Home » Featured, The Goal Is Freedom \ Tags:

The Goal Is Freedom

Keynes Returns

By Sheldon Richman
Published: 13 February 2009
Keynes Returns

Keynes is all the rage these days. Our House of Commons and Lords–sorry, House of Representatives and Senate–are brimming with Keynesians, and more than one news commentator has boldly declared (as we’ve heard before), “We’re all Keynesians now.” (An exception is Newsweek, whose cover blares, “We Are All Socialists Now,” but the difference, when you come down to it, is trifling.)

In light of the resurrection of the at least twice-interred Keynes (1946 and some time in the 1970s, the long run and the longer run), I decided to revisit some of the gentleman’s writings. It occurred to me that before people started tattooing Keynes’s name on their forearms, they might like to become better familiar with what he actually believed. I realize that many who profess Keynesian views on the economy may not feel obliged to embrace his political or social views. But the categories may not be as distinct as they think. Keynes, at least, didn’t seem to think so. Let us recall that in 1936 he introduced the German edition of The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money by noting that “[T]he theory of output as a whole, which is what the following book purports to provide, is much more easily adapted to the conditions of a totalitarian state [emphasis added], than is the theory of the production and distribution of a given output produced under conditions of free competition and a large measure of laissez-faire.” My translation: your system and mine are made for each other.

For the purposes of today’s symposium, I chose Keynes’s 1926 essay, “The End of Laissez-Faire,” which was based on lectures he had given around that time. I’ll skip his synopsis of the intellectual history of individualism and cut to the chase.

One of the revealing passages of the essay is where Keynes explains why he rejects “State Socialism.”  But first he enumerates those features which he does not find  objectionable: “I criticise doctrinaire State Socialism, not because it seeks to engage men’s altruistic impulses in the service of society, or because it departs from laissez-faire, or because it takes away from man’s natural liberty to make a million, or because it has courage for bold experiments. All these things I applaud. [Emphasis added.] I criticise it because it misses the significance of what is actually happening; because it is, in fact, little better than a  dusty survival of a plan to meet the problems of fifty years ago, based on a misunderstanding of what someone said a hundred years ago.”

In other words, the problem with State Socialism is only that it’s out of date and confused. Other than that, it has much to recommend it. It engages our altruistic impulses, and it isn’t hung up on the freedom to make lots of money. Best of all, it isn’t afraid to experiment. To fully appreciate Keynes’s sentiment, take a moment and remind yourself what was going on around this time in the Bold Socialist Experiment taking place to the east.

Keynes prefers the “semi-socialism” of “semi-autonomous corporations.” (We might call this fascism.) He writes, “It is true that many big undertakings, particularly public utility enterprises and other business requiring a large fixed capital, still need to be semi-socialised. But we must keep our minds flexible regarding the forms of this semi-socialism. We must take full advantage of the natural tendencies of the day….” Like his fellow Progressives, he had nothing against giant monopoly firms; quite the contrary — as long as they are directed at the public interest and not private profit. What he disliked was decentralization and money making.

“I suggest, therefore, that progress lies in the growth and the recognition of semi-autonomous bodies within the State-bodies whose criterion of action within their own field is solely the public good as they understand it, and from whose deliberations motives of private advantage are excluded, though some place it may still be necessary to leave, until the ambit of men’s altruism grows wider, to the separate advantage of particular groups, classes, or faculties — bodies which in the ordinary course of affairs are mainly autonomous within their prescribed limitations, but are subject in the last resort to the sovereignty of the democracy expressed through Parliament.

“I propose a return, it may be said, towards medieval conceptions of separate autonomies.” Now that sounds progressive.

Deliberate Control

Keynes proposes to cure the great economic evils that are “the fruits of risk, uncertainty, and ignorance.” These are what create disparities in wealth and unemployment. “I believe that the cure for these things,” he writes, “is partly to be sought in the deliberate control of the currency and of credit by a central institution, and partly in the collection and dissemination on a great scale of data relating to the business situation, including the full publicity, by law if necessary, of all business facts which it is useful to know. These measures would involve society in exercising directive intelligence through some appropriate organ of action over many of the inner intricacies of private business, yet it would leave private initiative and enterprise unhindered.”

Keynes was a master euphemist. For him, government, which at its foundation is nothing but legalized aggressive force, is simply “society . . . exercising directive intelligence through some appropriate organ of action.” This organ will centrally control money and credit, determining who does and doesn’t have access to capital. (He endorses this idea again ten years later in The General Theory.) Yet initiative and enterprise will be “unhindered.” Keynes was a magician as well.

Keynes elaborates: “I believe that some coordinated act of intelligent judgement is required as to the scale on which it is desirable that the community as a whole should save, the scale on which these savings should go abroad in the form of foreign investments, and whether the present organisation of the investment market distributes savings along the most nationally productive channels. I do not think that these matters should be left entirely to the chances of private judgement and private profits, as they are at present.”

We are to presume that leaving these matters to politicians and bureaucrats entails no chance. Unlike the money-motivated, they are not moved by “animal spirits.” Can you imagine a man being taken seriously after proposing that the government — “some coordinated act of intelligent judgement” — dictate how much the population should save? (Bear in mind that Keynes thought saving was antisocial.)

The Scary Part

As he nears the end of his essay, Keynes gets downright scary in thinking of things for the state to do that “at present are not done at all.” I shall simply quote him:

“The time has already come when each country needs a considered national policy about what size of population, whether larger or smaller than at present or the same, is most expedient. And having settled this policy, we must take steps to carry it into operation. The time may arrive a little later when the community as a whole must pay attention to the innate quality as well as to the mere numbers of its future members.”

Well, no surprise here. If we can intelligently design an economy, why not the human race itself? The eugenics movement once teemed with Progressives, although after the program’s gory bold experiment in totalitarian Germany, some biographies were airbrushed to obscure that fact.

Keynes could speak like a politician whose last intention was to frighten anyone. He winds up by saying that “These reflections have been directed towards possible improvements in the technique of modern capitalism by the agency of collective action. There is nothing in them which is seriously incompatible with what seems to me to be the essential characteristic of capitalism, namely the dependence upon an intense appeal to the money-making and money-loving instincts of individuals as the main motive force of the economic machine.”

Remember that when he says “capitalism,” he does not mean the free market. He means the sort of state-regulated economy then in practice in both Britain and the United States, complete with central bank. The laissez-faire whose end he foresaw and favored was not an existing system but a philosophy. He laments that the Great War, with its “centralised social action on a great scale,” had not turned the old stalwarts into reformers despite its impressive record. “War socialism unquestionably achieved a production of wealth on a scale far greater than we ever knew in peace, for though the goods and services delivered were destined for immediate and fruitless extinction, none the less they were wealth [!].” He concedes, however, that the waste and obliviousness to cost were “disgusting.” Minor details.

For Keynes, capitalism is the system driven by the “money-motive of individuals.” There must be a better way, but most of us are too reactionary to see this.

“A preference for arranging our affairs in such a way as to appeal to the money-motive as little as possible, rather than as much as possible, need not be entirely a priori, but may be based on the comparison of experiences.. . . On the other hand, most men today . . . do not doubt the real advantages of wealth. Moreover, it seems obvious to them that one cannot do without the money-motive, and that, apart from certain admitted abuses, it does its job well. In the result the average man averts his attention from the problem, and has no clear idea what he really thinks and feels about the whole confounded matter.”

Not to worry. The Enlightened, such as Keynes, will show the way to a new world.

“Confusion of thought and feeling leads to confusion of speech. Many people, who are really objecting to capitalism as a way of life, argue as though they were objecting to it on the ground of its inefficiency in attaining its own objects. Contrariwise, devotees of capitalism are often unduly conservative, and reject reforms in its technique, which might really strengthen and preserve it, for fear that they may prove to be first steps away from capitalism itself. Nevertheless, a time may be coming when we shall get clearer than at present as to when we are talking about capitalism as an efficient or inefficient technique, and when we are talking about it as desirable or objectionable in itself. For my part I think that capitalism, wisely managed, can probably be made more efficient for attaining economic ends than any alternative system yet in sight, but that in itself it is in many ways extremely objectionable. Our problem is to work out a social organisation which shall be as efficient as possible without offending our notions of a satisfactory way of life.” (Emphasis added.)

He sought to assure us that with him and like-minded people at the helm, we were in good hands. His spiritual descendants do the same today. Who will protect us from our protectors?

20 Comments »

  1. The social object of skilled investment should be to defeat the dark forces of time and ignorance which envelop our future. [_General Theory_.... Keynes]

    He confesses ignorance of the future effects of his ideas.

  2. I am depressed over the fact that all the bright minds inside the Washington Beltway cannot listen, read, or learn that Keynesian thinking has and is devastating our economy.

    All brains seem inside places like FEE, Heritage Foundation, ACRESUSA, etc. while ego driven, power hungry, omnipotent “leaders” keep spending and adding to governmental size and meddling, aided by left of Harvard “experts.”

    What will it TAKE?!?

  3. I’m curious how much popularity & notoriety Keynes deliberately tried to get by playing off of Einstein’s “General Theory” ?

  4. I read somewhere that he chose the title “The General Theory” because of Einstein.

  5. Bob Heltman wrote:
    “What will it TAKE?!?”

    Answer:
    “The tree of Liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.”
    – Thomas Jefferson

    I’m ready! Are you?

  6. Politicians find Keynes irresistible because he gives them simple theories for appearing to do somthing to help a faultering economy and playing the big heros. Never mind that the theories don’t work, the political rewards are too great, even in failure. An educated public is the only solution.

  7. I’m a seventeen year old high school student.
    Going to a public school, I can state that the ignorance of true economic principles comes from the education we’re being spoon fed.
    What it will take to change the “cronism” and social ideals in Washington will be do educate students about the truth. It’s a scary reality.

  8. The failure will blamed on the “fact” that politicians didn’t do/spend enough. Krugman and company are already preping thier comrades to really go for broke, next time. That time will be on us before we would like to imagine. It appears the time between “crisis” is getting shorter and the “solutions” are getting bigger.

  9. I am glad to see that the education continues. This reminds me of Professor Richard Ebeling from my days at Hillsdale College! Keep up the good work!

  10. A timely and well written expose of Keynes’ underlying philosophy. It is fascinating to read Keynes in his own words and realize that he really did believe in the failure of the free market, and the necessity of government and force, and then realize that he had no problems just coming out and saying it plainly.

  11. Freedom is under attack from all sides especially from public education. Students are not learning basic reading and writing, they
    are deliberately being brain washed to the idea that government is the answer to all problems. Keynes would be proud of todays students they are mindless robots.

  12. I’m no defender of Keynesian economics but remember that “The General Theory” was written in 1936 in the middle of the Great Depression.

    Remember also that one of the perplexing problems in economic theory back then was the business cycle, the boom-bust-boom. Many economists, including Keynes, realized that savings weren’t going to pull an economy out of the depression, as had been conventional wisdom.

    Keynes thought that in the current depression with the lack of demand for goods and serivces, businesses would NEVER expand without governmental injection of money. Later, some economists would say that FDR (who liked Keynes) had the right idea but simply didn’t inject ENOUGH money.

    Sounds very much like the current thought in the USA.

  13. Krugman and et al will complain that $850B for bailouts, $ 820B for stimulus, and $ 2 trillion for bad-bank is not enough. If they really believe that they will create $1.38 of economic activity for each dollar of stimulus, why not spend 20 trillion dollars or something? If democrats had 60+ senators, maybe they would.

  14. It would be interesting to compare the steps now being taken by Bush and Obama with those taken by Hoover and Roosevelt to create and extend their depression.

    Here in Australia, we had the Reserve Bank getting very worried about \"inflation\" and putting up the Bank Rate numerous times, even during the November (2007) election campaign. Their logic was based on the fact that the consumer price index was rising. Much of the CPI rise was due to the increased price of imports (especially oil), and in fact the alleged rise in inflation was largely mythical. Since July 2008, there have been several major cuts in the interest rate, concern about inflation totally forgotten.

    It seems to me that the only way that increases in interest rates can stop inflation is by generating a recession, or a depression. But unfortunately reduction in interest rates does not necessarily abolish a recession or depression – witness the years Japan was in the doldrums with interest rates close to zero.

    An interesting subject for a PhD would be the correlation between Central Bank interest rate changes and the effect on the economy. Is there any – do they work as required?

  15. Bob Heltman said, “I am depressed over the fact that all the bright minds inside the Washington Beltway cannot listen, read, or learn that Keynesian thinking has and is devastating our economy.”

    I’m depressed too but did you ever consider that it might be deliberate? In other words, Keynesian theory combined with the central bank, the government credit card, gives our elected representatives license to plunder, steal, erode freedom and gain more and more power?

  16. Alexa,

    Just had to congratulate you for being so young and not buying the bill of goods taught in the public schools. Bravo!

    You can do a lot to educate others to the Truth. It was youngsters, some young enough to be my grandchildren, who inspired me to begin reading Austrian economic theory a little over a year ago. So I encourage you to speak up and speak out.

  17. Don\\\’t forget that Keynes told Hayek that he wrote \\"The General Theory\\" as a ruse in order to use monetary dilution to reduce wage rates among British workers in the 1930s and thereby reduce unemployment. See:

    http://consultingbyrpm.com/blog/2008/12/hayek-tells-bill-buckley-that-even.html

  18. The State by definition will always want to increase its own power. The dual party political ‘democracy’ ensures that the party not in power also allows and desires the increase of State power, for when they are at the helm!

    Keynes simply gives arguments to these people justifying their theft, plunder and tyranny.

  19. chase freedom rewards card…

    Can point me to other similar posts on chase freedom rewards card? Really appreciate it. Thanks….

  20. chase freedom rewards card…

    Great job with the info. How did you find it? Please let me know….

Have your say!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>