May 23, 2006
In Memoriam: Lloyd
Bentsen, An American Leader
By Paul Craig Roberts
Former US Senator and Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen
has passed away.
Bentsen was a Texas Democrat and was President Clinton’s
first Treasury Secretary. As Chairman of the Joint
Economic Committee of Congress,
Bentsen played a key role in the replacement of
Keynesian demand management with supply-side economic
policy.
The 1979 JEC Annual Report stated that stagflation, the
major problem of that time, was the result of policies
that stimulated demand while retarding supply. In the
chairman’s introduction Bentsen recognized "an
emerging consensus in the committee and in the country .
. . that the major challenges . . . are on the supply
side of the economy."
The report concluded that supply-side incentives had
"been badly neglected as a way of fighting inflation."
Keynesian demand management had proved to be impotent,
because "even if demand is high, capital spending and
the supply of output in general may be low if the
after-tax real rate of return is inadequate."
Under Bentsen’s leadership, the 1980 Annual Report,
Plugging in the Supply Side, disavowed the practice
of fighting unemployment with inflation and inflation
with unemployment.
The report acknowledged that policymakers had made
mistakes by viewing tax cuts "solely as
countercyclical devices designed to shore up the demand
side of the economy."
The proprietors of the econometric models that
policymakers used to formulate US economic policy got
the message that the days of demand management had
passed.
At a Joint Economic Committee hearing on May 21, 1980,
the forecasters were asked if they had plugged in the
supply-side. Alice Rivlin, director of the Congressional
Budget Office, testified that the models were beginning
to incorporate the direct effects of fiscal policy on
supply, thus moving away from the focus on the short-run
effects on demand.
Otto Eckstein testified that "the mistake we have
made over the last 20 years is that we have always
looked at the short-run demand effects, and have thereby
ignored what we are doing to the long-run growth
potential of the economy." He admitted that it had
been costly to ignore the effects of fiscal policy on
the supply side of the economy.
Prior to
President Reagan’s election, congressional Democrats
had started the Supply-Side Revolution. The original
instigator was Republican Jack Kemp. Kemp was addressing
a real problem, not just playing politics. Democrats,
who controlled Congress, saw the point and took the lead
in implementing the new policy.
It is part of leftwing mythology that Ronald Reagan
deceived the country and implemented "trickle-down
economics" in order to enrich the already rich. But
as the Democrats realized, stagflation was destroying
their constituents, not the rich.
Supply-side economics broke the back of
stagflation. We have not seen it since.
A
quarter century ago Congress still had members who were
accustomed to lead. They could think for themselves and
did not rely on the executive branch or on lobbyists to
tell them what to do. Lloyd Bentsen was one of those
leaders.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts
[email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration.
He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.