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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
Mugabe's
'fatal conceit'
Ralph
R. Reiland, American Spectator
August 21, 2007
http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=11904
Readers of the New York
Times got a front-page example recently of what F.A. Hayek called
"the fatal conceit" - the idea that some great mind or
committee can do a better job than the private market in organizing
and directing an economy. Hayek argued that the market automatically
coordinates the millions of individual activities in an economy
by way of "natural, spontaneous and self-ordering processes
of adaptation to a greater number of particular facts than any one
mind can perceive or even conceive." The record of the past
century shows that the system that delivers the goods, reduces scarcity
and improves living standards is the "spontaneous human order
created by a competitive market," said Hayek, not the "deliberate
arrangement of human interaction by central authority based on the
collective command over available resources." What works, in
short, is freedom and capitalism, not statism and socialism.
The Times article
that supports Hayek's line of reasoning - "Caps
on prices only deepen Zimbabweans' misery," by Michael
Wines - provides a perfect illustration of how the "fatal conceit"
of government can turn a difficulty into a catastrophe. "Robert
G. Mugabe has ruled over this battered nation, his every wish endorsed
by Parliament and enforced by the police and soldiers, for more
than 27 years," explained Wines. "It appears, however,
that not even an unchallenged autocrat can repeal the laws of supply
and demand." With prices doubling weekly, Mugabe's attempt
to revoke the laws of economics came via an anti-inflationary order,
"Operation Slash Prices," on June 25, ordering merchants
to cut their prices by 50 percent. "One month after Mr. Mugabe
decreed just that, commanding merchants nationwide to counter 10,000-percent-a-year
hyperinflation by slashing prices in half and more, Zimbabwe's economy
is at a halt," reported Wines.
Most students with a
passing grade in Economics 101 could have predicted that Mugabe's
decree would produce shortages. Cut the price of gasoline by law
to a dollar per gallon, and there'll be less supply and more demand
- the formula for a shortage. Cut the price to 50 cents and we'll
be walking. It's the same with supply in the labor market. Cap the
salaries of brain surgeons at $100,000 and there'll be a shortage
of brain surgeons. Predictably, the results of Mugabe's decree were
catastrophic. "Bread, sugar and cornmeal, staples of every
Zimbabwean's diet, have vanished, seized by mobs who denuded stores
like locusts in wheat fields," reported Wines. "Meat is
virtually nonexistent, even for members of the middle class who
have money to buy it on the black market. Gasoline is nearly unobtainable.
Hospital patients are dying for lack of basic medical supplies.
Power blackouts and water cutoffs are endemic."
Similarly, the impact
on manufacturing and jobs was ruinous: "Manufacturing has slowed
to a crawl because few businesses can produce goods for less than
the government-imposed sale prices. Raw materials are drying up
because suppliers are being forced to sell to factories at a loss.
Businesses are laying off workers or reducing their hours."
With three-fourths of Zimbabwe's labor force already jobless prior
to Mugabe's decree, the government's prescription for bringing down
inflation only worsened the nation's poverty crisis. "Factory
layoffs and slowdowns," reported the Times, "are bringing
new poverty to the 15 percent or 20 percent of adult Zimbabweans
who still have jobs." To keep critics in line, a new law gives
Zimbabwe's security forces the right to observe as many e-mails
and tap as many phones as they see fit. For noncompliance with Mugabe's
edict, business owners are threatened with jail and the nationalization
of their companies.
"We are at war,"
explained one of Mugabe's vice presidents, Joseph Msika. "We
will not allow shelves to be empty." In other words, if supplies
won't come forth voluntarily via the market, the government will
force the production. "As many as 4,000 businesspeople have
been arrested, fined or jailed," reported Wines, while "state-run
newspapers publish lists of telephone numbers on their front pages
daily, exhorting citizens to report merchants whose prices exceed
the dictates." In the Soviet Union, to keep things moving according
to plan, the government eventually killed 55 million of its own
citizens. In China, 36 million. To kill in those numbers required
the obedience of many. Said British philosopher W.K. Clifford, "There
is one thing more wicked in the world than the desire to command,
and that is the will to obey."
Ralph R. Reiland is an
associate professor of economics at Robert Morris University in
Pittsburgh
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