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Lawrence Kudlow
Lawrence Kudlow
11 Feb 2012
A King Dollar GOP?

Out on the campaign trail, Fed head Ben Bernanke is an unpopular guy. Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich have both … Read More.

28 Jan 2012
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You would think that with one of the weakest economic recoveries on record, President Barack Obama would be … Read More.

21 Jan 2012
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The Death of Democratic Capitalism?

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How far will the Obama administration move to assert regulatory control over key sectors of the economy? Are we moving away from democratic capitalism and toward some sort of corporatist state-directed economy? That could be the biggest stock market and economic-growth issue facing us today.

Stocks plunged almost 300 points on Monday over new fears of bank nationalization. On Tuesday, shares recovered about 100 points after Treasury man Tim Geithner testified that repayment of TARP loans would be OK in some cases. But Geithner added that the decision to let banks repay the federal government will largely depend on the credit needs of the broader economy.

So while some investors believe Geithner backed away from the prospect of government-controlled banks, it's really not clear that he did so.

The issue at hand is the possible conversion of the TARP money now held by banks in the form of non-voting preferred stock into common stock with full voting rights. White House and Treasury officials have spoken of this possibility in recent days, and it plainly raises the issue of government ownership and backdoor nationalization of the banks — or at least the major banks.

To wit, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan look to be recovering their health. They want to de-TARP, and perhaps Geithner will let them. But if he doesn't, these institutions might be forced to convert their preferred TARP shares into common stock, thereby giving Team Obama tremendous sway over their operations. As for the less-healthy big banks, one suspects the government will increase its 36 percent ownership in Citigroup and take a new ownership position in Bank of America.

The results of the government's economic "stress tests" — due early next month — will complicate these calculations. And at the end of the day I think Team Obama will interpret the stress tests in whatever manner serves its larger purpose, which I suspect is backdoor nationalization.

Just to confuse matters more, the congressional strings attached to TARP might not only apply to the banks, but could apply to participants in TALF and PPIP — the new government-lending programs designed to detoxify bank balance sheets. I don't know this is the case, but it could well be the case.

This is why most private investors have stayed away from the two early TALF auctions.

And JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says his bank won't play in PPIP because "we've learned our lesson." He calls TARP a "scarlet letter." But what he's really saying as America's leading banker is that he doesn't want his bank or shareholders to be run by the government.

An old friend e-mailed me this week about how to characterize Obama's economic interventions into the banking and auto sectors (with health care next on the list). He says it's not really socialism. Nor is it fascism. He suggests it's state capitalism. But I think of it more as corporate capitalism. Or even crony capitalism, as Cato's Dan Mitchell puts it.

It's not socialism because the government won't actually own the means of production. It's not fascism because America is a democracy, not a dictatorship, and Obama's program doesn't reach way down through all the sectors, but merely seeks to control certain troubled areas. And in the Obama model, it would appear there's virtually no room for business failure. So the state props up distressed segments of the economy in some sort of 21st-century copycat version of Western Europe's old social-market economy.

So call it corporate capitalism or state capitalism or government-directed capitalism. But it still represents a huge change from the American economic tradition. It's a far cry from the free-market principles that governed the three-decade-long Reagan expansion, which now seems in jeopardy. And with cap-and-trade looming, this corporate capitalism will only grow more intense.

This is all very disturbing. For three decades, supply-siders like me and my dear friend Jack Kemp talked about democratic capitalism. This refers to the small business that grows into the large one. It means necessary after-tax incentives are being provided to reward Schumpeterian entrepreneurship, innovation and risk-taking.

At the center of this model is the much-vaunted entrepreneur who must be supported by a thriving investor class that will provide the necessary capital to finance the new economy. But also necessary for the Schumpeterian model is a healthy banking and financial system that will provide the necessary lending credit to finance new ideas.

Do we truly believe that raising tax rates on investors and moving to some sort of government-controlled banking system will sufficiently fund the entrepreneur and sustain democratic capitalism? Do we really believe that a federal-government-directed economic system will generate a sufficient supply of capital and credit to produce a strong economy?

I doubt it.

To find out more about Lawrence Kudlow and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


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Sir;...Normally the only thing democratic about capitalism is the people's choice on what product to buy...More and more they are only offered particle board crap to buy at inflated prices...Wages are driven down and quality is driven down until interest rates make the sale... Capital hates democracy, and only tolerates it for want of a choice... I will admit that our government is not much of a democracy, but it beats business to hell and back on that score... What you call democracy is clearly anarchy... That is the true nature of capitalism... It is multiple manufacturers competing for a limited market selling closer and closer to their costs until the market is glutted...Well, it helps that there really is more cooperation that competition, and that many business have monopolies, and that high profits have drained all available wealth out of the market...It could be that we have reached a point where the government must take over the capital it supports to save it from itself...You know that in medieval England the church and king leaned on each other for support... There came a day when to have religion at all as a support, the king had to take it over, and manage that wealth for the ruling class...For most of this county's history it has been business which has told government how to govern, and government should have been able to tell business how to do business, since it was only fair... For too long business has governed itself, and steered government off its normal course... I don't think government wants the job of running business...If they wanted to work they would not be in politics... Instead, they know well what you fail to notice at all: That capitalism is failing, and every time it breaks down the people pay to get it up and running and are left poorer for the wealth of the rich...All the trillions of dollars we are spending to keep capital working has not escaped the attention of the people, and they rightly hold the government to account...So government must demand responsibility, or at least the appearance of responsibility from business... To not do so risks losing control over the whole situation, and of all the people...Governments and economies have been swept away with less cause...And it is sad, because a government over the economy is socialism, but though the people hate the word they need the concept...If the economy is not governed it will govern us as it has; to greater widespread poverty and hopelessness... Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Mon Apr 27, 2009 8:03 PM
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