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To whom it may concern,
National Review Online is an important part of the
conservative movement, and plays a central role advancing conservative
ideas in the United States. Thousands of conservatives across the
United States turn to NRO for analysis and insight into important
issues facing America. This makes Larry Kudlow's use of NRO Financial
as a vehicle for advocating the failed liberal economic policy of
printing money to lift America out of the recession all the more
distressing. I want to be clear - Mr. Kudlow is not a liberal and
believes in free markets. However, on the issue of monetary policy,
he abandons sound conservative policies.
Kudlow's writings as editor of NRO Financial are variants
on of one of two themes. The first, reducing the marginal tax burden
on savings and investment, is a worthy conservative position that
National Review should support. The second, a call for the Federal
Reserve to create vast amounts of money under virtually all circumstances,
is not.
A quick examination of Mr. Kudlow's articles over
the past two years demonstrates that he believes that printing of
hundreds of billions of new dollars will restore America to prosperity.
Consider:
- If I thought the Fed would add plenty of new money by purchasing
10-year Treasury notes
then I'd say abandon the fed funds
rate target altogether and just keep buying Treasuries until
commodity prices, including gold, go up another 10 to 20 percent
from current levels. That would tell us that the economy is
well supplied with cash. (June 23, 2003)
- Mr. Greenspan and all his little maestros need to pour it
on. This is no time to take chances. Add more money
it's
up to the Fed to show us the money. (June 17, 2003)
- Most supply-siders disagree, but Alan Greenspan & Co.
should turn the money spigots wide open that day - more than
they have thus far in this reflation cycle. I'm talking about
shock-and-awe level accommodation from the Fed. (June 17, 2003)
- The Fed, however, could provide some better guidance
they could have given some indication that the monetary printing
presses will be tanned, rested, and ready to create more liquidity
should a wartime emergency arise. (March 20, 2003)
- As long as the Federal Reserve keeps pumping the economy with
sufficient new cash to boost investing, spending, and saving,
it looks like we're set for something of an economic boom next
year. (Dec. 19, 2002)
- As a result of this liquidity expansion, the monetary base
increased by roughly 9% in 2001. As this money circulates through
the economy, it will generate a higher level of nominal spending
(on consumption and investment). And this brings us back to
Mr. Lee's 5% to 7% projected growth range for 2002. (Jan 4,
2002)
-
the obsession over the Central Bank's fed funds rate
masks a more important shortfall in policy. Namely, the urgent
need to pump more high-powered liquidity into the economy.
Turning back to the Fed, liquidity deflation will not end until
year-to-year monetary-base growth increases by something like
10%. (March 21, 2001)
These selections are not isolated examples. One quarter
of Mr. Kudlow's NRO columns written over the past two years, including
four of his five columns in June, call for the Federal Reserve to
print more money. Larry Kudlow has consistently used his position
as National Review Online's economics editor to advocate printing
of hundreds of billions of new dollars to cure America's economic
woes. Free market luminaries such as Ludwig von Mises, Frederick
Hayek, and Milton Friedman devoted large portions of their lives
to refuting the belief that new money creates prosperity. This view
has no place in the conservative community, and does not belong
on NRO.
The recent history of American monetary policy and
conservative economic thought demonstrate the absurdity believing
that printing money improves the economy. Indeed, if the past century
has taught economists anything, it is the truth of the quantity
theory of money. Money only has value as a medium of exchange, and
when the supply of money rises relative to the supply of goods and
services in the economy, prices rise. From the Weimar Republic to
post-war Japan, from the United States in the seventies to South
America in the eighties, printing more money caused higher prices.
It worked every time governments tried it. Until the late seventies,
the Federal Reserve Board rejected the quantity theory of money,
relying instead on Keynesian theories postulating that instability
in the demand for and velocity of money allow the government to
print vast amounts of money without substantially effecting the
price level - theories that Mr. Kudlow also subscribes to. In the
late sixties Milton Friedman reintroduced economists to the quantity
theory of money, and supported it with exhaustive empirical evidence
demonstrating both the link between money and prices and the stability
of the velocity of money. Initially, the Federal Reserve Board refused
to abandon its Keynesian theories, but reversed course after successive
years of double digit inflation followed massive increases in the
money supply in the seventies. Since the early eighties the Federal
Reserve restrained the growth of the money supply, and since the
early eighties inflation has not troubled the American economy.
The defeat of inflation across the globe is one of
free market economics greatest triumphs in the past century. Not
only the United States, but the European Union, most of South America,
and many Asian states learned from Friedman and conquered high inflation
by slowing the rate of growth of the money supply. Today, unlike
the world of a quarter century ago, the economies of almost all
developed nations are undisturbed by significant inflation. This
triumph directly resulted from of central banks accepting and acting
on the empirically proven quantity theory of money. Yet, despite
these historical and economic facts, Mr. Kudlow seeks to abandon
monetary restraint, and, in his words, "open the money spigots."
National Review should not be used to promulgate such destructive
theories.
In addition to its inflationary implications, Mr. Kudlow's stated
rationale for rapidly expanding the money stock disturbingly echoes
the philosophy of central planning. Again, I want to be clear, I
believe that Larry Kudlow is neither a socialist nor a liberal,
and his recommendations for regulatory and fiscal policies, especially
his support for lower dividend taxes, demonstrate his strong commitment
to free markets.
Unfortunately, these free market views do not extend
to monetary policy. Mr. Kudlow argues for creating new money because
he believes that businesses need the Federal Reserve to provide
them with credit. He has contended that "
the Fed must
provide enough cash to fund the new investment tax incentives just
signed by President Bush," and explicitly stated that "the
Fed injects credit into the financial system, and then the banks
inject credit into the economy." Unfortunately, Mr. Kudlow
does not recognize that the government cannot and should not attempt
to create credit out of thin air. There is no such thing as a free
lunch, and, as both Hayek and Friedman demonstrated, printing money
is no exception.
The government cannot create credit by fiat, since
credit represents a creditor giving up his use of real resources
in the present so that a borrower can use those resources to fund
his investment. Printing money does not create new resources, and
thus provides no additional credit to invest in the economy. Rather,
newly created money permits businesses to increase investment, but,
spreading throughout the economy, raises prices and forces consumers
to reduce their spending. When the government provides new credit
to businesses by printing money, it forcibly reallocates resources
from consumption spending to capital spending. No matter what window
dressing Mr. Kudlow uses to disguise this reality, government printed
credit represents central planning on a national scale. It is absurd
to believe that the members of the Federal Reserve Board, no matter
how intelligent, could possible know how much credit businesses
require or the correct balance between consumer and capital goods
in the economy. Only when the Federal Reserve shuts down the printing
presses and allows interest rates to freely adjust can the free
market determine the correct balance between investment and consumption
spending. Only the market, not government, can generate that information
in the form of freely adjusting interest rates. Mr. Kudlow's claims
that the Federal Reserve must provide credit to fund the recovery
are another way of saying that the government needs to intervene
in the economy because free markets would not provide that credit.
Such views are wholly incompatible with National Review's mission
and purpose.
Mr. Kudlow justifies any inflation that results from
an increased money supply by renaming it reflation and claiming
that America needs the reflation to avoid deflation. Setting aside
the reality that the American economy is not experiencing deflation
at all, merely historically low levels of inflation, Mr. Kudlow
ignores the fact not all types of deflation damage the economy.
Deflation can result from either a decrease in the money supply
or from improvements in technology and more efficient production.
While a severe drop in the money supply can be just as damaging
to the economy as a rapid increase, the Fed hasn't decreased the
money supply. Instead, most deflationary pressures in the US stems
from the lower cost of providing goods and services - the prices
of commodities, as with the prices of all other goods and services,
will drop in a free market if it becomes less expensive to produce
them. The phenomenon of natural deflation resulting from increased
productivity won't harm the economy, and does not justify turning
the printing presses on high. The fact that it cost more to produce
some commodities, goods, and services, in the past than it does
today is no reason to "reflate" the currency.
Ideas have consequences. Mr. Kudlow's ideas have been
tried in the past, and they lead only to inflation and economic
stagnation. National Review Online influences the thinking of conservatives
across America, and this prominent position makes it all the more
important that NRO support free market policies that, if implemented,
would strengthen America's economy. Larry Kudlow's support for reducing
marginal taxes, and taxation of investment income, makes a valuable
contribution to the conservative movement. His perpetual calls for
dramatic increases in the money supply, his calls to "turn
the money spigots wide open", do not, and they have no place
in National Review or in any other conservative publication. I request
that National Review Online cease publishing Larry Kudlow's columns
that advocate expanding the money supply, and instead publish only
those columns of his that support truly conservative economic policies.
Sincerely,
James Sherk
Senior Fellow for Economics
The Evangel Society
Sherk@evangelsociety.org
http://www.evangelsociety.org/sherk/about.html
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