The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Moves by Fed show socialism here now

- George F. Will Hewrites for the Washington Post.

In 1906, Werner Sombart, the German economist, explained America’s resistance to socialism in five words: “roast beef and apple pie,” his shorthand for affluence. In 2020, however, semi-socialism has come to a United States that is stunningly wealthier — real per-capita income six times larger than in 1906; today’s superiorit­y of purchasabl­e products, from antibiotic­s to smartphone­s — than 114 years ago.

This year is drenched with politics, yet the nation seems oblivious that coming decades of American governance have been irrevocabl­y shaped by what Nicholas Eberstadt of the American Enterprise Institute calls “the largest single ‘state surge’ in American history,” a “tidal wave of public resources”: debt.

In June alone, the federal government’s $864 billion budget deficit was larger than the deficit in all of fiscal 2017. And fiscal 2018. In eight years, the Reagan administra­tion almost tripled the national debt, to $2.9 trillion, but that sum is less than Congress has increased the debt in the past nine months. Because both parties have a powerful permanent incentive to disburse more current government services than current revenues will fund, the pre-pandemic deficit in fiscal 2019 was already almost $1 trillion — at full employment, with 2.3% gross domestic product growth.

In 1946, after financing four years of global warfare, the national debt was 106% of GDP. After nine months of spending to counter COVID-19 — spending soon to be increased by additional trillions — the debt is about 100% of GDP, heading (according to the Congressio­nal Budget Office) to almost 200% by 2050. And the Federal Reserve has, Eberstadt says, “crossed a Rubicon.”

Wading waist-deep into political policies, the Fed is adopting, Eberstadt says, “the role of managing and even micromanag­ing the American economy through credit allocation, potentiall­y lending vast sums not only to financial institutio­ns but also directly to firms it judges suitable for government support. The Fed already dominates the markets for U.S. Treasury debt and mortgage debt as a result of previous, lesser crises.

John Cochrane of Stanford’s Hoover Institutio­n, who blogs as the Grumpy Economist, notes that in the 2008 financial crisis, the Federal Reserve launched “creditor bailouts, propping up asset prices to keep investors from losing money, buying unpreceden­ted assets.” The risk of moral hazard — incentives for reckless behavior — is obvious.

Today, counter-COVID-19 spending already is approximat­ely five times larger than that triggered by the Great Recession of 2008. By 2020, Cochrane says, “Once again a huge vat of debt had built up; once again, nobody kept any cash around for bad times; once again, the government stepped in and offered an enormous put option, just as, arguably everyone expected.”

“This time, however,” Cochrane writes, “I don’t even hear the promise to clean up the moral hazard. We are, apparently, permanentl­y in a financial system in which people should load up on debt and risky assets in good times, and the government will buy them up should prices ever waver. Private gain, public loss.” Which is the essence of socialism.

The pandemic has propelled government toward promiscuou­sly picking economic winners and losers. As has been said, government­s are not good at picking winners, but losers are good at picking government­s.

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