Bailout marks Marx’s comback
November 15, 2008 by Stephen Anderson
Filed under Featured, Guest Articles, Money & Economics, Principle 12
by Martin Masse – National Post | Marx’s Proposal Number Five seems to be the leading motivation for those backing the Wall Street bailout
In his Communist Manifesto, published in 1848, Karl Marx proposed 10 measures to be implemented after the proletariat takes power, with the aim of centralizing all instruments of production in the hands of the state. Proposal Number Five was to bring about the “centralization of credit in the banks of the state, by means of a national bank with state capital and an exclusive monopoly.”
If he were to rise from the dead today, Marx might be delighted to discover that most economists and financial commentators, including many who claim to favour the free market, agree with him.
Indeed, analysts at the Heritage and Cato Institute, and commentators in The Wall Street Journal and on this very blog, have made declarations in favour of the massive “injection of liquidities” engineered by central banks in recent months, the government takeover of giant financial institutions, as well as the still stalled US$700-billion bailout package. (Editor’s Note: Scholars at the Cato Institute have not supported Washington’s $700-billion financial bailout plan. The National Post apologizes for the error.) Some of the same voices were calling for similar interventions following the burst of the dot-com bubble in 2001. “Whatever happened to the modern followers of my free-market opponents?”>>>>Read the Full Article


