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A
Rare and Precious Bird
The Free Market Ideal
by
Leo Melamed
International Financial Forum 2010
Beijing, China
November 9, 2010
In
recent years, "Wall Street" has become the accepted
sound-bite for the cause of the
debt crisis. During the ensuing panic, this theme sold well in
the United States, both on Capital
Hill as well as on Main Street. As did the so-called lack of
regulation---a "politically correct" answer
for all the problems. Don't get me wrong, this is not an attempt
to absolve Wall Street,
the banks, or the private sector from
blame. Sadly, there was much at fault with greed playing a
major role in what happened. Wall Street institutions in their
rush for greater immediate returns
irrespective of consequential long-term risks, were guilty of
irresponsible behavior and in some
cases malfeasance. They deserved to be punished.
However,
the anti-Wall Street theme resulted in an unwarranted and unceasing
barrage by appointed and elected officials against American
business in general. It generated an all-out
legislative and regulatory agenda to fix the perceived problem.
Unfortunately, corrective
measures undertaken under panicked conditions are always dangerous
and often counter-productive. Sometimes they result in unforeseen
consequences. The collective blame on Wall
Street, the banks, U.S. business was translated by some as a
failure of the free market ideal. This
was a blatantly false and dangerous premise. Worse, it represents
a message that is roundly
applauded by every enemy of liberty on the planet. It brought
to mind the warning by economist
Milton Friedman: "The challenge for my generation was to
provide an intellectual defense of
liberty. The challenge for your generation is to keep it."
Wall
Street as the main villain completely ignores the most egregious
culprit of the financial collapse: two Government Sponsored
Enterprises, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. These
two GESs were on an affordable-housing mission becoming the largest
buyers of subprime
mortgages between 2004 and 2007. It was a mission encouraged
by elected and appointed
federal officials who presented themselves as champions of affordable
housing. According to the
former Fannie Mae Chief of Credit Officer, as of mid-2008, more
than 70% in high-risk
mortgages were accounted for by the federal government in one
way or another with nearly two-thirds of that held by Fannie
and Freddie. The Wall Street Journal called it, "One of
the great political scandals of our age." And as far
as regulatory authority, there were plenty of rules on the
books to prevent much of the private sector's wrong doing.
But instead of demanding strict
adherence, government assisted the private sectors risk-taking
appetite by keeping interest rates
historically low and opening the spigot for increased leverage
which served to accentuate the
dangers in the marketplace. Thus, in my opinion, the financial
reforms recently adopted, to a
large degree, represent a grave misdirect which might do harm
to the essence of America's
success story. I can only hope that the flaws in this legislation
will be corrected in the days
ahead.
The
American Free Market ideal---symbolized by its national emblem,
the bald eagle, a rare and precious bird---was born in the
Declaration of Independence at the precise moment in
1776 when Thomas Jefferson and his cadre of revolutionaries declared
the entitlement of some
self-evident truths among which are life, liberty and the pursuit
of happiness. During the two
plus centuries that followed the adoption of this principle by
a people of immigrant ancestry and
a multi-cultural heritage, it produced an unprecedented result:
It became a lightning rod for
ideas. It created a crucible for innovation. It became the decisive
driver of progress in science,
technology, and economic development. It was the fundamental
ideal that brought this nation to
the pinnacle of success. Oh, and one more thing, it changed the
course of civilization.
To understand
how and why this outcome transpired one must recognize that
the American free market ideal is not simply an economic principle
giving an individual the right to
produce goods and services without coercion or government intervention.
As economist
Friedrich Hayek explained, it is a social philosophy encompassing
ethics, moral values,
jurisprudence, ideas, and a way of life. The American free market
ideal from its inception
unleashed the most powerful economic and political influence,
first on the U.S., and ultimately
on the rest of the world. At its core is Liberty, the right to
act pursuant to one's judgment; the
right to examine ideas; the right to experiment and explore;
the right of private property. It
prized competition. It didn't take long before the world recognized
the value of this ideal. In
France the comparable, "Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite," was
adopted. In the Constitutions of
Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, peace, order and good government.
In Japan, its 1947
Constitution included, life, liberty and property. Similar references
can be found throughout
numerous nations in the world.
Indeed, here
in China, in the late 1970s, the great Deng Xiaoping, regarded
as the primary architect of modern China and its dramatic economic
reform, espoused a philosophy that in many
ways echoed the American free market ideal. The crux of Deng
Xiaoping's philosophy was
based on pragmatism and embodied in his dictum to seek truth
from facts. The criteria for
success, he believed, are determined by common sense and flexibility
rather than by ideology.
He dramatized this philosophy by insisting, "No matter if
it is a white cat or a black cat; as long
as it can catch mice, it is a good cat." And Deng did not
just focus on the economy. Deng
identified other areas where changes had to be made for China
to become a world power: There
was the need to revamp the educational system, especially universities
and research institutes;
lawyers had to be trained in the intricacies of commercial and
corporate law; there was need for
an expanded judicial system; more Chinese had to be permitted
to study overseas, and more
foreign students and tourists to come to China.
Since
the adoption of Deng Xiaoping's vision of common sense economics,
China pursued a pragmatic path towards a market-driven economy.
The results have been nothing short
of astounding and are reminiscent of the early economic successes
occasioned in the United
States. China's economy during the past 30 years has changed
from a centrally planned system
that was largely closed to international trade to a more market-oriented
economy that has a
rapidly growing private sector and is a major player in the global
economy. Reforms started with
the phasing out of collectivized agriculture, and expanded to
include the gradual liberalization of
prices, fiscal decentralization, increased autonomy for state
enterprises, the foundation of a
diversified banking system, the development of stock and futures
markets, the rapid growth of
the non-state sector, and the opening to foreign trade and investment.
Deng Xiaoping's ideology
lifted more people out of poverty than did the efforts of any
other world leader, anytime,
anywhere.
To one degree
or another, the facets of the free market ideal were adopted
by nearly every nation on the planet and served to effect world
populations in every aspect of their lives. Its
beauty lies in its inherent ability to unshackle human energies
whether in science, medicine,
technology, agriculture, space exploration, transportation, health,
or education. The ideal also
promotes cooperation between nations of the world. The Wall
Street Journal recently noted that
the Chilean miners owe their lives to the free market ideal.
It was free market applications that
resulted in the development of the Center Rock Drill in the U.S.,
coupled with innovations from
Germany, Japan, South Korea, and of course Chile to combine and
achieve the miracle. This
example is reminiscent of the Free to Choose TV series several
decades back, when Milton
Friedman explained to the whole world the basic principles underlying
the free market by
examining the make-up of a lead pencil and the variety of global
participants it took to build it.
America
had the first mover advantage. According to Encyclopedia
Britannica of the 159 great inventions
of the 20th Century, 110 were invented in the U.S. That is
nearly seventy percent. Most profoundly, the revolutionary
changes the world experienced during the last three
decades of the previous century were the result of free market
applications primarily built on
American innovations. This technological tsunami---the so-called
information revolution---
empowered the people on this planet to have instant informational
flows in total disregard of
internal prohibitions or national boundaries. It offered everyone
a stark, uncompromising
comparison of standards of living, economic freedoms, and the
value of liberty. It proved to be
the common denominator for the most dramatic upheavals ever experienced
in the annals of mankind.
In what seemed like a made for TV video, we were ring-side spectators
at a global rebellion
when in less than an eye-blink the Berlin Wall fell, Germany
was unified, Apartheid ended,
Eastern Europe was liberated, the Cold War ceased, and a doctrine
that impaired the freedom of
three generations, wrecked the economies of scores of nations,
and misdirected the destiny of the
entire planet for seven decades, was decisively repudiated. How
quickly we forget.
Many
nations participated in engendering these global changes, however,
it was a singular triumph of the free market ideal and a clear
example of its impact on civilization. And it
was equally a triumph of Wall Street. In truth, without American
business know-how, its ability
to attract investments, its system of capital formation, its
willingness to assume risk, and its vast
financial resources, the result might not have been possible.
Make no mistake, the Internet,
Google, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and a host of other enterprises
based on amazing innovations
for advancing information and knowledge to the world's populations
are primarily consequences
of the free market ideal. And, yes, they represent achievements
chiefly underwritten by
American business and Wall Street.
It is no
secret that those same free market dynamics served to overpower
the forces of tyranny in two World Wars. Most important, America
has never hesitated to explain the virtues
of its free market ideal and never kept secret its components
and features. While knowing that in
doing so it was creating its own competitors, America never wavered
in its fundamental mission
to spread its know-how to every corner of civilization, teaching
and encouraging people to
follow. And with great success! Inevitably, the world caught
on and caught up. The world of
today is a hugely different place than it was, say, a century
ago. Not simply because of major
advances in science and technology although that is its most
obvious and tangible difference, but
because those very advances are a direct product of the free
market ideal that swept across every
nook and cranny of this planet. Standards of living have broadly
improved, life expectancy has
greatly expanded, and the quality of life for much of civilization
is vastly enriched.
Thus,
as we respond to the causes of the recent meltdown, as we reform
the rules relating to financial markets, as we harmonize international
rules and procedures, we must be ever so
careful that this rare and precious bird---the free market ideal---remains
unharmed.
* * *
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