Economists cannot know what is ‘better.’ They can only know what is ‘more.’ They have numbers. They can count. They can add up ‘more’. As for ‘better,’ they have no idea. So, in their little minds, more is better.

That is the thinking that has driven the profession…and much of the world economy…to absurdity. Throughout the last 50 years, more looked so much like better, no one worried too much about the difference. More cars. More houses. More food. More gadgets. What was not to like?

But the cost was more debt. And by the 21st century the burden of debt had become so great that the system could no longer move forward. Here is how it worked, up until the early spring of 2007:

The Chinese, and others, made more stuff. The Arabs, and others, pumped more oil.

Americans, and others, created more credit and used the money to buy more stuff.

Rather than demand payment — in gold — for their excess dollars, as they would have before 1971, the exporters took the money and lent it back to the Americans. In this way, the US never really had to settle up. Approximately $8 trillion of purchasing power — the accumulated trade deficits between 1970 and 2007 — was created in this way. There is supposed to be ‘no such thing as a free lunch’ in economics. But for years Americans ate breakfast, lunch, and many of their dinners too at foreigners’ expense.

Not needing to redeem the old credits, new ones were made available to Americans. Cheap credit drove up housing prices…and gave them the collateral to borrow more money and buy more stuff.

But when subprime mortgage market collapsed in ’07-’08, suddenly, US real estate prices stopped rising. This left millions of households in a bind. They could no longer borrow against rising house prices because housing was going down. They had to cut back on spending…which meant less stuff could be sold to them…and it left producers with bulging warehouses with unsold goods.

Economists looked at this situation, after the crash of subprime mortgages in ’07 and ’08, and came to the same conclusion they had on the occasion of every other slowdown over the previous 60 years. The economy needed more “stimulus” to encourage consumers to buy more stuff. They did not notice that consumers already had too much stuff…and that they were now paying the price for buying more stuff than they could afford. Nor did they wonder whether consumers’ lives might be better if they focused more on quality and less on quantity. ‘More’ is all they know; it is all they can do. So they called for ‘more stimulus,’ more debt, more credit, more spending, and more stuff.

But more is not always the right answer. There are times when less is better.

One of those times was in the mid-1930s…when Germany faced a critical decision. More? Or less?

Adam Tooze, a British historian, has written a marvelous book on the Nazi economy, The Wages of Destruction. He shows that, far from illustrating the success of intelligent central planning, the German economy of the Third Reich was a disaster. The National Socialists — or “Nazis” — had their plans for Germany. They were determined to put them into practice, regardless of what the Germans may have wanted for themselves. They fiddled with one sector after another. When one fix failed to produce the desired results, actually bringing unintended and undesired consequences, they tried to fix the fix with a new fix. Most of these fixes involved spending money — if not on actual output, then on bureaucracies that regulated output. And most of them were directed towards a goal that only a demagogue politician or a lame economist would find attractive — making Germany self-sufficient. Imports cost money, they reasoned. Besides, trade forced a nation to behave. Neither was attractive to the Nazis.

Like America in the 2000s, by the mid-1930s Germany had already spent too much money — with the military as its biggest single expense. It faced enemies much more real and dangerous than America’s ‘terrorist’ adversaries. And under Adolph Hitler’s leadership it had decided to invest heavily in armaments. This created a sense of purpose for many people and a source of ‘demand’ that got people working again. Germany was still a relatively poor country, with a standard of living only about half the US equivalent. An autoworker in Munich, for example, could not expect anywhere near the same lifestyle as one in Detroit. Henry Ford paid his workers so well they were able to afford large houses with hot and cold running water and electricity. They could buy automobiles too…which gave a huge boost to America’s heavy industry. When war began, the US could fairly quickly convert its auto factories to production of jeeps, tanks and trucks. Germany could not.

In Germany, automobiles were still a luxury item. Few people owned them; certainly not the people who made them. Military orders made up for the lack of demand from the civilian population.

In this regard, many economists looked at Germany and labeled the rearmament program — from an economic standpoint — as a central planning success story. It ‘put people back to work.’ It ‘got the economy moving again.’ More stuff was being produced. ‘More’ worked! From all over Europe, people came to admire the revival in Germany. American Congressmen praised Hitler. So did many magazine editors and other leaders in France and Britain too.

Besides, compared to what was going on in Russia, Japan and Italy… Germany looked positively benign, if not a perfect role model. Stalin was purging or starving his enemies — millions of them. Benito Mussolini had invaded Abyssinia and was busily massacring the locals. The Japanese were beginning their bloody war against the Chinese. Hitler may have sounded mad from time to time, and he may have murdered many of his rivals on the ‘night of the long knives,’ but now — by 1935 — he was beginning to sound reasonable, at least in comparison.

But vast spending on the military brought problems for the Nazi leadership. The German economy was still recovering from the destruction of WWI, the loss of the Ruhr heavy industrial area, the Great Depression and the reparations payments. Germany. While other economies had been forced off the gold standard, Germany held to its strong mark policies. It lacked the raw materials needed to build heavy military equipment and the fuel needed to power a modern economy and modern war machine. Those could only be bought with foreign currencies, which it could earn by trade, or by drawing down its own hard currency reserves of gold.

By 1936, it was clear that the government would run out of money in just a few months. The Nazi leadership had already ‘fixed’ the farm sector — with various jury rigs and many unintended consequences. The market system had largely been replaced by a system of bureaucratic meddles and price controls which, naturally and predictably, led to shortages that had to be reconciled by rationing.

Now, this same sort of meddling was causing shortages in the manufacturing sector too. If something were not done, the whole rearmament effort could come to a halt. Germany was not rich enough to be able to afford guns and butter — at least not on the scale promised by the Nazi Party. And with their spreading system of bureaucratic management, neither the guns nor butter were likely to last long.

At the time, Mr. Hitler was lucky to have at least one economist with a clearer head than most of his other advisors and henchmen. Carl Friedrich Goerdeler came from a tough, conservative Prussian family. He was smart. He was a good organizer. He was persuasive. Goerdeler seemed like a decent sort, too. After all, in 1933, as mayor of Leipzig, he refused to enforce the national boycott against Jewish businesses and ordered the police to release several Jews who had been taken hostage by the S.A.

Goerdeler may not have been impressed with Adolf Hitler in every respect. Still, as late as 1936 he believed the Fuhrer was an “enlightened dictator” and that if he could only explain to him what was going on, he might be led to make the right choice. He saw readily that you can’t continue to spend more than you earn; Germany would have to adjust its priorities. ‘More’ would no longer work.

While he knew Hitler was dead-set on military expansion, Goerdeler urged the Fuhrer to forget the whole thing. Germany could not afford both guns and butter, he argued, and the German people would be better off with butter. Devalue the mark, he urged. Abandon the program of breakneck re-militarization. Come to terms with England, France and America. Drop the hard-line anti-Jewish claptrap. In short, become a civilized nation with a market economy, rather than a centrally-planned war economy.

He wanted to take this message to Hitler personally, to talk to him, to try to persuade him. But his friends talked him out of it. Hitler had put Hermann Goring into a position as his chief economic advisor. But Goring was very unlike Helmut Schacht at the central bank, who was also calling for a more ‘normal’ free market economy. Goring was a central planner…and a Nazi…through and through. So, Goerdeler prepared a memo for Hitler and passed it to Goring. The latter annotated it before passing it to the Fuhrer, marking critical passages “nonsense!”

Instead of embracing Goerdeler’s plan, Hitler came up with his own 4-Year Plan, released in 1936. It rejected a free-market economy altogether. Instead, Germany would have a war economy, in which all economic and financial decisions were subordinate to the interests of the military.

Like today’s neo-cons, Hitler told his followers that Germany was in a fight for its very survival. Therefore, the laws that applied to normal societies — including the laws of economics — no longer applied to Germany:

“The nation does not live for the economy, for economic leaders, or for economic or financial theories; on the contrary, it is finance and the economy, economic leaders and theories, which all owe unqualified service in this struggle for the self-assertion of our nation.”

In the age-old battle between force and persuasion…civilization and barbarianism…the market and politics…central planning and individual planning…the winner was clear. Germany had gone over to the dark side. Hitler had chosen more military spending…more central planning…and more war.

Politics was triumphant. War was inevitable. And Carl Goedeler was soon history. He began to conspire against Adolph Hitler…including the attempt to kill him in 1944. For his trouble, Goedeler was hung in 1945.

Regards,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning

Since founding Agora Inc. in 1979, Bill Bonner has found success and garnered camaraderie in numerous communities and industries. A man of many talents, his entrepreneurial savvy, unique writings, philanthropic undertakings, and preservationist activities have all been recognized and awarded by some of America's most respected authorities. Along with Addison Wiggin, his friend and colleague, Bill has written two New York Times best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day and Empire of Debt. Both works have been critically acclaimed internationally. With political journalist Lila Rajiva, he wrote his third New York Times best-selling book, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets, which offers concrete advice on how to avoid the public spectacle of modern finance. Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force behind The Daily Reckoning. Dice Have No Memory: Big Bets & Bad Economics from Paris to the Pampas, the newest book from Bill Bonner, is the definitive compendium of Bill's daily reckonings from more than a decade: 1999-2010. 

  • gman

    “Economists cannot know what is ‘better.’ They can only know what is ‘more.’ They have numbers. They can count. They can add up ‘more’. As for ‘better,’ they have no idea. So, in their little minds, more is better.”

    this is misleading. economists don’t know “more”. they know “more money”. and is there anyone in the world who would not agree that more money is better?

    “But the cost was more debt.”

    oh bill. bill bill bill. haven’t you heard? money is debt. our money is debt. our currency is a debt currency, repayable only with more debt currency, which requires more debt, which requires more debt currency, which requires more debt. that’s the cost of money. it’s debt. can’t have money without debt, bill.

    “There are times when less is better.”

    that’s the problem with debt currency. when you have less of it, the system does not merely contract. it implodes. given our light-speed financial system today everything probably could implode to zero worldwide in a few hours. there’s your “less”.

  • ken

    The similarities between american neo-cons and germany’s neo-nazis is remarkable.

    In seems america is so far down the road to fascism that all they need is to declare a fuhrer.

  • Mark Gusack

    Pretty good history. This four year plan ended up requiring Hitler begin his territorial expansion to obtain additional economic and military resources long before the German General Staff had planned.

    That is why the merger with Austria and especially the take over of Czechoslovakia was so critical. The invasion of Poland and France would not have been possible without the significant contribution of Czech tanks making up over half the medium models committed.

    However, you made one big mistake. It isn’t the neocons yelling for centralized economic planning. They only focus on increasing expenditures for our military – a process that has gone on almost unabated since 1941 by most presidents and houses of congress. In fact, it is the democrates who tend to centralize control over the economy.

    Add the two together and you get the kind of historical parallel you imply in your article.

  • El gordo de Rosario

    Economists are like my wife. Always asking for more and more, never doing productive things!!

  • Bill frommTennessee

    My oh my, who IS this gman pinhead?
    Clearly he has not read BB for very long at all…..tsk tsk, actually presuming to TEACH BB something everyone else with a brain cell knows BB already knows full well….if BB reads these rejoinders, you just know he smirks a righteous smirk at them all. BB rules!

  • Chris

    I’m sorry but I have to disagree this time. Hitler was fighting the same bankers America is (supposed to be) fighting today ! He had to take drastic action.

    The reparations Germany had to repay were as rediculous as the national debt America has to pay today ! They were in the same position and Hitler was the only one with the balls to stand up to the bankers.

    Unfrotunately they just used him to create a world war which was not what he initially wanted, but was forced into. A world war that lead the world being socialised and Eastern europe being ‘communised’. He saw what those murderous communists did to Russia. The millions of Christians they killed.

    National Socialism is not the same as International Socialism (banker funded communism). It is patritism. Looking aftr your own people. Fascism was not such a bad thing.

  • Chris

    Wrong. The neo-cons work for the bankers. Hitler hated the bankers for destroying Germany finacially after WW1. (inflation of marks, etc.) Unfortunately bankers used him to create WW2 although he never declared war first ! He wanted peace with Britian and not to ‘take over the world’ ! He thought he could route them out while using their money to do it ! Google search “who funded Hitler”

  • Chris

    gman you talk rubbish and even contradict yourself. The system does not implode from having less money. Yes it will have a negative effect, but if people didn’t spend so crazily with debt, then when they stop it wont be so bad (the withdrawl/contraction). It’s better to let the whole system go broke and collapse and start a better debt free society from scratch as Bill has explained numerous times, no matter how bad the ‘withdrawl effects’ are on the addict called America.

    You are basically saying people must carr on spending limitlessly ! What is your solution ?

  • Chris

    ps – Hitler didn’t choose more war. Most countries he ‘invaded’ wanted to be part of the german empire as they were before it split up. Wasn’t there at least one referendum he conducted proving this if I remember correctly ? Hitler ONLY wanted war with communist Russia who he hated with a vengence and whose murders made him look pale in comparison. Google search who funded communism !

  • Samsonov

    Mr. Bonner, just who are these neo-cons that you endlessly equate to Nazis? Do you speak to them regularly to get their thoughts? Can you name one?

  • Bruce Walker

    I’ve always thought the Nazi pursuit of war was the result of them having far and away the coolest looking uniforms. How can you dress a military like Mr. Hitler did and then not use them?

  • gman

    “The system does not implode from having less money.”

    you have to realize why the system has money at all, and what “less money” means.

    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2550156453790090544#

    http://www.moneyasdebt.net/

    “It’s better to let the whole system go broke and collapse and start a better debt free society from scratch”

    better for who, exactly? not for the people who run the system.

    “no matter how bad the ‘withdrawl effects’ are on the addict called America.”

    go outside and stand on your front lawn. look around. imagine what would happen if suddenly you and your neighbors no longer could buy gasoline, the grocery stores closed or took only cash, all 27 million americans on behavior-control medications couldn’t get them, and all of those who have been on welfare their entire lives no longer had any money on their ebt cards. “no matter how bad” takes on a new meaning.

    “You are basically saying people must carr on spending limitlessly !”

    yep. because “spending” means “increasing debt”. that’s the point of the entire system – to make you spend everything you own, everything you will ever own, and more, everything your children will ever own. that’s the point.

    “What is your solution ?”

    oh man. you don’t want to know.

  • gman

    “actually presuming to TEACH BB something everyone else with a brain cell knows BB already knows full well”

    ohhhhh yeah. he knows. he most certainly does full well. but I wasn’t writing to him.

  • Woody in Florida

    Well Bill you got us talking, and arguing, which I feel is a step in the right direction. And gman the only thing that will implode to zero is the currency system. Food, water, houses, or pretty much any tangible thing will retain value. We will just need a new method of exchange, and perhaps as silly as some may find it, precious metals did work for a few years prior to Bretton Woods.

  • Woody in Florida

    And I would like to extend an apology to gman. It is odd that we all know name calling is not really a good way to argue and still some can not resist. Makes it hard for me to listen to them afterwards, and that is unfortunate since they may actually have something that needs to be said.

  • gman

    “And gman the only thing that will implode to zero is the currency system.”

    ok. try spending zero dollars for three months. do everything using alternative methods of payment. can you do it? I sincerely hope you can, because you just might have to do so.

  • gman

    sorry about the multiple posts, sometimes the board shows no result and I try again.

  • gman

    “And I would like to extend an apology to gman.”

    none necessary. it’s the points being made that count.

  • Le Petomane

    Last night I watched Michael Moores Sicko for the first time and I’m moved to say that if a documentary such as this doesn’t convince you that socialised medicine is desirable then you are thoroughly brainwashed. Thoroughly.
    The rest of the civilised world enjoys quality care across the entire population with little or no cost to the patient.
    In Australia, a private industry runs alongside the public one, to satisfy particularly hungry doctors and hospitals. Here is another shining example of the infiltration of greed and fear into American society.
    Here’s the thing. Half or more of you would probably mount an argument against what I have just written. Yet your foe is of one mind, committed, relentless, ruthless and in charge.

  • http://www.cbhbank.com Werner Wolfer

    Hjalmar Schacht was an excellent central banker with many innovative ideas. He was also about the only high official to critizise the “policy on Jews” in a documented public speach (Koenigsberg speach). This saved him his after war career, where he played an important role in the design of the Bundesbank.

  • The InvestorsFriend

    Bill said:

    More cars. More houses. More food. More gadgets. What was not to like?
    But the cost was more debt.

    Yes, Bill, the earth owes a lot more to the Martians than ever before…right?

    When I lend you money I allow you to consume now while I forego consumption. To lend is to share. (But expecting repayment).

    Long live debt!

  • Marcy Fleming

    Bill, your history of Nazi Germany is dubious. There’s a lengthy paper published by the University of Barcelona in Spain titled Privatization Launched By Nazi Germany and details how they reversed the Socialist Weimar policies by transferring industries from public to private hands.
    Germany’s Economic Preparations For War by Burton Klein back in the 50s demonstrated that the German recovery was not due to heavy military spending, there were no Nazi plans to conquer the world and their Keynesian New Deal was more successful than ours. A recent book, Three New Deals, by Wolfgang Schivelbusch
    confirms this. Germany was the last combatant in WW2 to adopt central planning. Also the Nazis actually liberalized the strict gun controls of Weimar contrary to myths here.
    The Barcelona Paper can be accessed through IHR.org archives and there may be more PC places to locate it too.
    I don’t like their Nanny State on smoking, etc., but I’m sick of all the lies about them that have been going for 70 years. That British book seems like worthless garbage as was Peikoff’s Ominous Parallels. Time for serious revisionism.

  • The InvestorsFriend

    Too Much of Good Thing…

    can be…

    Wonderful!

  • mike

    …”leaders” are foxes, and their followers are chickens…at least in a democracy, politicians have to first,knock on the door of public approval before entering!

  • tyler

    Get a clue, gman. More money equals inflation, bozo.

  • Oliver L.

    Agree that the “more is better” psychology has got to end, but (as usual) using Nazi Germany to make your case relies on dubious readings of history…

    Hitler did not want to become part of the globally dominant (mostly Anglo-American) “free trade” system because they would not let Germany participate as an equal member…the Western Allies, especially the French who reinvaded the (industrial) Rhineland in the early 1920s, wanted to keep Germany in a *permanently* subservient economic and political state. Under such conditions it would be both normal and expected for a nation to seek to develop its own resources and allies (especially since the main cause of Germany’s loss in World War One had arguably been the Royal Navy’s blockade of Germany which deprived it of food, medicine, and every manner of material [it was also done in violation of maritime law at the time insofar as it seized the ships of neutral countries and goods which were not explicitly for military usage {British violations of international maritime law also led directly to the practice of unrestricted submarine warfare, something English-language textbooks will inevitably "forget" to mention.}]).

    Hence Hitler’s cultivating allies such as Romania (which had the Ploesti oilfields) or at least maintaing neutrality with countries like Sweden (which supplied most of the metal used for the German armed forces in World War Two) arguably made perfect sense at the macrolevel, since just “getting with the program” with the “civilized” nations of the world was not realistic because those very “civilized” nations were the ones promoting highly punitive trading conditions.

    P.S. As another commenter pointed out, the economist you cite was named “Hjalmar” Schacht, not Helmut (he was tried at Nuremburg but found not guilty incidentally). Also in German if someone’s name has two dots over a vowel (“umlaut”) you must either reproduce them or add an “e” after the vowel (so Hermann Goering, der Fuehrer, etc.) And the past tense of “to hang” used transitively is “hanged” not “hung”!

    P.P.S. Marcy Fleming’s post was excellent, Germany did not move its economy to “Total War” until after the defeat at Stalingrad in 1942.

  • Ron Edge

    “For his trouble, Goedeler was hung in 1945.”

    There is much more to this man’s story. It is amazing he lasted so late into Hitler’s suicidal rampage through history.

    R.I.P. Herr Goedeler.

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