Friday, September 18, 2015

Internet Austrians



The Fed didn’t raise rates.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard was bound to comment on this (along with offering his obligatory derogatory comment about Austrians), and he has not disappointed.  I will keep this short, as only yesterday I commented on his post in which he approves of governments issuing greenbacks (apparently Macquarie is calling for a similar elixir).  So I don’t want to spend too much of my energy and your time on dissecting another AEP paean to the gods of central banking.

The argument that zero rates are unhealthy and impure is to let Calvinist psychology intrude on the hard science of monetary management.

Capital at zero cost is certainly unhealthy.  I don’t believe Calvin had anything to say about this, though.  Anyway, who knew monetary management was a hard science?  Does AEP mean hard science?

Any of the natural or physical sciences, as chemistry, biology, physics, or astronomy, in which aspects of the universe are investigated by means of hypotheses and experiments.

He must not mean this.  There is no testing via experiments – there is no testing!  It is just an experiment, sans testing.  He must mean hard, as in difficult.  Of this, there is no doubt.  But I wouldn’t call it a science – more like voodoo, or divining.

The chorus of demands – and just from ‘internet-Austrians’ – that rates should be raised in order to build up reserve ammunition in case they need to be cut later, is a line of reasoning that borders on insanity.

First, I think he must be missing the word “not” in the above, as in “and not just from ‘internet Austrians.’”  Because many people not associated directly with Austrian economics have said such things.

On the other hand, any Austrian worthy of the name (internet or otherwise) would not advise what a central bank should do.  If asked for an opinion, they would say that there should be no central bank.

There was also an equity crash on the Shanghai and Shenzhen casinos, though this is of no relevance beyond puncturing the illusion that the Chinese authorities known what they are doing. Self-evidently they do not.

Ambrose offers that Chinese authorities don’t know what they are doing, yet…

…the immediate implication is that data from China will soon start looking a great deal better, lifting the whole world out of its summer sulk.

Consider what he is saying: idiots can run monetary policy and regulate the banks and it makes no difference – the economy will perform just fine; fine enough to save the world!  The gods of Ambrose = idiots.

…the Fed is damned if it does, and damned if it does not, for by recoiling yet again it may well be storing up a different kind of crisis next year.

Finally, something we can agree on – may the Fed be damned.

Nobody said central banking was easy.

Austrians certainly never said it was easy.  Austrians never even said it was hard.  It is impossible.  It is central planning.  And to expect good outcomes from central planning is to worship false gods.

And may those who worship false gods be damned.

9 comments:

  1. Central bank experiments would have been fun to watch if it was not for the fact that we are the lab mice.

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  2. BM, I think your link is incorrect. I assume you are discussing this:

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/11874484/Fed-is-riding-the-tail-of-a-dangerous-global-tiger.html

    For the record, I am officially the “vulgar internet Austrian”:

    http://socialdemocracy21stcentury.blogspot.com/2014/07/what-is-vulgar-internet-austrianism.html

    I suppose that being the “vulgar internet Austrian” isn’t quite the same thing as being just a plain vanilla “internet Austrian”.

    In my role as “vulgar internet Austrian”, I constantly point out that our opponents cannot seem to grasp or conceptualize the difference between a) the state of affairs where violent intervention is successfully prohibited and b) the violent interventions upon which our opponents’ hopes, dreams and policies are based. As such, they do not grasp that the problems they seek to cure are caused by “b” and not “a”.

    Further, they do not and cannot grasp the concept of economic calculation/miscalulation or the distinctive nature of prices under a regime of “a” vs. a regime of “b” above.

    This problem seems to afflict EVERY non-Austrian in the galaxy which suggest to me that we must start from scratch in our teaching efforts.

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    Replies
    1. Mr. Roddis

      I deleted your most recent comment. I will not publish anything further from you on this site.

      Delete
    2. I find both you and Roddis to be likable people.

      Hopefully whatever the offending material was, you two can come to a peaceful resolution.

      I think you both generally speaking contribute much in libertarian thought.

      Best Regards- Nick


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    3. I agree with Nick. Perhaps there is an invisible line that should be made visible? If made visible, and then crossed, well then.....

      Until then it is implicit, but not explicite. Perhaps it would not have been crossed, if it were known. Just saying.

      It has always been fun to listen to listen to Mr. Roddis in the past. Perhaps an understanding of governance would clear this up?

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    4. I was not going to comment on this further, however I hold each of the two of you in great respect.

      I was told that I would have to be a moron to believe something I wrote. I don't believe I need to publish any guidelines on this; that such a statement crosses the line should be self-evident.

      If Mr. Roddis feels somehow I am mistaken or otherwise wants to discuss this, he can do so via email; the address is on the contact page. In the meantime, no comment of his will be published here.

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    5. Ad hominem's are beneath Roddis's intellectual capabilities.

      Hopefully he apologizes, & you forgive him.

      Nick


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    6. Nick / gpond

      As you have reached out on this topic, I think it is appropriate that I offer an update.

      Mr. Roddis wrote an explanatory note. In summary regarding the comment I noted above, he was writing as if speaking for a third (unfriendly) party, and not in his own voice. This was not at all clear to me when I read it.

      In any case, for me the matter is settled and I hope to see Mr. Roddis' continued contributions here in the future.

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    7. I'm glad to hear that BM. You are both valued members of a "voluntary" community.

      :)

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