Paul Krugman, not surprisingly,
compares the current financial crisis to the Great Depression.
Gosh, if I had a dime for every time a liberal commentator invokes
the Depression, I could probably afford Bear Stearns myself.
Krugman perpetuates the canard that the "banking crisis of the
1930s showed that unregulated, unsupervised financial markets can
all too easily suffer catastrophic failure" and that's what turned
an ordinary recession into a Depression. But in reality, what
worsened and prolonged the Depression was government interference
in the economy through regulation, protectionist trade policies,
higher taxes, and mismanagement by a Federal Reserve Board that
actually contracted the money supply in the
early years of the crisis (see Milton Friedman's
Monetary History of the United States and Amity Shlaes's
The Forgotten Man for more). With all of that
said, as I wrote
on Tuesday, the fact that the Fed rescued Bear Stearns ultimately
with taxpayer money, makes it easier for Krugman to argue that we
need preemptive regulations.
topics:
Taxes, Trade, Books