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Friday, May 01, 2009
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Capitalism Becomes a Victim of Recession
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON -- Capitalism has taken a beating lately, as it often does in a prolonged recession, even though government precipitated the crisis in the first place.

But this time the enemies of capitalism have grown bolder, maybe more persuasive, and arguably more effective than its defenders -- certainly more devious in cloaking increasing state controls, central planning and federal ownership with softer terms to beguile voters into giving them the power to manage and control much of our economy.

Increased spending for every problem is now called "investment." Reregulation of the nation's financial system and centers of production is called "reform." Demand for more control over economic decision-making is called "fixing the economy."

Disturbing signals that capitalism has been losing ground among our body politic can be seen in a recent Rasmussen Reports poll finding that only 53 percent of American adults believe capitalism is better than socialism.

Twenty percent disagreed, saying socialism is preferable, while 27 percent said they were not sure which was better.

The younger they are, the more they liked socialism. People under 30 were about evenly divided: 37 percent favored capitalism; 33 percent said socialism was better; and 30 percent were just undecided.

Support for capitalism grows with experience and age. Among people in their 30s, 49 percent said capitalism is the best system, compared to 26 percent who supported socialism.

People 40 and older overwhelmingly support capitalism -- a mere 13 percent said socialism is better.

Capitalism's popularity rises and falls with the economy. It was hugely popular in the Roaring '20s when the economy was running flat-out, taxes were low, government spending was modest, and regulation was minimal.

Then capitalism became the enemy with the crash of 1929 that heralded the Great Depression. Politicians and people blamed Wall Street, bankers, speculators and anyone with money.

Capitalism experienced a resurgence in the 1950s with the boom of the postwar years that weakened in the 1960s when John F. Kennedy ran on getting the economy "moving again" by cutting income tax rates. To those who criticized cutting taxes for the rich, Kennedy replied, "A rising tide lifts all boats." By the end of the decade, the Treasury was flush with cash and the budget was in surplus.

But no president in recent memory was a greater champion of capitalism than Ronald Reagan, who redefined it in heroic terms. The people who ran it and made it work for everyone were entrepreneurs, risk-takers and bold investors who dreamed of building great enterprises that would span the globe.

He declared the 1980s "the age of the entrepreneur" and was its biggest cheerleader, delivering economic sermons in praise of the free-enterprise system that would expand wealth, jobs and opportunity if only government would get out of the way. As the economy plunged into the recession of 1981-1982, he told a dispirited nation that government wasn't the answer to our problems -- government was the problem. As it is now. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Lambro should have done more homework
because Rasmussen also showed a poll of 77% of Americans favoring free markets over government run economies.

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/business/gen eral_business/support_for_free_market_economy_up_seven_poin ts_since_december

The interpretation here is that of the 27% of the generalized population who like the idea of socialism, only 11% favor government run economies. That socialists (read "poorly educated, overly indoctrinated people") don't understand basic economics is not news. What is news is that there is an emergent minority of the population (about 24%) who no longer equate "free markets" with "capitalism". Is that a function of poor education? No, it is the simple matter of people seeing big government and big business as symbiotic or synergistic. Compare this to yet another Rasmussen poll which shows that 70% believe that point exactly:

http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/business/gen eral_business/70_say_big_government_and_big_business_on_the _same_team

This has very interesting implications for what successful GOP candidates will look like. Regular people like successful small business owners will win elections. Professional politicians and "big" business owners, directors, etc. will be the also-rans who continue to lose elections.

Ed writes:
And guess what, there will still be successful people. How will the government deal with that?

Yes and the poor will still be poor. This is about Socialism power grab. Government interference by instituting artificial outside impacts.

Socialism always fails cause the government always runs out of other peoples money. BO and the Dems have survived a long time by throwing crumbs to the poor in order to keep their vote. Their lot has not improved. The new slaveowners are the Dems (Socialists).
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