Stewardship wrote:
Any production problem is an incentive problem and a government-created problem. Its an obvious logical inconsistency to hold that incurring debt is beneficial while incurred debt is immaterial. Either debt has value or it doesn't; you can't have it both ways.
The "fiscal hawks" were right about the housing bubble, so their track record is still pretty good compared to most. Most were in denial that we were even in a recession and kept insisting that we would bounce right back... until we didn't. This just goes to show that truth is not dependent on our believing or being convinced.
A few things:
1) Not many fiscal hawks called the housing bubble. Specifically, I can think of Peter Schiff but I know there are others. The majority of inflationist/fiscal-hawks thought real-estate was a great way to protect yourself from rising rates and inflation. At least in my observations. And Schiff completely bobbled every other asset class than housing before and since the crisis, so I consider that some smarts with some luck... not sound economic analysis.
2) Any production problem is not necessarily an incentive problem (if aliens bombed half the factories in the U.S., this is a REAL problem, not an "incentive" problem... if we run out of oil, this is a REAL problem, not an incentive problem)... but I think I see what you mean, and I agree that most production problems are incentive problems. But the idea that they're caused necessarily by government not only not true, but it appears government can actually solve the problem in a way the private sector cannot... at least in the case of the most recent recession.
Businesses weren't firing people and holding off adding on to their factories because of regulation and taxes... they were doing so because they had
inadequate aggregate demand!
That-being-said, I'll fully admit that perhaps without government we would operate on barter and short-term contracts much more frequently than we do, and therefore have a lot more flexibility in our economic lives to reduce expenses when aggregate demand is hit, thereby avoiding a liquidating event, but this is a world you may want to advertise more abundantly to the business owners that Austrians so reliably seem interested in serving. They advertise their world as "a quick yet harsh negative downturn followed by huge growth due to the government being absent." That is either a lie or a hugely inconsistent analysis of purely free-market economics. Economic metropolis' like Manhattan and Hong Kong don't just happen out of capitalist purity. They happen out of a balance between state planning and private activity. If we're all to go back to the purity of a barter system and no big cities, fine, but Austrians might want to advertise that future more honestly. Our rich use of debt has definitely caused some problems, but it's caused huge advances in technology as well... the very kinds capitalists point to as wonders of the free-market. You don't get there without lots of risk-taking and debt and infrastructure and efficient capital markets.
I challenged Kshartle on this point, but we live in a world with what seems to be ZERO anarcho-capitalist societies, in the midst of TONS of political units, islands, etc. One could logically conclude that this is due to one of a few things:
1) They don't work to maximize production and happiness, or
2) They would work to maximize production and happiness, but for all the other governments and nefarious economic interests around the world that would take advantage of the weak nature of such an overwhelmingly decentralized authority system... which brings us back to #1.
If they were so robust to outside influence, and so obviously the key to all that is desired, would we not see more of them? To the degree you might want to answer, "but governments move in one way or the other," I would say, "if that is an inevitability, is it advisable to build what could be called 'your own' government so at least it has citizens to answer-to in some sense than a foreign economic/citizen base?"
If the answer to that question is no, then anarcho-capitalism is bankrupt from a utilitarian mindset... utterly useless as a workable theory.
If the answer to that question is yes, then government has value, and isn't necessarily the cause of "bad incentives," neither short NOR long-term. In fact, if the federal government were to abolish itself tomorrow, and I knew it, I wouldn't start a new business today, or buy shares of some company, or give my money to Warren Buffet to invest in our new-found anarcho-capitalist economy... I'd put all my money in gold and survivalist "stuffs."
EDIT:
Here's a quote summing up the analysis of the price mechanism derived from individual players in the market:
The problem referred to is that of how to distribute resources rationally in an economy. The free market solution is the price mechanism, wherein people individually have the ability to decide how a good or service should be distributed based on their willingness to give money for it. The price conveys embedded information about the abundance of resources as well as their desirability which in turn allows, on the basis of individual consensual decisions, corrections that prevent shortages and surpluses; Mises and Hayek argued that this is the only possible solution, and without the information provided by market prices socialism lacks a method to rationally allocate resources.
Ludwig von Mises argued in a famous 1920 article "Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth" that the pricing systems in socialist economies were necessarily deficient because if government owned or controlled the means of production, then no rational prices could be obtained for capital goods as they were merely internal transfers of goods in a socialist system and not "objects of exchange," unlike final goods. Therefore, they were unpriced and hence the system would be necessarily inefficient since the central planners would not know how to allocate the available resources efficiently.[1] This led him to declare "...that rational economic activity is impossible in a socialist commonwealth."[1] Mises developed his critique of socialism more completely in his 1922 book Socialism, an Economic and Sociological Analysis.
So if individuals come up with the prices for goods and services with their own best interests at heart, this will lead to the highest gross "economic utility" for society as a whole.
This is the fallacy of composition at work. If a bunch of bees were to each pursue their own individual best interest, vs the interests of the hive as a whole, Mises would say, is the best economic utility based on preferences and the "pricing mechanism" on their individual efforts and benefits. It's easy to see why this isn't true. Does this mean we have to all behave as hive-minded insects? Of course not, but it does invalidate the Austrian argument, as what is true of the whole system, is not necessarily true of its individual parts, and vice versa.
This doesn't even begin to discuss that Austrian economic analysis assumes as a given the natural link between a human and their preferred capitalist-norm measure of private property, which hasn't been proven to have a fundamental link. So the price mechanism might not even be efficient due to falsities built into the property-allocation aspect of that argument. I'm not saying communist property norms are correct (though there are different versions around that). I'm simply saying that Austrians haven't proven what they assume as axioms within their arguments.
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine