Column on Bush’s Confusion

Bush’s Confusion

Tibor R. Machan

It is generous to call it that. More likely President George W. Bush was
prevaricating, not confused, when he stated, looking straight out at the
audience listening to is speech about the current financial disaster, “The
market is not functioning properly.” That’s because he—or his
advisors—must know that the American economy is not a genuine market at
all but a politically manipulated arena of criminal interference with
people’s economic decisions.

Take the plain and easily demonstrated fact that during Bill Clinton’s
years in the White House the two government-supported lending
corporations, Fanny and Freddy May, were forced by his administration to
lend money to people are unbelievably low rates. This was done so as to
encourage home ownership among low income citizens, ones who ordinarily
could not afford home loans. But government interfered and made it easy
for such people to obtain money without adequate collateral, without solid
jobs, without a ghost of a chance of actually paying their loans back.

Of course this is just one of the reasons for the current crisis but what
is clear beyond any reasonable doubt that no such system as a market was
functioning at all. Markets are destroyed as markets when the government
interferes in such a fashion, taking out the normal instrument of risk
which leads people to tend to act rationally, prudently.

So is President Bush so economically ignorant as to fail to understand
even this much about the recent history of the housing market? Does he not
know that when you provide people with artificially low mortgage interest
rates and with ridiculously easy terms, they will then most likely cut
deals they should never even go near? If you force a merchant to part with
his or her product or service at prices that are way below what the free
market would command that merchant is going to go broke and the customers
are going to be utterly mislead about the requirements for doing sound
business.

The American economy has for decades been subjected to such irrational
public policies that seriously distort the market process and many
economists predicted that exactly that would happen nearly a decade ago.
These economists, who do understand the nature of a properly functioning
market, aren’t shocked, shocked with the current economic state of
affairs. But when they aired their warnings in all kinds of forums, they
weren’t listened to because it was deemed politically incorrect to oppose
easy housing and other loans to people who had no business getting them.
Yes, they were too poor to handle those loans and when government
nonetheless forced financial institutions to make them, they were paving
the way toward today’s financial collapses.

Why Mr. Bush would join all those dishonest “economists” who advocated the
government’s easy money policies with the claim that it was “the market”
that is “not functioning properly” is a mystery to me, especially after he
announced, in that same speech, that he favors the free market and is
reluctant to interfere with it. But then President Bush clearly appears
to have only pretended to be a friend of freedom, what with his enormous
budget deficits which coerce members of future generations into near
bankruptcy even before they are born.

Thomas Friedman, The New York Times columnist who recently wrote The World
Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-First Century, about globalization,
said a few days ago that until the very end of one’s journey falling from
a skyscraper one will feel like one is able to fly. So over the last few
decades, as housing prices kept climbing and every Tom, Dick, and Harry
has become a home owner, never mind the ability to afford a home, millions
of people were like the bloke who was deluded that he could fly until he
met his demise by crashing to the ground. But instead of learning from
this, Congress and those cheering it on are committed to fooling us into
thinking that one can really get away forever with financial imprudence.

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