We Can Explain How Markets Work Without Mythical "Invisible Hands"
On Investopedia
this week: HERE “James Grant, the
author of the widely read Grant's
Interest Rate Observer newsletter, appeared on CNBC on Thursday after
the market close to discuss the Federal Reserve, rising interest rates and
plunging gold prices.
“Adam Smith's
Invisible Hand”
“Grant
argued on CNBC that Adam Smith's "invisible hand," or natural market
forces, will inevitably prevail in relation to asset prices despite the near
constant intervention and price manipulation employed by the Federal Reserve
ever since the financial crisis. …
The
risk is that Adam Smith's "invisible hand" will reassert itself, and
central bank intervention and manipulation will eventually unleash devastating
unintended consequences.”
Comment
Akin
to meaningless theological mantras, the invocation of “Adam Smith’s Invisible
Hand” whenever a pronouncement is made by financial experts is like saying “please
be to God” or “God Willing” in every sentence. Such knee-jerk nonsense makes a mockery of economic analysis. The invisible hand is meaningless
jibberish when used in this manner.
James
Grant is a classic example of linking Adam Smith to an investment report
that goes on to explain what is happening in money markets. He does not need to
blow smoke about “invisible hands” to give his account some sort of authority
by implying that he understands what the “invisible hand” actually does when he hasn’t a clue what it is.
His
gullible readers may not know that James Grant misquotes Adam Smith on his use
of the “invisible hand”, which was never about markets. Any “ devastating unintended consequences” won't result from an "invisible hand". It
doesn’t exist.
Metaphors for resemble their "objects", and in the singular case in which Smith used it in
Wealth Of Nations (1776) the “invisible hand” referred to the hidden motives (they
cannot be seen by observers). Some merchants who preferred to avoid foreign
trade were “led”, said Smith, to invest their capital locally. It was their hidden insecurity that ”led” them to
add their capital to domestic industry, a wholly arithmetic conclusion from
their actions. It had nothing to
do with “unleash[ing] devastating unintended consequences”. It merely added their capital to
domestic industry and this, Smith regarded, as beneficial for the public good.
For
Smith actions from their hidden motives had arithmetical consequence from their hidden motives,
which he described by using the “invisible hand” metaphor to describe it in a
“more striking and interesting manner”, as you do if you use an appropriate
metaphor in grammatical English. Metaphors are not real entities, they do not
exist, and neither are they ghostly or worshipful, or miraculous. Adam Smith knew the role of metaphors
in the English language – he lectured on metaphors in his long-running
Rhetoric courses (1748-63). We have a student's copy of them from 1762-3.
Indeed, James Grant identifies the unintended circumstances arising from the hidden
insecurities felt by some (but never all!) merchants. Other merchants did risk their capital in foreign trade and
ventures, and Smith regarded such actions as beneficial to a country too. Both domestic and foreign trade raised
economic activity (today’s higher GDP and GNP) of great benefit to the public. Consumption is the purpose of
production. It measures the real
wealth of nations!
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