Capitalism
Without
Capital?
By Ron Paul
October 16,
2008 "Lew
Rockwell" --
It has been
long
understood
that our
federal
government
is going
deeper into
debt,
consistently
raising the
debt ceiling
and
demonstrating
no fiscal
restraint.
In recent
years, debt
ceiling
increases
have been
placed in
“must pass”
legislation
as a means
to guarantee
that
Republicans
as well as
Democrats
would vote
for them
when
Congress was
under
Republican
control.
We also know
our nation’s
“negative
savings
rate”
reflects the
habits of
private
citizens,
showing
those habits
to be not
tremendously
different
than the
habits of
the public
sector. Yet,
the signs of
decline are
becoming
ever more
apparent. So
apparent, in
fact, that
it seems
unlikely
that
bailouts or
other
gimmicks
will have
even
short-term
success.
More
inflation,
and creating
moral hazard
by bailing
out
egregious
offenders,
is a recipe
for
disaster.
These
activities
can seem to
provide some
short-term
relief, but
it seems we
are now at a
significant
crisis
point, where
monetary
policy
gimmicks
don’t
provide the
band-aids
they did in
the past.
Not only is
our nation
on the verge
of
bankruptcy,
but so are
its people
and private
institutions.
We are now
repeatedly
hearing
about
businesses
“needing to
access the
credit
market to
make
payroll.”
This is an
unmistakable
sign of more
dire
consequences
ahead for
the economy.
If
businesses
must borrow
just to make
payroll,
this is
evidence of
a severe
undercapitalization
that cannot
be
sustained,
even for the
short run.
Couple these
facts with
items such
as the
explosion of
the “payday
loan”
industry and
the
unmasking of
the false
sense of
economic
well-being
is nearly
complete.
These payday
loan
companies
use
preferred
access to
easy credit
to inject
cash into
the hands of
the working
poor. They
are nearly
always set
up in
lower-income
neighborhoods.
These
people, who
are
struggling
to buy food
and pay
rent, get
addicted to
the credit
drug. Their
standard of
living is
only further
depressed by
the interest
payments on
these loans
that make
them
profitable
to their
providers.
Thus, the
recipients
are left
even less
capable of
paying for
items such
as food and
housing in
the long
run, without
using this
credit again
and again.
These people
are often
the very
ones being
paid by
businesses
who “borrow
to make
payroll.”
This is the
dark
underbelly
of the fiat
money,
borrow-and-spend
economy this
nation has
been
building. As
the
government
takes over
more and
more
functions of
the economy
many see the
rise of
socialism as
an antidote
to this
failure of
“capitalism.”
However, the
fact remains
that our
economy has
been
increasingly
running on
debt, not
capital.
Capitalism
does not
exist
without
capital and
debt is not,
has never
been and
will never
be a form of
capital.
Only now are
we seeing
the more
dire
implications
of an
economy
without
capital.
Dr. Ron Paul
is a
Republican
member of
Congress
from Texas.