Trump Took on the International Elites at Davos. You Know They're Steaming
Appeals Court Puts the Kibosh on Insane Judge's Ruling That Hamstrung ICE Agents...
Dana Bash Recalibrates Both Sides of ICE Protest, and Sen. Cruz Is Guilty...
The Left Is Baby Brain Damage
Trump Blasts Canadian PM Mark Carney's Lack of Gratitude for American Strength
Tucker Carlson's Latest Newsletter Argues That a Nuclear Iran Could Be 'a Good...
Justice Clarence Thomas' Response to Hawaii Gun-Control Law, Grounded in Racist Black Code...
Trump Jokes With Newsom During His World Economic Forum Speech: 'I Would Call...
The Left's Search for a New Cause
Former TD Bank Worker Helped Launder $26 Million Through Shell Accounts, Prosecutors Say
President Trump Sounds Alarm Over UK Giving Up Key U.S. Military Base
U.S. Sues Louisiana Hospital Operator Over Alleged Medicare Fraud and Kickbacks
House Oversight Sends Contempt Resolution Against Clintons to Full House Over Epstein Prob...
Man Faces Federal Charges for Alleged Online Threats to Kill ICE Agents
The Republicans Are Launching an Investigation Into Ilhan Omar's Mysterious Net Worth Expl...
OPINION

Here Comes Big Government

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

It was probably inevitable. In small doses, it may even be desirable. Never mind that the economic crisis we face isn't nationwide, but worldwide, with causes that are beyond the power of any one nation, even this one, to remedy. The federal government must, of course, take what steps it can to correct matters and keep the damage within bounds.

Advertisement

But it was easy to predict that the Big Government boys would leap on the situation to call for their favorite remedy. "CRISIS INSPIRES RETHINKING OF 'REAGANOMICS,'" blared the top headline in Oct. 19 San Francisco Chronicle. And the subhead followed suit: "Experts say era of small government, deregulation is over."

Yep, it turns out the Gipper was wrong. As the article's first sentence puts it, "Big government is staging a comeback." Out from under their rocks are coming all the Big Government fans who have spent the last 30 years in hiding. In the exultant words of William Galston, a senior fellow at Washington's Brookings Institution, "We've gone through a period of three decades when the default assumptions were conservative assumptions. That framework has probably been torpedoed by events." One can practically hear Galston exhaling, "At last!"

As the Chronicle article notes, "A combination of circumstances, including the resurgence of the Democratic Party and fallout from the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, is giving impetus to wholesale expansion of government economic intervention."

And it's true. Government is climbing all over the woodwork, planning to make things better. And if, as seems likely, a Democratic administration and Congress sweep to victory next month, you can bet that the new administration will be positively crawling with fresh ideas to steer the economy in a (supposedly) more desirable direction.

Advertisement

But if you get the uneasy feeling that you have heard all this before, you are right. Time after time, every few years since 1934, Washington, D.C., has been trotted out as the solution to the nation's problems. But the New Dealers were still struggling to pull the country out of the Great Depression when World War II obligingly took the problem off their hands. And government has proven no wiser in the ensuing decades.

The truth is that bureaucrats have no crystal ball that can reveal the right economic course for the country. The economy has its ups and downs, based in part on global factors beyond merely national control and partly on national trends set in motion by forces sublimely indifferent to Washington's wishes. If (say) the weather dictates a downturn in agricultural production, no "czar" in Washington can command an uptick.

But the recent worldwide economic downturn will, predictably, generate a demand that Washington "do something," and Washington will respond with a whole series of programs, laws and expenditures allegedly designed to improve matters. Few, if any, of them will work, but they will have the collective effect of putting government's weight on the scales against the economy's own healthy tendency to right itself. In a few years, we will learn all over again why we acquired our previous deep distrust of government "solutions."

Advertisement

That is why the coming barrage of new government programs will predictably be such a desperately bad idea. We cannot legislate our way out of an economic slump, because an economic slump is simply the economy's way of exhaling, prior to taking a fresh breath. We can take palliative measures, to relieve individual cases of economic discomfort, but we cannot repeal the laws of economics.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement