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Peter Schiff: The Reagan Counterrevolution

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November 07, 2008 – Comments (7)

In 1980, when the U.S. economy was last in serious trouble, Ronald Reagan offered the correct diagnoses that government was the problem and not the solution. His message resonated with voters, propelling him into the White House to implement an agenda of lowering marginal tax rates, reducing government spending and business regulations, restoring sound money, abolishing entire government departments, and basically allowing free market vibrancy to unshackle an economy burdened by big government. Though in practice much of the Reagan revolution never materialized, at least in theory his basic premise was sound.

In contrast, the country has now hitched its wagon to the views of Barack Obama. We don’t know much about what he truly believes about economics, but the little that we do know is not encouraging. Obama has repeatedly heaped the blame for the current crisis on the excesses of unregulated capitalism and the greed of the wealthy. For him, the free market is the problem and government is the solution.

The President-elect has promised to cage the destructive forces of capitalism, impose more regulation, raise marginal tax rates, increase government spending, and restore prosperity by redistributing wealth from those who earned it to those considered to be more deserving. Like most of his generation, Obama believes that economic growth results from consumer spending, primarily from the middle class. Any policy that keeps the consumers headed to the mall will be promoted.

Unfortunately, while Reagan had a hard time getting his full agenda through Congress, Obama will likely be much more successful. The effort to concentrate more power in Washington will be far more appealing to Congress then Reagan’s idea of restoring it to the people.

This sharp contrast in philosophy should not be taken lightly. Reagan looked to unleash the pent-up free market forces that had been smothered by a generation of Great Society reforms and uninterrupted Democratic control of Congress. Today, the public is looking for the Obama Administration to create the growth that the free market has apparently destroyed. The hope that our economy will grow as a result of government spending and micro-management is the most seminal shift in political philosophy since the New Deal.

Despite the absence of Reagan’s promised spending cuts, the economy generally did well during his presidency (The growth would have been more genuine if the cuts had been delivered). However, Obama’s policies will immediately make the current situation worse and the nation will suffer severely as a result. Rather than a sharp recession at the beginning of his term followed by a significant expansion (as occurred under Reagan), the recession that Obama inherits will be far worse when his first term ends.

What nearly all politicians on both sides of the aisle fail to understand is that the current contraction and credit crunch is necessary to restore order to an economy that is horribly out of balance. Years of misguided fiscal and monetary policy and market-distorting regulations have resulted in reckless borrowing and spending on Main Street, pervasive gambling on Wall Street, and rampant fraud and corruption at every intersection. America’s borrow and spend economy, and the bloated service sector that evolved around it, must be allowed to topple, so that a more sustainable economy grounded in savings and production can rise in its place. Any government efforts to delay the adjustment and spare us the pain will backfire, turning this recession into an inflationary depression.

Of broader concern however is the sharp turn in ideology, and what it means for the future of our nation. If this is a permanent shift, then America will lose any resemblance to the economic titan it was in the 20th Century. Our standard of living will decline sharply, our economy will be ravaged by inflation, tens of millions will be unemployed, more individual liberties will be surrendered, and rugged individualism will be supplanted by the nanny state. In short, Latin America may extend north to the Canadian border.

However, if this shift proves temporary and Obama’s reign either ends in one term, or he summons the intelligence and courage to reverse course once the situation deteriorates, then perhaps one day there will be light at the end of a very long tunnel.

While all of us can certainly hope for the best, prudence suggests that we had better prepare for the worst. Not only does that mean divesting our portfolios of U.S. dollar denominated investments but preparing for the possibility of emigration. With economic conditions at home becoming increasingly intolerable, the call of freer economies and greater prosperity abroad may be too tempting to resist.

7 Comments – Post Your Own

#1) On November 07, 2008 at 3:02 PM, guiron (21.35) wrote:

The reason we have regulated options markets is because of problems with these derivatives in the past when unregulated. Credit derivatives need to have a common exchange, and banks need to be honest about the value of holdings they bundle into securities. Hedge funds have been very fond of these instruments, but when they fell apart, the hedges had to unwind, which will be going on throughout next year. When hedges unwind, it brings the whole market down.

Regulation is not a problem when we're talking about exchanges. Financial mumbo-jumbo is what caused Oct. 17, 1987, too. I see nothing wrong with regulating the credit derivative market and creating an exchange. These sorts of economic events (massive sellloffs, grinding down of investor confidence) are not desirable, and lesser gain for less nonsense is fine with me, and it will ultimately help the market (which is far, far from unregulated anywhere). Pure laissez-faire is great if you're very rich, but it tends to wipe us small guys out when the market swings, and besides, in a global economy, there is no such thing as a free market.

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#2) On November 07, 2008 at 3:44 PM, camistocks (< 20) wrote:

Ehm just a few points.

-It was Paul Volcker, appointed by Jimmy Carter as Fed chairman, who raised interest rates massively in 1980 to combat then 10+% inflation, which drove the US into recession and cost Carter the presidency. The death of inflation was one of the main reasons for the boom in the 1980s

-Reagans tax cuts and huge military spending resulted in the US becoming a debtor nation. National debt rose from $700bn to $3 trillion under Reagan which forced George "read my lips" Bush 41 to increase taxes.

-Reagan appointed Greenspan

-it was total deregulation that led to the housing bubble under Bush 43 and the massive buildup of derivatives.

and probably much more...

 

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#3) On November 07, 2008 at 4:24 PM, awallejr (82.52) wrote:

Irony about Reagan is, he was a Republican yet acted like a Democrat with his increased spending.  And in hindsight that was probably the right solution.  And when we look at Clinton, he actually behaved more like a Republican in trying to balance the budget, than a Democrat.  And again, in  hindsight that was probably the right solution. 

Hopefully Obama will provide solid solutions so we can also say one day that "in hindsight" they were probably right.  If he was serious during his Presidential debate (unfortunately an IF) where he put Energy as the top priority, this can help this country tremendously depending on what he really plans on doing. 

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#4) On November 07, 2008 at 6:47 PM, Ph1sh55 (28.93) wrote:

Peter Schiff is an interesting guy and I agree with a lot of his views (am currently reading his book in fact), but I think he goes off the deepend when saying regulation is a bad thing and that free market is the solution top everything.  There's so many data points that have demonstrated the opposite and he always conveniently ignores them. He cherry picks a few bad regulations and claims they are all junk. 

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#5) On November 07, 2008 at 7:09 PM, johnw106 (61.18) wrote:

Unfettered capitalism has destroyed more than one Empire. History has shown that greed begets greed. There needs to be a firm hand on the collar of the attack dog we call wealth generation.

I like Schiller my self but moving to the extreme right or left is never a good idea. And he paints a very distorted view of the Regan years. I lived through it and was out of a job most of those years. It was far from a boom of any kind. The real economy where I live didnt improve until the middle of his second term.

 We need to remain in the center. I am normaly a Republican in my views even though I am what is classified by the politicaly correct as "the working poor" or more correctly white trailer trash. Being poor doesnt make me ignorant of the dangers in too much government and too little.

For eight years we have seen what too little government and out of touch good old boy Republicism has done to our economy. We need to move back to the center, and for now maybe even move to the left a bit. Trickle down economics doesnt work when the ass hats on the top dont let go of the trickle.

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#6) On November 08, 2008 at 11:49 AM, dexion10 (28.29) wrote:

A FEW PROBLEMS WITH REAGAN:

 

I know its generally considered sacrilege to say that Reagon wasn't a god.  But the truth is he was a president who spent America out of problems.

If Reagan was such a great champion of free markets how come the deficit ballooned under his watch....

Building up a huge deficit was a result of historic subsidies to business... that is socialism.  The profits went to the private sector and the debt went to the public U.S. balance sheet.

REGARDING THE CURRENT BIG ISSUES OF THE DAY:

Politics and policy are not as big a determinent of economic prosperity as money supply and government balance sheets.   

The U.S. had a decent balance sheet (not great) at the time of Reagan so we could afford to lever up and spend to grow the economy.  But what do we do now that the U.S. balance sheet is insolvent.   

The only reason we're not bankrupt is that we can print more money - any other entity would be bankrupt with this balance sheet.

In short we are screwed seven days from Sunday and even Reagan himself couldn't fix this mess

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#7) On November 09, 2008 at 1:53 PM, lenri (80.35) wrote:

Hey Dakota. Nice commentary.

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