A failure of Randian economics
Here's a fascinating confession by Alan Greenspan in today's Breakpoint:
I thought, "Wow, Greenspan must have been a Randian," then I read:
What a revelation, that the banking crisis at least partially resulted from Randian economics. When I get bugged over liberal talk of regulation, I often think of John Galt's words to the socialistic government in Atlas Shrugged: "Get out of my way!" But the book really made me cringe at how it (that is, Rand) assumed self-interest and the utter absence of altruism could result in anything besides anarchy. Rand, and Greenspan, don't recognize how much their own assumptions are guided by the shadows of Christian thought still inescapable in their lifetimes, but now fading rapidly. Like C.S. Lewis pointed out in The Abolition of Man, "They remove the organ and demand the function." Or as Jennifer Morse said, "A free market depends on individuals having a conscience." Or as Colson concluded:
Greenspan told a House committee that he had "made a mistake in presuming that the self-interests of organizations," like banks, made them "best capable of protecting their own shareholders and their equity in the firms."
When chairman Henry Waxman said to him, "in other words, you found that your view of the world . . . was not right," Greenspan replied, "Absolutely, precisely." He then confessed to being "shocked" by this "flaw" in his thinking.
I thought, "Wow, Greenspan must have been a Randian," then I read:
Greenspan was a devotee of Ayn Rand, author of Atlas Shrugged, the bestselling book which is still very popular. Her worldview, called objectivism, promoted the idea that if you pursue your own self-interest, it will always be rational and help the most people. We've seen in recent weeks where that leads.
What a revelation, that the banking crisis at least partially resulted from Randian economics. When I get bugged over liberal talk of regulation, I often think of John Galt's words to the socialistic government in Atlas Shrugged: "Get out of my way!" But the book really made me cringe at how it (that is, Rand) assumed self-interest and the utter absence of altruism could result in anything besides anarchy. Rand, and Greenspan, don't recognize how much their own assumptions are guided by the shadows of Christian thought still inescapable in their lifetimes, but now fading rapidly. Like C.S. Lewis pointed out in The Abolition of Man, "They remove the organ and demand the function." Or as Jennifer Morse said, "A free market depends on individuals having a conscience." Or as Colson concluded:
Forget human nature and you don't get free markets, you get the Darwinian law of the jungleāa view of the world that shouldn't come as a shock to any Christian.
Labels: Ayn Rand, Breakpoint, C.S. Lewis, Conservatism, Economics
2 Comments:
Have you actually read Ayn Rand. What we are saying now is anything but Randian economics. Without the existence of the Federal Reserve, none of this could be possible. Rand was an unequivocal proponent of the gold standard, whcih would have prevented this whole mess (not to mention the outsourcing of jobs to the degree we see now). Under the gold standard, trade deficits were sattled yearly in gold. The US would be out of gold in under a year.
Have you read Greenspan's earlier writings on gold? Has it ever occurred to you that Greenspan *is* John Galt?
Thank you for your response! I have read Atlas Shrugged, and enjoyed it very much. I have also read biographies of Ayn Rand and I stand by my remarks that Objectivism fails to adequately account for human nature. I do agree that abandoning the gold standard was a serious mistake, and I found it fascinating how it was the accepted "underground" currency in Atlas. You cleverly suggest Greenspan could be John Galt, but Greenspan acknowledged his surprise that individual self-interest did not result in the good of all. Rand was right on that regulation stifles industry and compulsory redistribution of wealth is immoral, but a market devoid of faith and compassion has no incentive for honesty, which is essential to business. Honesty and trust come from accountability to an unseen higher Power, which Rand denied. Rand's idol was the dollar sign, but a successful capitalist society still needs a real God.
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