
If sports talk shows are to be believed, Mondays are brutal for professional and college football players. Particularly those who play for teams that lost the Saturday or Sunday before.
Monday is the day in which film of the previous game is closely studied, and errors showcased. In sports thereโs no sugarcoating or coddling. Errors are realized right away, often in humiliating fashion, and corrected. Those that donโt correct their mistakes are quickly benched, or released.
The truth about sports came to mind while reading Roger W. Robinsonโs fallacy-riddled speech about China that was recently re-printed in Hillsdale Collegeโs highly regarded (with good reason) Imprimis. The publication is associated with some of the greatest talks ever given by members of the conservative and libertarian movement, and it rightly enjoys a place of high prestige in the classical liberal pantheon. In time, the inclusion of Robinsonโs flamboyant misunderstanding of basic economics will be viewed by Imprimis editors as one of those inevitable mistakes that all editors make.
It seems Robinson forgot just how crucial error realization is to individual progress, and by extension economic progress. Economies are just collections of individuals, and when theyโre shielded from their errors theyโre similarly blinded to what enables greatness. Thatโs why every elongated economic downturn always and everywhere has the fingerprints of an activist government all over it.
Recessions on their own are necessarily short simply because theyโre the process whereby economic actors of all stripes engage in a figurative film study of the kind athletes endure on a weekly basis. This study of individual and corporate actions forces a necessary and quick realization of errors, the correction of bad habits, the shedding of employees who arenโt the right fit, along with the mothballing of investments and initiatives that arenโt working. In short, untouched recessions are the certain sign ofย recoveryย on the way. Theyโre the signal that everyoneโs watching the proverbial film closely, and fixing whatโs wrong.
Just as football teams make adjustments at halftime, and substantial adjustments following film study in the week after losses and wins, so do businesses do the same. If not, they slide toward mediocrity and eventually bankruptcy. Anything done to delay error realization invites stagnation, and this speaks to the horrors of government efforts to mitigate the pain of downturns. When government does this it necessarily slows recovery simply because these actions once again slow the corrections necessary for progress.
If only Robinson had thought about the above before he went public with his musings on China. As he puts it at speechโs end, โThe Chinese are waging economic and financial warfare against us every day.โ What Robinsonโs saying is that Chinaโs businesses are allied with the Chinese state on the way to an economic โwarโ with the U.S. If we ignore that exchange among producers is about cooperation as opposed to the โwarโ naively bruited by Robinson, itโs right here that we can see how misguided the former Reagan administration official is.
Crucial about the above is that Reagan himself would have well understood the basic misunderstanding informing Robinsonโs thinking. Stated simply, businesses allied with the state arenโt very good or competitive as businesses. They arenโt because politics, as opposed to profit motive, drive their actions. Businesses allied with the state are weakened by the tie when itโs remembered that they neednโt rush toward the error realization without which thereโs no progress. More to the point, businesses tied to the state canโt realize errors simply because the act of doing so almost invariably involves painful decisions of the layoff kind that politicians spending the money of others avoid like the plague.
After that, businesses that are tied to government are invariably subsidized by government. Not only do their political ties make tough decisions unlikely, those same ties make it unlikely that the company heads in control will rush to their mistakes in the first place. Why acknowledge error when government subsidies make it possible to ignore them to begin with?
Robinson adds around mid-speech that the Chinese state is pursuing a “Made in China 2025,” a strategy designed to dominate key technology sectorsโfrom artificial intelligence and quantum computing to hypersonic missiles and 5G.โ Reagan would have had a field day with this. One reason he was so confident in the Soviet Unionโs eventual collapse was because he knew state-planning of its economy would fail,ย by definition. Reaganโs former minion in Robinson claims โChinaโ is centrally planning how Chinese businesses will approach the future, which is the surest sign that, assuming Robinsonโs analysis of Chinaโs economy is correct (it isnโt), that the overnight protectionists (Robinson claims without evidence that President Trumpโs โtrade war is hurting Chinaโ) on the right neednโt worry about China. State planning of economic activity doesnโt work on all too many levels, but the main reason it doesnโt is that technological progress is as a rule a consequence of endless failure on the way to breakthroughs that are only arrived at after endless mistake realization.
The problem with the above (for China at least) is that the state control of economic activity once again buys off the failure that is necessary for progress. Reagan understood this truth too. As he used to regularly quip, โthe closest thing to eternal life on earth is a government program.โ When government is involved in anything, bad ideas beget more spending on whatโs bad and isnโt working. Again, if Chinaโs economy resembles what Robinson imagines (it doesnโt), then paranoid types like him have nothing to worry about.
Like all China critics, Robinson makes the typically tired arguments about IP theft and โforced technology transfers,โ but what he doesnโt realize is that technology is anything but if itโs in the wrong hands. Goodness, the richest of rich U.S. technology geniuses routingly acknowledge that nearly everything they try fails, yet Robinson presumes the Chinese, perhaps for being Chinese (?), have the skills to identify whatโs brilliant only to execute on it? If only life were so easy. Robinson insults American genius in presuming it can so easily be stolen, plus he insults the profit motive itself when he so childishly presumes that success is as simple as taking something and making it. In the real world, businesses of every stripe produce with great uncertainty given a basic understanding that whatโs hot now in no way predicts what will be hot in the future.
On the subject of energy, Robinson calls for a repeat of the Reagan administrationโs efforts in the โ80s to limit the Soviet sale of natural gas to Europe. As he put it, โThe Reagan administration drew the line on a project called the Siberian Gas Pipeline, a 3,600-mile twin-strand pipeline that stretched from Siberia into the Western European gas grid. If completed, not only would it become the centerpiece of the Sovietsโ hard currency earnings structure, but Western Europe would become dependent on the USSR for over 70 percent of its natural gas, weakening Western Europeโs ties to the U.S. and leaving the continent open to Kremlin extortion.โ Itโs hard to know where to begin.
For one, if natural gas purchases from the Soviet Union would have made Western Europe โdependent on the USSR for over 70 percent of its natural gas,โ which country or countries was Western Europe โdependentโ on before the USSR? But the bigger question is one of who cares? Robinson makes the point throughout his speech about the alleged horrors of Chinaโs modern existence, and that it, like the old Soviet Union, is very much reliant on hard currency to liquefy its economy. Ok, but if true then itโs a certainty that the USSR would never have ceased natural gas sales in the 1980s any more than โChinaโ would withhold market goods today. Market share is hard won and rarely something given up, plus per Robinsonโs own reasoning, the need for hard currency would overwhelm any illusory gain from a cessation of sales.
To which Robinson might respond that โChinaโ could cease selling to us, and the โU.S.โ could cease selling to China, as the U.S. allegedly did vis-ร -vis the USSR and its pipeline partners in the 1980s. In Robinsonโs words, โThe U.S. at the time had a monopoly on oil and gas technology that could drill through permafrostโwhich we had developed for Alaskaโs North Slopeโand we imposed oil and gas equipment sanctions on the USSR and European companies that were helping to build the Siberian pipeline.โ Robinson misunderstands that so long as U.S. companies were selling their oil and gas technology in the โ80s, then they were by definition selling it to the Soviets assuming there was demand from them. Lest readers forget, thereโs no accounting for the final destination of any good, service, or currency. Thatโs why there are Apple iPhones in Cuba, North Korea and Venezuela despite wholly symbolic U.S. โembargoesโ on all three countries, and itโs similarly why the U.S. dollar liquefies economic activity in all three countries. Just the same, the so-called โArab oil embargoโ from the 1970s similarly failed completely when it came to keeping โArab oilโ out of the U. S. Thereโs once again no accounting for the final destination of anything, which wrecks Robinsonโs economically bankrupt arguments in support of isolating China in terms of goods, services, and most of all, currency.
More on currency in a moment. Until then, itโs useful to continue addressing Robinsonโs misunderstanding of energy, and energy flows. Robinson laughably claims itโs hard to find a โgood actorโ in China, but lauds a โsecret dealโ made with the allegedly benevolent Saudi Arabia in the 1980s in which we apparently โpersuadedโ them to โpump an additional two million barrels of oil per day and decontrolled prices at the wellhead in this country, knocking oil prices down to about $10 a barrel.โ Supposedly this sped up the bankruptcy of our old nemesis the USSR. Reagan would have laughed at Robinsonโs reasoning on the price of oil too.
As he explained about the oil price in 1981 in the form of a question, โwere the OPEC nations raising the price of oil or were they simply following the same pattern of an ounce of gold, that as gold in this inflationary age kept going up, they werenโt going to follow our paper money downhill? They stayed with the gold price.โ Reagan knew that the price of oil wasnโt high in the 1970s due to a lack of supply; rather it was nominally high because the dollar in which it was priced had been in freefall. The dollarโs decline reversed under Reagan when itโs remembered that he ran on reviving a dollar that had collapsed after President Nixonโs errant decision to delink the greenback from gold, followed by President Carterโs errant decision to continue talking the dollar down through Treasury secretary Michael Blumenthal. In short, what brought on the price of oilโs collapse to a price level that was still four times what it was before Nixonโs departure from Bretton Woods was a revived dollar, not a โsecret dealโ as Robinson naively speculates. As Warren Brookes explained about falling oil during the โ80s, โin February 1981 President Reagan scooped the experts when he predicted that oil prices would soon fall because the price of gold had dropped over 20% since his election.โ Oilโs decline was a dollar story, not one of supply.
Back to currency, on the matter of dollars liquefying China trade and investment in same, so long as U.S. financial interests are in the business of financing economic activity, dollars will circulate in size throughout China. Thatโs the case because money, like goods, flows to production. Always. This would still be every bit as true even if โWall Streetโ were as patriotic as Robinson yearns it to be. As he so offensively put it, โyou canโt appeal to Wall Street on the basis of patriotism.โ Get it? Wall Street only cares about profits, not Robinsonโs mercantilism. Except that all financial service companies are ultimately intermediaries of funds coursing toward their perceived highest use. If โAmericanโ financial firms turn up their noses to budding and existing Chinese genius, then others wonโt. Theyโll often do so with U.S. dollars that are never idle. So long as thereโs wealth, it will be in motion. Translated: wealth created and saved stateside will find its way around the world โ including China โ so long as thereโs economic activity that rates investment there.
Robinson laments that there are over 80 Chinese companies listed on the NYSE, and over 60 on the NASDAQ. Of course, glossed over by the China skeptic is that a U.S. stock exchange listing makes it much more likely that Chinese companies will pursue that which enhances their betterment as opposed to the yearnings of the Chinese state. Stock exchange listings make for transparency of the kind that conservatives used to cheer, not lament. Thank goodness U.S. financial exchanges are open to Chinese companies. Hereโs hoping more, not fewer, list stateside. The more that the Chinese are economically engaged with the rest of the world, the lower the odds of conflict. The problem with the former Soviet Union is that quite unlike China, it had next to no economy. Those are the enemies to fear as they have nothing to lose from war. With China itโs the opposite.
Precisely because Chinese businesses do so much in the way of sales in the U.S., the Chinese state pursuing war with the U.S. would be pursuing the countryโs economic collapse. If readers find this hard to contemplate, they need to imagine what would happen to Gucci if its executives made a point of thoroughly insulting residents of Beverly Hills and Manhattan on a daily basis. Such efforts would greatly weaken a company reliant on sales to the well-to-do in both locales. Just the same, war for China against the U.S. would involve the Chinese warring against the Chinese.
Crucial here is that whatโs bad for the Chinese economically is bad for the U.S. Seemingly glossed over by Robinson is that one reason โWall Streetโ is so intrigued by China is that the worldโs greatest, most valuable companies (those would be U.S. companies) are similarly intrigued by China, and the potential for enormous growth there. Briefly, Apple sells a fifth of its iPhones in China, GM sells more cars in China than it does in North America, while China is presently the 2nd largest market for Nike and McDonaldโs ahead of it soon being the largest. Does Robinson know something the world’s greatest companies don’t? The question answers itself.
Which brings us to how anti-free market Robinsonโs speech was, and how very un-Imprimis it was by extension. Here Robinson wraps himself in Reaganโs greatness, while basically calling for the state to do something very un-Reagan like in the form of dictating to Wall Street and U.S. companies how they should operate, and how they should extricate themselves from a rapidly liberalizing nation. Worse is that Robinson is up front in his support of Trumpโs efforts to damage U.S. consumers, workers and businesses through tariffs. Reagan was at least somewhat sheepish about tariffs as the cost of politics.
Beyond that, Robinsonโs speech was sad for it exhibiting such little knowledge of a country populated by people whose relentless toil gives Americans a raise daily, and enables their pay-hike inducing specialization longer term. Missed by Robinson is that to get off of the airplane in China as an American is to feel more at home than anyone in the world, Chinese people included. American businesses are everywhere as a happy consequence of a love affair taking place between the increasingly acquisitive Chinese people and American goods. How sad then that irresponsible people like Robinson are in the process of trying to sabotage what is brilliant with mindless rhetoric rooted in an impressive misunderstanding in economics.
Imprimisย can surely do better. As for Roger Robinson, who knows? At the very least we should lament his use of Ronald Reaganโs great name to make a very un-Reaganesque argument.ย Robinson chose to wrap himself in the person whose real achievements and actual understanding of economics made his lifted swagger possible.ย
This piece originally ran in RealClearMarkets
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