theory of value, feeding raw meat to later Marxists claiming exploitation of labor. This is a common opinion from tertiary sources, but if one actually reads with any care Ricardo’s chapter one, on value, Ricardo distinctly credits the capital input for adding to value. Ricardo was unlikely to paint his own profession as parasitic, and didn’t.

Ricardo’s other great sin was methodological, to rely on abstract or a priori reasoning without reference to the real world.  If Skousen is to fault Ricardo for that, he can hardly turn around and beatify von Mises, for example, who makes a virtue of relying on reasoning a priori and rejects statistical testing.  Skousen does not acknowledge, or try to reconcile, this apparent contradiction.  Nor does he mention that Ricardo’s theories were relevant to a major political issue, England’s “corn laws”.  He does not note that Ricardo showed that land rents depend on the price of corn, not the other way around, refuting the claim that Ricardo based prices on cost of production, without recognizing the demand-side view that Austrians developed later.  Neither does Skousen mention Hayek’s debt and tribute to what he labeled “The Ricardo Effect”.

No, Ricardo’s primary offense to property interests, in my view, was demonstrating that land rents are unearned.  This, following upon Smith’s soft hints, and Turgot’s hard activism, paved the way for Mill’s and A.R. Wallace’s proposals to tax land values and encourage subdivision, to George’s more sweeping proposal to focus most taxes on land rents and values.  It opened the gates for the Edwardian governments under Campbell-Bannerman, Asquith, and Lloyd-George who pulled the teeth from the House of Lords in the Parliamentary Revolution of 1909-11, in order to pass their proposed national tax on land values.

By focusing on Vienna and central Europe, Skousen makes the left-right struggle into a rivalry between Marxist communism and free enterprise.  South of The Alps, Pope Leo XIII used the same stratagem in his 1891 Encyclical Rerum Novarum. In fact, Marx was little known in Anglophone nations before the Russian Revolution of 1917. American Progressives and English Radical-Liberals and Fabians leaned more toward downtaxing commerce, industry, housing, and labor.  They would replace the revenues by uptaxing land values, melding free enterprise with radical land reform.  Henry George was not alone, but prominent among the progressives.

To his credit, Skousen does devote a few pages to George (pp. 230-34), but they are shallow as a morning dew and spun like a spiderweb.  He explains that Georgism died because it was “too extreme”, whatever that means.   Only this and nothing more.  He then dismisses George’s exegetes using ridicule and a personal attack on me:  “By George, it’s a conspiracy!”  He supports this with a statement I never wrote, that he says he found on an old dust-jacket.  He alleges that I am part of a “tight-knit political or religious group filled with true believers”.  His short (p.233) box demeaning me and my work contains “conspiracy” five times.  Actually, my long chapter (“The Neo-classical Stratagem”) in the book that Skousen cites  contains “conspiracy” only once, quite incidentally, preceded by “as though”.  The word and the concept are his, not mine.

Skousen also leans on the authority of J.B. Clark.  George was wrong because Clark said so.  If Skousen had read my chapter (the evidence says he didn’t) he would find 12 pages analyzing and refuting Clark, and 26 works by Clark in the bibliography. Clark’s major causes were two: undercutting George, and undercutting Böhm-Bawerk and other Austrians.  He succeeded in both efforts, in American academe.  It is incongruous for Skousen, a self-proclaimed Austrian, to rely on the authority of Clark, the dogged nemesis of Austrians.  My chapter purports to show how the two causes fit together.  It is accessible at www.masongaffney.org.

Skousen, Mark, 2009, The Making of Modern Economics. Armonk, NY:  M.E. Sharpe.  2nd Edition, n.d. but apparently 2012.  Comment by Mason Gaffney, 10-2012.

________________________________________

My comment: The personal attack on Gaffney reminds me of John Molony’s The Worker Question: A New Historical Perspective on Rerum Novarum, Melbourne, Collins Dove, 1991 which suddenly turned into purple prose at the very mention of the name “Henry George”. It seems powerful ideas affecting landed interests must be trivialised–then proponents derided–if they are unable to be refuted.






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SITTING BACK

Sitting back, studying the stupidity.

Young people willingly putting their necks into the noose of an impossible mortgage.  Banking CEOs knowing it can never be repaid, being paid millions to say they didn’t know this. Less knowing bank staff also signing up to purchase a home with an inflated land component that’s about to tank into a big correction.

Mortgagors have concluded that renting is a matter of flushing money down the toilet. Although the real estate industry confirms the fact, those who’ve done the proper sums roundly disagree.

As the economy worsens, some anxiety sets in. Have we over-committed? What if one of us were to lose our job? Can we afford a family? Thirty more years to go! The government is applying this financial pressure. We won’t vote for them. The other crowd will fix the economy …. Won’t they?

Some young people are starting to call the BS for what it is, but they aren’t yet a majority.*

Economists in the thrall of scientism confirm their uselessness by selling people out to the 0.1% for errant theory.

It’s so terribly sad that most believe in this gruesome fairytale, this stupidity. If it didn’t create such immense social distress, sitting back observing might be entertaining.

It’s certainly not.

______________

*ps.  Maybe it’s more than I thought!







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