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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.

He cut taxes, eliminated burdensome regulations, turned on the spigot to increase oil exploration, opened global markets to U.S. goods, started the North American Free Trade Agreement, and the economy took off.

Newspaper headlines said Reagan had made "capitalism fashionable again."

Now we are again in a deep recession, and Barack Obama has ridden it to the pinnacle of power by saying that the economy has been gunned down by Wall Street, bankers, speculators and unfettered capitalism. Obama became the anti-Reagan. Government, he said, is the answer to all our economic problems, and we need lots of it. Income taxes will have to be raised on those very entrepreneurs, investors and risk-takers that Reagan saw as the pioneers of economic progress. And the government will "invest" those taxes as it sees fit in government-run green technology and nationalized healthcare. Oil exploration and all other fossil fuels will be taxed and curtailed. Trade will be restricted and demoted. The heroes of Obama's centralized economy will be administrators, czars, regulators and overseers in Washington.

"What Obama proposes is a 'post-material economy,'" and that's not good, writes Washington Post economic columnist Robert J. Samuelson.

"He would deemphasize the production of ever-more private goods and services, harnessing the economy to achieve broad social goals" like curbing global warming and creating government health insurance. "In the process, he sets aside the standard logic of economic progress.

"Since the dawn of the Industrial Age, this has been simple: produce more with less," i.e., increasing productivity, Samuelson continues. "Mass markets developed for clothes, cars, computers and much more because declining costs expanded production. Living standards rose. By contrast, the logic of the 'post-material economy' is just the opposite: Spend more and get less."

Obama is betting $9 trillion in debt that it will work. Wise economists like Samuelson know that it can't.

Obama thinks the age of free-market capitalism is ending, and that we are entering the Age of the Managed Economy where government redirects the nation's resources and its capital to achieve broad, untested social reforms.

"Those who predict capitalism's demise have to contend with one important historical fact," Harvard Professor Dani Rodrik writes in the current issue of The International Economy. It "has an almost unlimited capacity to reinvent itself." It has survived countless crises over the centuries and has outlived all of its adversaries. It will survive Obama, too.

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Capitalists are people,too!
I read this quote somewhere.."The problem with Socialism is SOCIALISM. The problem with Capitalism is CAPITALISTS!" Kinda the way certain evangelists gave God a "bad name". Gotta keep our perspectives in order,folks! (I guess age and experience will do that!)

Fear bought us down
If you have enough citizens of any systems that want it to fail- the way the Democrates wanted it to fail - then it will fail. For years under the leadership of pinko Obama Dems have used fear and willing brought down our economy by talking it down.

Sol
The economy was brought down by a Dem Congress and with the government forcing businesses and banks to give loans out to people who could not repay them. Not to mention the massive spending that has doubled our debt in the past 100 days.

Capitalism failed because the government would not let businesses fail that were MEANT to FAIL. Instead we put those businesses on life support with stimuluse money that will be lost when that business inevitably dies. If we had let Capitalism run its course then the bad businesses would die while new ones emerged and we would all be Trillions of dollars richer.

I hate pointing fingers
Im also not saying that the Repubs are clean from this mess too. They had the time and opportunity to be more proactive than they were in congress instead of spending like Democrats. And Bush is at fault for passing the legislation that was pushed in front of him. But I mostly blame the Dems, because this out of control spending and the idea that businesses are too big to fail came from thier ideology.

Raw Capitalism
What we have witnessed under the neocons is the savagery of capitalism in its rawest form. Perpetrated in the 90’s by the world Bank and the IMF, who set about the nations of the world privatizing and carving up countries assets, flooding individuals pockets with great wealth which then allowed them to downsize companies or lay off thousands of workers and doubling the working hours of the rest whilst paying them the same or less salary.
Bush, Cheney et al took this through to its conclusion with terrifying force creating a dangerous chasm between the elite and the masses. Capitalism is about as sustainable as communism.

Liberal Ignorance is Bliss
It takes a particularly ignorant moron to blame ANY of the current financial crisis on “capitalism” and, by extension, to give Obama a free pass because he’s only been in office for 100 days. The financial crisis was created ENTIRELY by government failure: the actions of the Fed under Greenspan and Bernanke (and yes, Bush takes the blame for selecting him), the actions of Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac (under Dem oversight pushing for more affordable housing) and, of course, profligate government spending (for which the anti-veto president deserves blame). Obama cannot be blamed for INITIATING the problem, but, by undertaking the exact same policies (free money, excess government spending, more power for the Fed, bailouts, interventions in the marketplace) at vastly greater levels (huge increases in spending, actually taking ownership stakes in private enterprise, more bailouts), he is demonstrably making matters worse.

The uneducated ideological nonsense of those who blame “raw capitalism” or “greed” or downsizing/outsourcing or the IMF/World Bank or “obstructionists” who won’t let Obama do whatever he wants to the economy without complaint or (the height of stupidity (the “gap” between rich and poor simply highlight the abysmal level of economic understanding in this country and elsewhere. It isn’t merely that they have no idea what they are talking about; it demonstrates an unwillingness to learn anything about the subject on which they’ve chosen to speak: ignorance to them truly is bliss.

President Cool Jazz Will Decide...
President Cool Jazz, aka, The Fresh Prince of Hot Air, will pick winners and losers in business, will decide our healthcare, he will lower our defenses so as not to offend his moooslim brothers, he will legalize tens of million of illegal Latino peasants to turn them into loyal democrat voters.....President Cool Jazz is God Almighty.

As Sarkozy of France said of The Teleprompter Jesus - "He has a messiah complex".

The Cracks in Capitalism
Capitalism began to fail long before 2008. Our capitalists "running" our manufacturing industries were losing market share back in the 60s and 70s.

Industry got so big, to rise to the top, you couldn't spend a lot of time learning the basics of the business. So, when competition got stiff, the capitalists in control had no idea what to do. These aren't capitalists, they are bean-counters. Our trade deficits have risen since the 60s and we've been living on borrowed money. Finally, the bubble burst.

Our old form of Capitalism is not viable in our new, more complex world. What we need is a new form of Capitalism. The new Capitalism will put the rewards for creativity in the hands of many more people than the old Capitalism did.

Think outside the box, guys.


Take your head out of the box
"Capitalism began to fail long before 2008."

Capitalism has never failed.

"Our capitalists 'running' our manufacturing industries were losing market share back in the 60s and 70s."

As the economy shifted to a more service oriented base just as it moved from an agricultural to an industrial base in the past. From an economic standpoint, the issue is entirely irrelevant.

"Industry got so big, to rise to the top, you couldn't spend a lot of time learning the basics of the business."

On what planet, 'cuz it sure ain't this one.

"So, when competition got stiff, the capitalists in control had no idea what to do."

The Us is still the most competitive economy on earth. Absent the gross governmental interventions that create the boom and bust cycle (and the accompanying malinvestments that lead to the failure of individual companies), the caitalists in the economy work just fine. Manufacturing OUTPUT has continued to grow steadily. Manufacturing EMPLOYMENT is what has declined.

"Our trade deficits have risen since the 60s and we've been living on borrowed money. Finally, the bubble burst."

The asset bubble that burst had nothing whatsoever to do with the trade deficit, which is, in reality, an economic sleight of hand because iot ignores the offsetting capital account surplus.

"Our old form of Capitalism is not viable in our new, more complex world."

The basics of economics don't change. Only the gullible fall for that idiocy. There is no need for a "new" capitalism", just an end to the disastrous intervention into the "old" (read: REAL).

F1etch
Great post and response!


non-federal ngo federal reserve monopoly
spending money the gov't doesn't have is the point ! congress borrows money from the nga fed that we income taxpayers are obligated to repay ..plus interest ! ALL OUR INCOME TAXES GO TO PAY JUST THE INTEREST ON THE SKYROCKETING NATIONAL DEBT ! !! ! ! ! ! ! !

the "fed" [no more federal than fedex is unconstitutional; lincoln, jackson , garfield, mckinley,wilson and jfk despised the private central banks and their franchises to print money adding to the national debts of their day ! lincoln and jackson succeeded for a while ; the parasite is back , the fed ; the fed controlls the business cycle ! ! !
NATIONALIZE THE FED ! ! ! !

What raw capitalism?
What we have witnessed under the liberals and neocons is the savagery of fascism in its rawest form. Prior to the crash of 2008, we did have a sprinkling of socialism in key industries, such as the government owned schools. However, our main problem (possibly promoted by attitudes expressed in socialist government schools) is fascism.

Fascists have no problem allowing the illusion of private ownership of businesses so long as government sets all the major policies and procedures. For examples, minimum (and maximum?) wages, excessive restrictions on drilling and refining oil or building nuclear plants, requirements for lenders to make bad loans, etc.

Faulse choices
"Capitalism has taken a beating lately, as it often does in a prolonged recession, even though government precipitated the crisis in the first place.'

The choice between blaming Capitalism and Government is a false choice. Government is just a business expense for Capitalists, to protect their profits, Capitalists are just customers for politicians who sell government access.

A weakened democracy
is susceptible to fascism led by a charismatic leader. Fasicsm is promoted by elite financial and business people (note the huge campaign contribution to Obama by wall street and CEO's)who think they can take advantage of his mass appeal. (Wonder what they think now as he takes control of their companies and alters their compensation?)Fascism grabs the power centers of capitalism and takes control of a country. Fascism has to scapegoat as Hitler did with the Jews. Obama scapegoats bondholders, Fox News, those on the right and those who disagree with him.

When we need advice...
...from someone who follows the completely obliterated "theories" of a failed journalist (who, by his own reckoning, should be ignored because he, himself, was a member of the bourgeoisie)

...from someone who still beliees the Marxian notion of history even though it was absurd when first presented and refuted by every facet of every moment in human history ever since

...from someone who cannot grasp basic definitions in English (as opposed to Marxist slurs) wherein "capitalism" is the FREE market with the ownershp of the means of production in private hands and, BY DEFINITION, government inervention is anti-capitalistic

...from someone who cannot grasp that, as pervasive as the sale of government access is in this country, it pales nearly to insignificance in comparison to what is found in the socialist economies of the West and what THEY experience pales to real insignificance comared to every country that has attempted to implement Marxism.

When we need advice from anyone that completely divorced from reality, we know where to turn. Until then we'll look for advice from competent, intelligent people, but thanks anyway...

A weakened republic
Our republic has been weakened and is degenerating into a democracy. Our founders had learned from the Greeks and rejected this form of government in Article 4, Section 4.

Under de-mob-ocracy, the mob has bought, stolen, and fabricated 50.01% of the votes and has chosen a mixture of a little socialism and a lot of fascism. I guess fascism was the preferred choice of the control freaks because "evil" owners make such handy scapegoats when businesses are government controlled instead of having government actually own them.

loco
Fascism, as has been understod by historians, political scientists and economists for more than half a century is nothing more than another form of socialism. While certain individuals take advantage (as under every system), the economy is wholly controlled by the state (not financial and business people) which leaves the illusion of capitalism while exercising total control over the means of production (controlling wages, prices, quantities produced, who can buy and who can sell).

Make no mistake, the power grab underway is by GOVERNMENT.

Power grab
The power grab underway is promoted by both the left and right wings of Control Freaks Unanimous. They wish to complete the destruction of our republic and use de-mob-ocracy to gain control of government and then of everyone. Freedom is no longer even a goal in America, and it all starts in our socialist (government owned) schools.

God save our republic. The 5-4 DC Supremes never will.

No More Reagan
http://mises.org/article.aspx?Id=1544

When will people learn that Reagan was exactly the opposite of what his mythology has pronounced him to be? Cutting marginal income tax rates and raising them everywhere else (his plans, not a Democrat Congress), increasing spending and increasing regulation is not something we should be promoting, but villifying.

Reagan is the perfect whipping boy for the left. He created many of the regulations and spending programs that caused our problems today yet loved to call himself a free market supporter and a deregulator. What better way than to give the free market and deregulation a bad name than to dredge up Reagan?

This bloated beast of a government
Must be bludgeoned to death. But we will have to kill it with a thousand cuts. Oblaba, Peloser and Harry Fraud are positioned for the next 550 days to blow this incompetent mess through the roof. If there isn't some exposure of the supposed moderate dims and rinos allowing this we won't have a chance of turning it even with a massive turnout in 2010. The foundation has to be laid to scare these enablers back to their constituents. By the Fourth.

True capitalism?
Mr. Lambro, this country hasn't seen true capitalism for many, many years.

Please don't write articles implying that the recent psuedo capitalism we've had is true capitalism.

That's the problem. People don't even know what true capitalism is. We've gotten to the point where words don't even mean the same thing to everyone.

When a society can't have a discussion because they all have different definitions of words we're in big trouble.

The left loves to hijack nice sounding words and change thier meaning. They hijack words like liberal, progressive etc., because it makes them feel good. But that's no different than you claiming that we have had capitalism lately.

Defining the debate
Good point SMyles, but it's worse than you thought - as this column illustrates, the right has adopted the left's vocabulary.

The term "capitalism" was coined by Karl Marx as a sort of verbal coup, implying an economic system whose returns go to a handful of investor-financiers. In fact, only about 6% of the returns from the free market go to investors, with 75% going to labor. As Milton Friedman pointed out, it would make far more sense to call the system "laborism"! A much better term is "free market."

Ironically perhaps, the percentage of returns to labor in the free market U.S. easily exceeded those of the socialist Soviet Union, and dwarfed them in real terms.

Let's use the term "free market," since it is accurately refers to the natural, uncoerced, voluntary system based on mutual benefit. Additionally, every survey I've seen on the topic shows that the term "free market" is far more favorably received than "capitalism." Don't adopt the calculatedly deceptive vocabulary of the left.

The problem with Socialism...
"The problem with Socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money"

-Margaret Thatcher-


Looks like this principle hold true today and will hold true long after we are gone...And people wonder why the government deficeit is growing.

Here's the good news
If, despite everything that has happened, a housing bust, a financial crisis, and a deep recession, the left cannot rustle up enough public support for socialism and antipathy toward capitalism to ride roughshod over the private sector, then they are finished. We just have to hang in there for a while, but we are witnessing the apex of the left. It really is all downhill for them from here.

We just have to make sure that: 1. Government interference and not the private sector, or capitalism itself, takes the fall for the financial crisis and the ensuing recession (I believe the government has already gotten a good portion of heat for the housing bust). I am working on a more comprehensive theory to achieve this. 2. People get educated about how statism inherently causes destruction and how capitalism (defined as the politico-economic system of private property rights) always leads to properity.

On the down side, we still have a number of stubborn people on the right who can't or won't acknowledge all this (just see Cooper's thread on the credit card legislation). We just have to work harder at broadcasting our message.

Great column.

Problem with Socialism
Yes, the problem with Socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money. But, another reason comes from Carl Marx. Socialism is one step away from Communism. Each come in different degrees. From the enormous size of our Government and the number of Government social programs, I would say we are under Socialism rushing into Communism.

With the exception of our armed forces, has government ever produced a profit? Is it possible to have a well-run, efficient organization when it is almost impossible to fire the inefficient? We have all heard stories about someone in government being "fired" which was actually having the individual's prestige removed. The paycheck and the benefits remained the same.

Lambro
The short answer to your title is "Capitalism
is a TEMPORARY victim. But it isn't even that.
Both my husband and I have our own businesses.
Mine is about 15 years old, his is about 28.
We are still plugging along. Nobody has attempted to take us over, nobody has pumped
money into us. I think that our story is most
people's story.

Capitalism...
There is no alternative to it. The alternative is merely to destroy it. Government does nothing without money, like any business, but unlike a business that has to earn income, the government takes it by force. Government, therefore, is entirely dependent upon the mechanics of Capitalism - of people working toward producing a value that will generate a profit.

The government is entirely to blame for the economy's present decline - government run by Bush and his Republicans. This merely gave Obama and his Democrats the opening for more government control and spending, which will continue this decline indefinitely. Government is dependent on and a drain upon, the productivity of Capitalism.

bye bye, capitalism
Don't let the door hit you on the way out.

Middle Way
Joel-De Oppresso Liber condemns Keynsian economics, saying, "Any dollar the govt spends is a dollar that is removed from the productive class that knows better what to do with it."

Would that be the same "productive class" that created an economy of bubbles, hedge funds, funny money, outsourcing, deindusrialization, and destroyed retirement accounts?

Face it: unfettered capitalism is as absurd as unfettered socialism. In each case, you have a society severely out of balance, with fanatical true believers in charge and ordinary people suffering from the insanity.

All Obama is doing is attempting to restore the immediate damage done by unfettered capitalism and move us toward the kind of balance we had under FDR, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson---a middle way in which capitalism can prosper (but not destroy) and citizens can flourish (with a reasonable safety net for old age and times of adversity).

Randall writes:
Capitalism failed because the government would not let businesses fail that were MEANT to FAIL. Instead we put those businesses on life support with stimuluse money that will be lost when that business inevitably dies. If we had let Capitalism run its course then the bad businesses would die while new ones emerged and we would all be Trillions of dollars richer.

Pretty good description of what's going on. The rest of it involves Government interference. Minimum Wage intrusion of artificial increases in expenses just made it worse for low earners.

People forget the S&L scandals...2000 banks went under...no government interference... everything was back to normal in 6 months.

There will be pain but nothing like the scare tactics that seem to indicate that this is another 1929...give me a break!

Government can't run what it's supposed to, why interfer in what they don't know.

The Have Nots Prevailed
It's really unfortunate that so many people believe that all successful people are somehow cheating the system. The current administartion believes in the redistribution of wealth. They also believe that they can somehow create jobs. The truth is they can't and won't. Job creation is due to successful businesses, the same one's that are being put down as we speak. You can redistribute the wealth only once. After that, someone needs to be successful to continue growing the wealth. Who is going to want to be successful when it will only be taken away from them. The actions taken by this administration to date will not cure the economy. If anything, it will cure itself if not too much more damage is done to stymie it. Many peolpe assume that the actions taken so far haven't hurt because they have yet to feel the effects. When these effects kick in, and they will, our lives are going to become much more difficult no matter what economic level one might be in. And guess what, there will still be successful people. How will the government deal with that?

Ed
Boy, are you ever a downer. The Have Nots have
prevailed. Prevailed in what? In having a chance at keeping their head above water for once. Can they not gain while the Haves also
prevail. Why do you think it is an either/or
situation. Or is it important to have every
in their place so you can define to yourself where you are on the pecking scale.

Hang in there, guy. We will be back to normal sooner or later. Later than you want,
but sooner if you cooperate.

An amazing trip to the kitchen
Right after I made my last post, I went into the
kitchen to feed the cat. The radio was on. I
heard a guy say "When all is said and done the
most important question to be answered is not
when did this economic crisis end, but what will we have learned from it?"

Superb question. Anyone care to answer it?
He gave his own suggestion. We will be judged by how we treat the poorest among us.

This is not a new saying, obviously, but I
think that it is one that the Republican party
(you know, the Christian Right, the Family
Values party), has forgotten. Time to rethink the priorities.


Time to Rethink the Priorities??
That may be a true statement DEPENDING WHAT UR PRIORITIES ARE!! I'm past 70 now, have worked since I was 15 and, to the best of my recollection, have never drawn an Unemployment Check. IDEEPLY RESENT being told, by the Congreee, Prez or anybody else, that I'm OBLIGATED to redistribution of MY income to *the Less Fortunate*.. My Wife donates a LOT of $ to Church, Hospitals, etc but that is a matter of CHOICE!!I guess as soon as we can ASSURE ALL THE UNFORTUNATE get a Guarantee to go to College (after they learn how to fill out the APPLICATION)things will GREATLY IMPROVE..

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).

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.
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