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Stuck in '89

The fall of the Berlin Wall may seem like ancient history. But the economic debate has never moved beyond it.

 
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One of history's great economic experiments ended 20 years ago. The odd thing is that we still haven't figured out what the results mean. The comparative experience of West Germany and East Germany during the Cold War was the stuff of terrible human drama. But it also added up to the closest thing that economists have had to a scientific trial with identical twins. The two countries provided the clearest measure of how well a "command" economy could perform against a market economy. Here were the same people from the same culture, starting from a virtual clean slate at precisely the same level of development after World War II—but under radically different forms of economic organization. On Nov. 9, 1989, the final test results were delivered by the thousands of East Germans who streamed across the border. One of the "twins" had produced the most vibrant economy in Europe; the other had become a place of darkness and dysfunction. Milton Friedman, the foremost champion of modern free-market thinking, later said that that the fall of the Berlin Wall was worth more than everything he had said and written. It was "undoubtedly the most influential action for the last hundred years because it put finis to an attitude," Friedman told C-SPAN's Brian Lamb in 1994. "The lesson from the fall of the Berlin Wall was that we have too extensive a government and we ought to cut it down." (Click here to follow Michael Hirsh. Article continued below)

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The Wall Falls

That certainly was the ideological response of both politicians and economists. The abrupt and miserable end of the socialist experiment—it all happened so fast, with East Germany getting absorbed into West Germany on Oct. 3, 1990, and the Soviet Union disappearing a year later, on Dec. 26, 1991—shifted the axis of the economic debate sharply rightward. Economic thinking in the United States had already been moving that way, a response to stagflation and failures of big government here at home. But in the aftermath of the Cold War, it was anathema in Washington to advocate government solutions of any kind for anything. Moderate Republicans became small-government zealots and liberal Democrats turned into "Eisenhower Republicans," which is what Bill Clinton mockingly called himself.

That's where we still are today. To a striking degree the economic and political debate remains mired in 1989. As evidence, consider the reaction of the Republican Party to the Obama administration's policies on financial regulation, fiscal stimulus, and health care. The Republicans are using the vast bailout of the financial system begun by the Bush administration to justify holding "tea parties" and threatening an Ayn Rand-inspired "strike" against Washington. This is absurd, considering that what precipitated the biggest government intervention since the Great Depression was not too much but too little government—too meager regulation of a Wall Street that has run amok for two decades, drunk on out-of-control derivatives trading. The Republicans are also turning the debate over a "public option" in health care into yet another orgy of big-government bashing—as if the government were not already running Medicare.

The Democrats, for their part, haven't figured things out much better. They remain unduly in awe of Wall Street and fearful of tampering with the markets. Both the Obama administration and the Democratic-controlled Congress are taking an ultracautious approach to regulation of everything from bank size to derivatives trading. No one dares talk about the deeper problem—that a financial system whose role was once to be an intermediary for disbursing capital to the real economy has instead come to dominate the real economy. Doing something about that would require too much government intervention, after all. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, appearing on Meet the Press on Sunday, talked up the legislation on regulatory reform going through Congress. What he didn't mention is that legislation is even now getting drilled full of loopholes, thanks to intense Wall Street lobbying that is funded at least in part by taxpayer money. Pressed by host David Gregory, the reticent Geithner gave up his bottom line: he wants a giant insurer like AIG to get itself healthy enough "so the taxpayer can get out." When Gregory asked him, "After that you don't care what happens?" Geithner responded simply: "No." This is the same AIG that nearly brought down the financial system all by itself.

In other words, the idea of government minimalism still frames every debate. Is this wise? The great economist Paul Samuelson, writing a few years after the fall of the Wall on the 46th birthday of his classic economics textbook, cautioned that the Cold War was not the black-and-white contest of economies that it was made out to be. The end of the Cold War, Samuelson wrote, really only meant that "victory has been declared in favor of the market-pricing mechanism over the command mechanism of regulatory bureaucracy." The victor was not pure laissez-faire capitalism but the "mixed economy" that had dominated U.S. and Western capitalism for most of the Soviet Union's history, Samuelson said. In other words, markets modified by government taxes and government-orchestrated transfers of wealth to limit inequality, and government monetary and fiscal policies to curb recessions and inflation.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: memo02 @ 11/10/2009 8:45:16 PM

    From the 70's untill now borrowing money with high interest, become the most profitably business in the world, for most of this foreing country's, was the example of this economic catastropic and embarrassed situation we live on today !,
    Economist's play one of the biggest roles on history,but also become the most radical socialism in our governments,.
    people don't understand how this happen !, cause they don't witness this, in 1989, or before that time, the question is what we learn from it ?, I believe nothing cause still happening, just an advice to prevent another mistake !, call you Governor or Senator at each state, don't let this happen again !, I understand we need to fix our actual Health Care, but, this is not the right time yet !, not like this please listen people, I don't believe in Democrats or Republicans both looking for the same ideology,...

  • Posted By: memo02 @ 11/09/2009 9:09:04 AM

    Just I let you know, this is bigger of what we think, and people need to know,.
    Mr:Obama know all this already just, I still don't get it, why his doing, what is doing right know, But, we going to leave it, soon or later we will find out the truth,..

  • Posted By: memo02 @ 11/09/2009 8:56:31 AM

    Just I still remember so many people was opposed to the free market or NAFTA, North American Free Trade Agreement ?, but, before this in 1980, Many factories move out the country, just by the borders from Mexico and Canada, untill now still these factories there, why,.
    So " ggdwill " don't leave yet this debate just start, many folks don't have idea,how many people desagree with this new trade and Congress along with Mr:Carter and his economist which of course this person was not Mr: Alan, many people believe was him, Mr:Regan just follow that part of the business was made already, besides this is not the first time economics play with effect of recession and depressions, but we never play with credit untill 1989 !,...

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