July 22, 2011
 
_defining  ideas_ (http://www.hoover.org/publications/defining-ideas) 

What Would Alexander Hamilton Do? 
by _Michael McConnell_ (http://www.hoover.org/fellows/8536) 
The founder’s financial  wisdom holds lessons for today’s debt crisis.   
____________________________________
  
We often forget that the main reason the Constitutional Convention met in  
1787 was to resolve a financial crisis—one more serious even than ours of  
today. 
In the wake of the successful American Revolution, the United States  
government was flat broke. We owed $11.7 million—real money, in those days—to  
European creditors (mostly the French government and Dutch bankers), $40.4  
million to creditors in the United States, and an additional $25 million in  
state debts incurred during the war. The interest alone was over seven times 
the  annual operating budget of the then-United States government

 
This is the stuff of national disaster. More than any other single 
objective,  the United States Constitution was designed to provide long-term 
institutional  solutions to the young nation’s fiscal woes. 
The central problem in 1787 was that the United States government, under 
the  Articles of Confederation, had power to borrow, but not to tax. That is a 
nasty  combination. Federal revenues slowed to a trickle. The United States 
was out of  money. 
*** 
Alexander Hamilton, truly a remarkable young man, was penniless and  
family-less when he immigrated to New York in 1772 from the West Indies. John  
Adams called him the "bastard brat of a Scotch peddler." 
At the age of 26, while serving full time as an artillery officer and  
aide-de-camp to General George Washington, in the midst of the war for  
independence, which was not going well at the time, Hamilton wrote two  
letters. 
One was to his friend James Duane, a delegate to the Congress. It presented 
a  proposal for a new Constitution of the United States—six years before 
the  Constitutional Convention even met. The second letter was to the newly 
appointed  Superintendent of Finance, Robert Morris, which suggested an 
economic plan for  the new government. There is no better way to grasp the 
connection between  constitutional design and financial reform than to examine 
these two  letters. 
Hamilton recognized that solving the fiscal crisis was central to winning  
independence, and that constitutional reform was essential to solving the 
fiscal  crisis. In his letter to Morris, he wrote that, "Tis by introducing 
order into  our finances – by restoring public credit—not by gaining battles, 
that we are  finally to gain our object." 
Hamilton recognized that solving the fiscal crisis was central  to winning 
independence. 
In this, Hamilton was ahead of his time. Today, economic and military  
historians look back on the long series of wars between England and  France—
France having three times the population, two and a half times the GDP, a  
better climate, more fertile land, and significant advantages in science and  
culture—and conclude that England’s military advantage was, purely and simply, 
 its superior financial system and thus its ability to finance war. 
Hamilton perceived this, and wanted to bring that advantage to America. 
But Hamilton’s plans were even more ambitious than that. In the depths of 
the  war, he was planning for the subsequent peace, and he wanted it to be a 
peace of  strength and prosperity. Hamilton realized that if the new nation 
could put its  public credit on a proper footing, this would not only avert 
fiscal meltdown in  the short run, but it would bring huge commercial, 
military, and political  benefits to the new nation for the future. 
A properly funded national debt, Hamilton wrote, "if not excessive, will be 
 to us a national blessing." 
An added advantage, Hamilton realized, was that if the nation provided 
proper  funding for the interest on the debt, it would not be necessary to 
repay 
the  principal. Creditors would be more than happy to roll over their 
investments in  stable and profitable government securities. 
Moreover—and this was Hamilton’s visionary insight—if the interest were 
paid  regularly, and everyone knew it would be paid, then the underlying 
securities  would gain stable value. They would become a kind of liquid 
capital—a 
"blessing"  in a world where gold and silver was costly to transport and 
use for  transactions. 
Hamilton thus wished to bring what economic historians call "the Financial  
Revolution" to America. 
At this time, in most of Europe, kings and princes borrowed on their own  
credit, mostly for personal luxuries, wars, and foreign adventures. And they  
were none too scrupulous about paying it back. Instead, they dealt with 
their  debts through defaults and depreciations, which were usually accompanied 
by  attacks on the greedy speculators who held the royal securities. 
France, for  example, defaulted on its royal debt in 1634, 1648, 1661, 1708, 
1720, 
and 1770,  and in intervening years debauched the currency, which is 
nothing but default in  small increments. 
These shenanigans naturally made creditors unwilling to lend to  
governments. 
Then came the Financial Revolution. After the Glorious Revolution in 1688,  
the English Parliament chartered the Bank of England. Sir Robert Walpole, 
as  Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury, embarked on a solid and  
predictable policy of full payment of interest and gradual retirement of  
principal, over the screams of many who thought he was favoring the fat cats 
and  speculators. By the mid-1730s, the Crown was able to borrow money, 
long-term,  for as little as 3 percent. 
Hamilton wanted to bring the English funding system to America. To do that, 
 the Articles of Confederation had to be scrapped, and a new Constitution 
adopted  that would enable the federal government to raise revenue and 
service its  debts. 
The properly funded public debt indeed turned out to be a  national 
blessing, as Hamilton predicted. 
Seven years later, Hamilton got his wish. In the list of powers given to  
Congress, which appears in Article I, Section 8, the very first item says 
that  Congress shall have the power "To lay and collect taxes . . . to pay the 
debts  of the United States." 
The Constitution assigns to the federal government the exclusive right to 
the  most lucrative source of public revenue in early America: taxes on 
imports, and  a supervening claim on the second most lucrative, excise taxes. 
Beyond giving  the federal government the nation’s most valuable physical asset—
the western  lands—the Constitution also gives the federal government 
control over the  currency, interstate and foreign commerce, and bankruptcy. 
These are the  ingredients for a common market and a modern commercial 
republic. 
Upon publication of the new Constitution, even before ratification,  
speculators in New York and abroad began buying up United States securities. In 
 
March of 1788, a leading Dutch banker bought $200,000 in American securities 
at  37.5 cents on the dollar. In August he increased his order to a million 
dollars  worth, and by early 1789 Dutch investors had purchased about $4 
million—and the  price of continental securities was soaring toward par. 
Later, as Treasury Secretary, Hamilton put into place the economic plan he  
had outlined in his 1781 letter to Morris, and toward which the 
Constitution had  pointed. His public finance program had three key elements 
and two 
important  effects. 
First, he created a national bank, controlled by private investors, on the  
model of the Bank of England. The structure of the bank is a point of some  
interest, in light of recent events. 
Hamilton insisted that private investors control the bank; the United 
States  government was merely a minority shareholder. He explained that 
investors 
would  not trust the bank if it were controlled by politicians. But he 
realized  incentives are important. The bank would be required to redeem its 
notes and  deposits in silver or gold, which means that the bank’s owners would 
lose money  if they allowed the bank’s credit to slip. 
Moreover, he gave the Treasury Secretary (himself) power to inspect the 
books  and to receive weekly reports on the bank’s activities. Note what this  
accomplishes. The government becomes a guarantor of the transparency and  
integrity of the bank’s books, but leaves the bank’s investment decisions to  
private hands, under conditions where investors will lose money if they 
fail to  maintain sound practices. 
Second, Hamilton set tax rates at a manageable level, which would not 
inhibit  trade and production. He realized that excessive tax rates would both 
hurt the  economy and bring in less revenue. 
Third, he dedicated certain revenue sources to repayment of the debt, with  
priority over other spending. This removed debt service from the politics 
of  annual appropriations. 
So much for Hamiltonian economics: our national debt is  ballooning out of 
control. 
Hamilton’s program worked amazingly quickly. By 1792, the interest rates on 
 federal debt had crawled down first to 6 percent, then to 5.25 percent, 
then  4.25 percent. By 1797, for a brief period, American securities carried a 
lower  risk premium even than British securities. The properly funded 
public debt  indeed turned out to be a national blessing, as Hamilton 
predicted, 
enabling the  United States to borrow money at the lowest interest rates in 
the world, and  making the dollar the reserve currency of the world. 
So, how are we doing today? 
Let’s first consider the banking system. Today, if private investors make  
decisions that are unsound enough, the federal taxpayers will bear some or 
all  of the loss. Think of Freddie and Fannie, and the banks that are too big 
to  fail. 
Second, the recent financial reform bill is not about the transparency and  
integrity of financial books. Instead it gives a new government agency the 
power  to second-guess investment decisions about risk. The two changes are 
essentially  the reverse of Hamilton’s theory that we should get the 
incentives right and  then rely on private management. 
And what about the public debt? In the last two years, the national debt as 
a  percentage of GDP has been higher than it has even been in our history, 
other  than during World War II. Our debt will double in about five short 
years. We are  beginning to hear a worldwide chorus of concern that the 
national debt is  ballooning out of control. 
Hamilton taught us that a properly funded national debt, if not excessive,  
can be a national blessing. In 2010, the federal debt had grown to 62 
percent of  GDP, and is growing rapidly. 
So much for Hamiltonian economics. What about Hamilton’s ideas of  
constitutional design? 
Hamilton was skeptical of the ability of politicians facing frequent  
elections to make the long-term sacrifices necessary for the common good. At 
the  
Constitutional Convention, Hamilton went so far as to suggest that the 
President  and senators serve life terms, insulating them from popular demands 
for  shortsighted policies, like spending today and paying tomorrow. Barring 
that, he  wanted administrative officials in the executive to serve for 
lengthy periods,  across presidencies, so that they could bring a long-term 
perspective to their  jobs. For the most part, these ideas were rejected, in 
favor of a more  democratic and accountable system of governance. 
Strangely, just as Hamiltonian finance has begun to crumble, there has been 
a  resurgence of neo-Hamiltonianism in governance. The federal government 
relies  more and more on unelected and unaccountable regulatory bodies to 
control our  economic life: presidentially-appointed "czars," independent 
agencies, and the  autonomous Federal Reserve. But here is the irony. The 
current 
unelected and  long-termed federal officers, aided and abetted by members 
of Congress (who  often act as if they are entitled to hold office for life), 
are the very people  who have given us the current financial mess. 
Meanwhile, it is the placard-waving, Jeffersonian common horde, flocking to 
 town halls and filling town squares, who have become the champions of  
Hamiltonian prudence. Stop spending money we do not have on things we do not  
need, they say. Stop piling debt on the shoulders of future generations, they 
 say. Bring back the Hamiltonian dream, where penniless bastards out of 
nowhere  can rise by the sheer force of intellect, hard work, and audacity to 
succeed in  an America that prefers opportunity to entitlement, that lets 
losing businesses  fail and winning businesses make some serious money. 
Do they really mean it, these oddly foresighted populists? Will they stick 
to  their principles when budget cutting starts to pinch? 
How ironic it will be if Hamilton’s dream of a national blessing were  
restored by the very democratic, unruly politics that he thought incapable of  
it.  
____________________________________

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to