Challenging Keynesian dogma - common sense for most non-economists.
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Hurricanes
Do Not Have A 'Silver Lining'
31
October, 2012
It didn't
take long for mainstream economists to provide us with some inane
commentary regarding the latest natural catastrophe.
Allegedly, the massive destruction of wealth hurricane 'Sandy' will
leave behind has a 'silver lining'.
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It’s hard to assess the economic damage of a storm that hasn’t yet passed. But some economists predicted Monday that, barring a catastrophic event, Hurricane Sandy would slow growth in the short term but have a negligible impact on, and possibly even boost, fourth-quarter growth
“While natural disasters take a large initial toll on the economy, they usually generate some extra activity afterward,” Moody’s Analytics economist Ryan Sweet wrote on the firm’s website Monday. “We expect any lost output this week from Hurricane Sandy will be made up in subsequent weeks, minimizing the effect on fourth quarter GDP.”
Jason Schenker of Texas-based Prestige Economics said hurricanes like Sandy usually lead to a bump in economic growth, mainly through stronger retail sales. In a note to clients, he cited to “the last minute run to hardware stores and supermarkets, or after-the-storm replacement of furniture, windows, cars, and other damaged durable and non-durable goods.” He said that, barring major damage to infrastructure in the mid-Atlantic region, Sandy will likely help retail sales in November.
„The hurricane will, of course, cause a loss of production and wages, the size depending on the magnitude of the damage and the length of the disruption. The region in Sandy’s path along the East Coast has a GDP of about $10 billion a day.“
(emphasis
added)
They
make it sound as if nothing especially pernicious had happened. Let
us leave aside that it may perhaps have been appropriate to say a
word or two about the loss of life the hurricane has caused. Even so,
if anything, this would be yet another good opportunity to question
the value of GDP statistics.
The
loss of wealth the hurricane has inflicted is very real; the wealth
destroyed by it is most definitely gone. GDP
does however not measure the existing stock of wealth and the impact
the hurricane has on it. It measures the annual flow of
wealth creation (although we must stress that the statistic
nonetheless remains deeply flawed and can definitely not be accepted
at face value), but it tells us nothing about existing wealth or its
destruction. Maybe they should at least have mentioned that?
Certainly
companies will try to make up for lost production and the dwellings
and infrastructure that have been damaged by the hurricane will be
rebuilt. This
rebuilding activity is then recorded as an 'addition to GDP'.
Suppose
though there had been no hurricane. Then
all the resources that must now be expended on rebuilding what it has
destroyed would be available for other uses. In that event, it would
indeed be possible to create additional wealth. The hurricane has
rendered us poorer by precisely what it has destroyed – the
rebuilding activity is merely undertaken to catch
up to
the status
quo ante.
The
statement about the 'bump in retail sales' that will 'boost GDP' is
just as absurd. If
people engage in panic buying ahead of the hurricane, then this
represents demand for consumer goods that has been pulled forward;
even in terms of GDP statistics this seems hardly relevant, as future
consumer demand will be commensurately lower.
The Keynesian Fallacy at the Core
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Why
is it that modern-day economists always seem
to insist that the destruction natural catastrophes and wars bring
about is really a 'good thing' economically? We
believe the main reason behind this stance is the unquestioned
acceptance of one of Keynes' great fallacies: namely the idea
that all economic
activity – even unproductive activity – is somehow 'good'.Keynes
for instance famously advised that governments could battle
recessions by paying people to dig ditches and then fill them up
again. He also published variants of this train of thought, as e.g.
in his references to the joys and advantages of pyramid building.
As Paul
Cantor remarks on this:
„Lord Keynes's daffy paean to the power of pyramids has been something of an embarrassment to his followers, but, far from being uncharacteristic of his thought, this passage actually goes right to its heart. It is after all just another way of Keynes saying, "I never met a government expenditure I didn't like."
(emphasis
added)
Naturally, if
it were really true that we could create economic progress by
breaking windows or digging ditches (we will admit that pyramids at
least render what one might term 'monument services', even if the
expense seems hardly justified by this), then the government should
pay half the population for digging ditches and hire the other half
to wreak wanton destruction. Some
time later, everyone could be employed in rebuilding what has been
destroyed. We'd have no unemployment and we'd have 'GDP growth', but
would this make any sense?
It
is the very same with the prosperity allegedly provided by war
(readers may recall that e.g. Paul Krugman was recently
pining for a fake war with alien invaders,
so as to spur deficit spending).
As
Ludwig von Mises said about so-called 'war prosperity':
„War prosperity is like the prosperity that an earthquake or a plague brings. The earthquake means good business for construction workers, and cholera improves the business of physicians, pharmacists, and undertakers; but no one has for that reason yet sought to celebrate earthquakes and cholera as stimulators of the productive forces in the general interest.“
Evidently
Mises didn't have the opportunity to encounter the mainstream
economists infesting the world in the 21stcentury. As
we have seen after the tsunami that devastated Japan, they do in
fact celebrate earthquakes as 'stimulators of the productive forces
in the general interest' – the financial press almost immediately
reported on economists gushing about the 'boost to Japan's GDP' the
tsunami would bring about.
They
forgot to mention that 'GDP' is obviously not a useful measure of
wealth and welfare (nonetheless,
the usual
suspects were happy;
Paul Krugman seems to imply that Japan could really use another
tsunami, given how nicely 'GDP' has grown shortly after the last
one). One suspects that these economists would probably see the
'silver lining' in a cholera epidemic too.
Hurricane Trivia:
This
week was the first time since 1888 that the New York Stock Exchange
was closed two days in a row due to really bad weather.
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