Dan Flynn

Production, not destruction, is the engine of growth. More than 150 years ago, Frederic Bastiat observed his fellow Frenchmen falling for the notion that “it is a good thing to break windows, that it causes money to circulate, and that the encouragement of industry in general will be the result of it.” Simpletons noticed the man with the broken window paying the glazier to replace it. They could not have noticed that had the window not broken, the man would have had money to buy something that he wanted—and still have a window.
It’s called the broken window fallacy. And despite its simple logic, liberals have acted as though it was never written. From Franklin Roosevelt’s wild-eyed idea to pay farmers to plow under crops and slay livestock to Barack Obama’s mush-headed cash-for-clunkers program that subsidized the destruction of functional automobiles, liberal schemes perpetually confuse destruction for production.

5 thoughts on “Dan Flynn

  1. s.A

    In economic terms, the Japanese have lost billions in property damage, countless diverted labor hours, and thousands of their island’s greatest natural resource: people. But to hear some talk, one might think that they'd hit the lottery instead of gotten hit by an earthquake.

    “Paradoxically, natural disasters—and the need to rebuild—can prove a catalyst to economic activity,” Robert Cookson and David Pilling write in the Financial Times. Lawrence Summers, former secretary of the Treasury and president of Harvard University, flirted with the earthquakes-are-stimulus theory. Summers, director of the White House National Economic Council for President Obama, conceded on CNBC that the natural disaster may “add complexity to Japan’s challenge of economic recovery,” but highlighted the possibility of “some temporary increments ironically to GDP [gross domestic product] as a process of rebuilding takes place.”

    Did the tsunami short out their mental circuits?

    Reply
  2. s.A

    If the broken window fallacy weren’t, well, fallacious, then graffiti taggers and vandals prolific in economically depressed urban areas might be regarded as harbingers of good times rather than symptoms of decline. Instead, government rightly punishes rather than pays such ne’er-do-wells.

    Nobody prays for a blizzard, a volcano eruption, or a hurricane. They pray after one. Natural disasters provoke economic activity the way burglars do. The victims expend capital to replace lost items. But they would have possessed their items and their money had the crime never occurred.

    What makes falling for the broken window fallacy so foolish in the case of Japan is that people, not just property, were broken. Human capital is the most valuable resource of all. You can replace broken windows. You can’t replace broken people.

    Whether through an act of God or an act of government, vandalism as stimulus works about as well as redistribution—a kind of pocketbook vandalism—as stimulus. This is because both destroy existing wealth rather than create wealth. Growing the economy is not a parlor game—rearranging Monopoly money or compelling the guy with the most chips to put them back in the pot. It’s about producing. Liberals rarely do this, and never get this.

    The broken window fallacy is just one of many pernicious, enduring economic falsehoods. Reversing the moral incentives of the market by rewarding failure and punishing success is on display in bailouts and “progressive” taxation. Government, rather than buyers and sellers, setting the price proved disastrous in 1970s gas lines but will return through ObamaCare omnisciently overruling the market. Marx’s theory of surplus value—the idea of profit as theft—would be the death knell of free enterprise if codified, yet serves as the basis for about half of Michael Moore’s pronouncements.

    The no-competence, high-confidence engineers of such policies are a dangerous mix of certitude and stupidity. There is no reasoning with such people. There is no teaching them either.

    Reply
  3. shinichi

    Broken Window Fallacy Besets Japan and U.S.
    March 21, 2011

    Aftermath of Tsunami
    by Dan Flynn
    Originally published in Human Events.

    http://www.yaf.org/news/broken-window-fallacy-besets-japan-and-u-s/

    In economic terms, the Japanese have lost billions in property damage, countless diverted labor hours, and thousands of their island’s greatest natural resource: people. But to hear some talk, one might think that they’d hit the lottery instead of gotten hit by an earthquake.

    “Paradoxically, natural disasters—and the need to rebuild—can prove a catalyst to economic activity,” Robert Cookson and David Pilling write in the Financial Times. Lawrence Summers, former secretary of the Treasury and president of Harvard University, flirted with the earthquakes-are-stimulus theory. Summers, director of the White House National Economic Council for President Obama, conceded on CNBC that the natural disaster may “add complexity to Japan’s challenge of economic recovery,” but highlighted the possibility of “some temporary increments ironically to GDP [gross domestic product] as a process of rebuilding takes place.”

    Did the tsunami short out their mental circuits?

    Production, not destruction, is the engine of growth. More than 150 years ago, Frederic Bastiat observed his fellow Frenchmen falling for the notion that “it is a good thing to break windows, that it causes money to circulate, and that the encouragement of industry in general will be the result of it.” Simpletons noticed the man with the broken window paying the glazier to replace it. They could not have noticed that had the window not broken, the man would have had money to buy something that he wanted—and still have a window.

    It’s called the broken window fallacy. And despite its simple logic, liberals have acted as though it was never written. From Franklin Roosevelt’s wild-eyed idea to pay farmers to plow under crops and slay livestock to Barack Obama’s mush-headed cash-for-clunkers program that subsidized the destruction of functional automobiles, liberal schemes perpetually confuse destruction for production.

    If the broken window fallacy weren’t, well, fallacious, then graffiti taggers and vandals prolific in economically depressed urban areas might be regarded as harbingers of good times rather than symptoms of decline. Instead, government rightly punishes rather than pays such ne’er-do-wells.

    Nobody prays for a blizzard, a volcano eruption, or a hurricane. They pray after one. Natural disasters provoke economic activity the way burglars do. The victims expend capital to replace lost items. But they would have possessed their items and their money had the crime never occurred.

    What makes falling for the broken window fallacy so foolish in the case of Japan is that people, not just property, were broken. Human capital is the most valuable resource of all. You can replace broken windows. You can’t replace broken people.

    Whether through an act of God or an act of government, vandalism as stimulus works about as well as redistribution—a kind of pocketbook vandalism—as stimulus. This is because both destroy existing wealth rather than create wealth. Growing the economy is not a parlor game—rearranging Monopoly money or compelling the guy with the most chips to put them back in the pot. It’s about producing. Liberals rarely do this, and never get this.

    The broken window fallacy is just one of many pernicious, enduring economic falsehoods. Reversing the moral incentives of the market by rewarding failure and punishing success is on display in bailouts and “progressive” taxation. Government, rather than buyers and sellers, setting the price proved disastrous in 1970s gas lines but will return through ObamaCare omnisciently overruling the market. Marx’s theory of surplus value—the idea of profit as theft—would be the death knell of free enterprise if codified, yet serves as the basis for about half of Michael Moore’s pronouncements.

    The no-competence, high-confidence engineers of such policies are a dangerous mix of certitude and stupidity. There is no reasoning with such people. There is no teaching them either.

    Reply
  4. shinichi

    Young America’s Foundation

    http://www.yaf.org/

    Young America’s Foundation is committed to ensuring that increasing numbers of young Americans understand and are inspired by the ideas of individual freedom, a strong national defense, free enterprise, and traditional values.

    As the principal outreach organization of the Conservative Movement, the Foundation introduces thousands of American youth to these principles. We accomplish our mission by providing essential conferences, seminars, educational materials, internships, and speakers to young people across the country.

    **

    Young America’s Foundation (YAF) is a conservative youth organization, founded in 1969, whose self-described mission is to ensure that increasing numbers of young Americans understand and are inspired by the ideas of individual freedom, a strong national defense, free enterprise, and traditional values.

    Reply
  5. shinichi

    Human Events

    http://humanevents.com/

    The Declaration of Independence begins: “When in the course of Human Events…” In reporting the news, Human Events—the nation’s first conservative weekly—is objective. We aim for accurate presentation of all the facts. But we are not impartial. We look at events through eyes that favor limited constitutional government, local self-government, private enterprise and individual freedom. These were the principles that inspired the Founding Fathers. We believe that today the same principles will preserve freedom in America.

    Human Events has been the nation’s leading conservative voice since we were established in 1944. Our reporters and contributors are among the nation’s most influential and powerful conservative voices, heard and trusted on Main Street and on Capitol Hill. Human Events is the news source President Reagan called his “favorite newspaper” and we still hold high the Reaganesque principles of free enterprise, limited government and, above all, a staunch, unwavering defense of American freedom.

    **

    Human Events is a conservative American political news and analysis website. Founded in 1944 as a print newspaper, Human Events became a digital-only publication in 2013.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *