Future Oriented
27 November 2007
Editor, The Washington Times
To the Editor:
Carl Henn asserts that "Congress can . . . react in ways that protect our long-term interest, while marketplaces can't, due to the tyranny of short-term monetary pressures" (Letters, November 27). Mr. Henn mistakes imagination for reality.
Although imperfect, markets routinely take the long-run view. The reason is that assets and firms designed for long, productive lives generally have higher values today than do assets designed only with tomorrow in mind. If, for example, Southwest Airlines were tyrannized by short-term monetary pressures, it would never spend hundreds of millions of dollars buying a fleet of 737 jets.
Where short-term pressures truly reign tyrannically is in politics. An elected officials' time horizon extends no further than the next election. If spending money today will buy votes, experience shows that such spending will occur regardless of its long-term wisdom. I challenge Mr. Henn to defend the federal budget as being a shining example of long-term planning for the greater good.
Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Chairman, Department of Economics
George Mason University
Editor, The Washington Times
To the Editor:
Carl Henn asserts that "Congress can . . . react in ways that protect our long-term interest, while marketplaces can't, due to the tyranny of short-term monetary pressures" (Letters, November 27). Mr. Henn mistakes imagination for reality.
Although imperfect, markets routinely take the long-run view. The reason is that assets and firms designed for long, productive lives generally have higher values today than do assets designed only with tomorrow in mind. If, for example, Southwest Airlines were tyrannized by short-term monetary pressures, it would never spend hundreds of millions of dollars buying a fleet of 737 jets.
Where short-term pressures truly reign tyrannically is in politics. An elected officials' time horizon extends no further than the next election. If spending money today will buy votes, experience shows that such spending will occur regardless of its long-term wisdom. I challenge Mr. Henn to defend the federal budget as being a shining example of long-term planning for the greater good.
Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Chairman, Department of Economics
George Mason University
Posted by Don Boudreaux on
Sunday May 11, 2008 at 11:19am