Let Your Rabid Leftist Friends And Family Go
The Holiday Survival Guide (Trump WON Edition)
New York Democrat Issues Warning to His Party About Hochul
Outgoing Biden Admin Exposed for Special Interest Corruption
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 243: What the New Testament Says About Fearing...
The Forever-Tarnished Legacy of Barack Obama
Avoiding Self-Inflicted Trade and Economic Wounds
Matt Gaetz for Florida Governor?
Trump to Create New Position to Deal With Ukraine
Giving Thanks Is Good For You
The Hidden Pro-Life Message You Missed at Miss Universe
The Border's Broken Vetting System: Why We Can't Wait to Fix It
Can We Take Back the English Language Now?
Trump's Strategy On Iran Could End Middle East Wars
Trump Names His New Agriculture Secretary
OPINION

Big, Big Government

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

Not a one of us non-economists -- and probably not a lot of economists either --know for sure how the Paulson-Bush rescue plan will play out now or down the line.

Advertisement

I venture a guess that is grounded less in dense economic theory than in some apprehension of the human condition. The guess is that the politicians, 2008 fashion, will muck things up in considerable degree. There is one more point to advance here. It is that the lust for sticking political thumbs into economic pies is the main reason we should keep politicians as far away as possible from whatever table the pie rests upon.

I take up the points in order.

Anyone notice there's a presidential election going on? Both parties desire credit for resolving the present financial mess. Certain members of both parties actually desire such an outcome for its own sake. They're probably outnumbered by those who just want to win the election, but let's give credit where it's due.

Still, the market's Monday sinking spell -- just when we thought we'd heard a bugler blowing "charge" -- was occasioned largely by doubts that the good old Democrats are going to stand by and let the White House claim credit. No, the Democrats are talking about what the Wall Street Journal styled "a regulatory crackdown," with a role for partial government ownership of companies being rescued. So the Democrats also want to be heard calling for compensation limits on executives of said companies. What any of this huffing and puffing has to do with passing the Paulson plan you may guess. The relevance of it all is gaining a little short-term political credit: say, enough to get Sen. Obama elected president.

Advertisement

The second point mentioned above is, I think, more fundamental in nature -- the point about the separation of politicians from economics insofar as human realities make it possible.

The point, I said, is grounded in observation of human nature. The human craving to lay hands on a problem and twist it here and there is immutable. The political expression of that craving frequently has malign consequences. That's because political success depends on white-knighting it -- showing the yokels what the bien-pensants in the House and the Senate have kindly figured out in their behalf. Intrinsically vain, show-offy, meddlesome, the worst politicians think economic statesmanship consists in massaging whatever economic constituencies are most important to their election hopes: Wall Street, labor unions, subprime mortgage borrowers, protection-minded farmers, etc. When election is your highest aim, you go with whatever constituency helps you get elected. Human nature, I said.

As it happens, free market economics, which rightly stresses the superiority of non-interventionist policies, works better in general. It's merely that the market isn't ever as free as it needs to be to function. Groups want favors. They want backs scratched and ears rubbed. As much as is possible, and as often. Pretty soon you've got a subprime mortgage mess, and a $700 billion bailout of institutions "too big to fail" without taking down their neighbors.

Advertisement

Here we are, then -- beginning, it would appear, a new cycle in which regulators and bureaucracies, responsive to the political trade, make the big, important calls for us. You know -- to protect us. That's until somewhere down the line, as during the wreck of the Carter presidency, we reacquaint ourselves with the cost of political protection: the distortions, the unfairnesses, the political logrolling that goes into government control.

How the Democrats will acquit themselves this week, with the Paulson package on the table, we'll see soon enough. Will hopes and plans and designs for the election of Barack Obama drive the train over Republican objections about even more government intervention -- if possible -- than the Bush administration proposes?

I, um, don't believe I'd rule it out, on the basis of what we're seeing right now.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos