






















|
Planning the Free Market
Ronald Banks
[Reprinted from Land & Liberty, May,
1965]
THE Conservative and Labour Governments since the war have shown
little difference in their fundamental approach to economic policy.
Both parties seem convinced that it is only the academic expert who is
able to tackle economic affairs with any success, with the result that
it has now become fashionable to accept this. On this basis, all
initiative is left to the Government of the time, and the skill,
ingenuity and resourcefulness of the people are left to stagnate while
the Government and its experts work out their formulae.
While one can criticise the Labour and Conservative parties on the
strength of the policies pursued while in office, the Liberal Party
has to be judged by its own criticism of the policies of the
government of the day, and by policy statements made by Liberal
spokesmen.
Since the fortunes of the Liberals have revived, they have shown an
inclination to embrace fashionable ideas at the expense of principle,
and "planning" has become an important word in their
vocabulary.
The first welcome signs of a return to basic principles, however
slight, appear in a new statement on economic policy by Christopher
Layton and Richard Lamb.[1] It must first be said that the document
contains inconsistencies; largely attributable, it would appear, to an
over-reliance on the "expert" and on the role a government
is expected to play in a "new economy." However, there are
sections - on protection, the market economy and the price mechanism -
that are extremely well argued, and it is during the discussion of
such subjects that the authors are at their happiest.
Tariffs, hidden subsidies, quotas and other protective devices are
attacked on a number of counts, not least as the bastion of
monopolies. High tariffs are criticised as preventing investment in
new machinery and capital equipment because businesses can make
profits in an easy home market with out-of-date factories and plant.
Distortion of investment is also laid at the door of protection in
that declining but protected industries survive longer than they
otherwise would, and thus lock up precious capital and labour
resources.
The authors propose a reduction of tariffs, together with stricter
legislation against monopolies and restrictive practices, but the term
used is "reduction of tariffs" and not "free trade"
and the reason for mis is soon apparent. It is stated that "all
tariffs should be reviewed and used as a positive instrument of
Government economic planning." Free trade, of course, cannot be
used as a planning instrument. Free trade is in itself the antithesis
of planning. With tariffs, decisions are in the hands of the "experts";
with free trade decisions rest with the whole population. To retain or
"review" tariffs for "planning purposes" is to
give away the argument for both free trade and the free economy.
A similar kind of reasoning is to be found later in the booklet, when
the nationalised industries come under discussion. To quote from the
document:
"It is high time the price mechanism, which is the
best instrument we have for gauging the relative efficiency of
different sectors of the economy, and the best means of telling us
where to invest our resources, was properly used, here as well as in
the private sector. This does not mean abandoning planning or ruling
out all social considerations in public services. But it does mean
making use of the price mechanism to tell us where the
nation's money is most economically invested, and planning
accordingly. It also means giving a clear directive to the
nationalised industries that they must compete and survive on a
profitable, commercial basis, with the state providing a conscious,
direct subsidy for any particular social objectives which it
considers to be necessary."
Except for the reference to planning, which seems irrelevant except
to social objectives, the paragraph quoted could appear with merit
in any textbook on free enterprise economics. From this point on,
however, economic planning is the by-word, although it is apparent
that the term "planning" is given many different meanings.
Stress is laid on the importance of overall objectives for economic
growth set by the Government, together with Government help to
industry to plan for the future. This proposal is hardly consistent
with the authors' previous proposal to allow market forces to
determine where and how resources should be used; the authors seem
to be unaware of the effects that their free market proposals would
have on industry and the economy generally should they be
implemented. For instance, a reduction of tariffs, legislation
against monopolies and a really free market economy would all
combine to produce naturally the right conditions for economic
growth. There would be no cushioning from a protected home market,
and this would stir businessmen to greater efficiency and more
selective investment. The skill and ingenuity that exists in this
country would be mobilised and utilised without Government planning.
The authors also propose new planning instruments to stimulate
exports and investment in the "right place," although
their other free market economy proposals would serve far better
than government intervention. Their apparent lack of faith in the
workings of real Liberal principles looks like lip service without
conviction.
On the subject of housing they recognise that previous intervention
by the state has caused imbalance and distortion, and that the
Government should help to redress the imbalance. Yet, instead of
proposing the removal of obstacles to increased home ownership (of
which land monopoly is one) they propose a plan that will cause even
greater distortion of the housing market - that of the Government
providing substantial tax reliefs for entrepreneurs who build houses
below a certain rent and above a certain standard!
The reference to land reform above will probably prompt a question
about the Liberal policy of land-value taxation. Unfortunately,
there is no mention of it. It is even more disheartening when one
remembers that one of the authors recently wrote a booklet on
site-value rating and extolled its virtues.[2] It appears that, in
common with most modern economists, our authors believe that land
has nothing to do with economics!
NOTES
1. The Morning After by
Christopher Layton and Richard Lamb. New Directions No. 10. (Liberal
Publication Department)
2. Make Rates Fair by Richard Lamb and Colin Clark. New
Directions No. 9, (Liberal Publications Department)
|