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Free Markets Archive

Thursday

23

October 2008

0

COMMENTS

Wrong Diagnosis

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Free Markets

I recently sent the following letter to the Washington Post:

Dear Editor,

Harold Meyerson says it is now up to liberalism to “[build] a more sustainable economy from the wreckage of the old,” while declaring the conservative god of “unregulated capitalism” to be dead (“Gods That Failed,” October 15). He’s a bit late for the funeral. Free-markets died almost a century ago when FDR, ignoring the Constitution, expanded government power over economic activity. Today, there’s an alphabet soup of federal agencies employing over 12,000 bureaucrats to regulate the supposedly unregulated financial sector.

Every time there is a new problem, a chorus of talking heads immediately blames it on a lack of regulation and demands action. Legislators who want to look like they are “doing something” get busy passing laws and hiring yet more regulators. It’s these knee-jerk government interventions to the challenges of the past that have fueled the problems of today. Let’s not create more problems in the future by making the same mistake now.

Sincerely,
Brian Garst

Monday

20

October 2008

0

COMMENTS

Wave Of Freedom Floods Europe, Authorities Panic

Written by , Posted in Free Markets

When government’s try to control markets, people don’t sit idly by and listen to the dictates of bureaucrats telling them what they can buy, and for how much. Government meddling is countered by black markets, where people go to get what they want at closer to market prices. Europe is learning this the hard way as they struggle to control the supply of cigarettes:

Waves of smuggled Russian cigarettes flood Europe

Kaliningrad, with its frontier atmosphere, is a dangerous place to ask questions about smuggling. But this isolated Russian enclave on the Baltic is now alleged to be the home of a novel phenomenon which is alarming western authorities.

Russia is accused of allowing Britain and Europe to be flooded with a wave of cut-price smuggled cigarettes. The most recent UK seizure was this month, at Coventry.

Why is Russia being “accused” of anything? What horrible crime have they committed?  What it should say: Russia is being credited at delivering a desired good to Britain and Europe at a cheap price.  Suddenly that doesn’t sound so nefarious, does it?

So why is it so horrible that Europeans are able to spend less money on cigarettes?

Austin Rowan, who heads the unit, said: “The smuggling of Jin Ling has become a huge problem in the EU, causing substantial losses to both national and EU budgets.”

Like mobsters threatened by the prospect of customers using businesses not under their “protection,” European governments are prepared to bully free people into buying products at inflated prices in order to suck in as much money as possible.  Silly journalists then talk about how “legitimate prices” are being undercut:

Video evidence about what is going on in Kaliningrad has been obtained by the Washington-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, a non-profit group which includes East European reporters.

They went in to the factory under cover, posing as would-be Romanian buyers. A container-load of Jin Ling, which are never officially marketed in Europe, was offered for less than £60,000.

It would be worth at least £1.5m in the UK, if smuggled packs of cigarettes were sold at half the legitimate price in Britain.

The only thing that makes a price legitimate is the willingness of a buyer and a seller to get together at a particular price.  What’s illegitimate here is not the trading of cigarettes at low prices, but rather the claims that government has authority to insist on higher prices in the first place.

Tuesday

14

October 2008

0

COMMENTS

More On Gas Shortages

Written by , Posted in Energy and the Environment, Free Markets

More on the government created gas shortages, from Robert Prechter:

Q: Doesn’t reduced supply — scarcity — create shortages?

A: No. In a free market, shortages are impossible; there is only a price. Rubies and Picassos are scarce, but there’s never a shortage of them. You can buy all you want any day of the week. Just pay the price.

Q: So how is the state causing a shortage?

A: The overriding cause of the shortage in the Southeast is state legislatures’ mandates that anyone selling gasoline at market prices will be labeled a “gouger” and fined $10,000 to $25,000.

Q: That’s it? That’s the reason?

A: That’s all there is to it. Only government can create shortages. If the price for gasoline had been allowed to fluctuate freely and rise to $5 a gallon locally, it would have provided plenty of incentive for truckers to siphon gas from other states and haul it to Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina and Alabama. But as it stands, every one of these states has an “anti-gouging” law, and every one of their governors stood up to announce that he would vigorously enforce it. They may as well have said, “I demand a gas shortage.”

Wednesday

1

October 2008

1

COMMENTS

Media Mind Readers

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Liberty & Limited Government, Media Bias

Given the media coverage the last few days, I have come to believe that reporters are able to read minds. It is, after all, the only logical explanation for these headlines:

Stock market rallies amid bailout hopes
Stocks Move Higher On Hopes Bailout Bill Will Be Revived
US STOCKS-Futures rise on hopes for reviving bailout
Wall Street rallies on bailout revival hopes

And it’s not just American stocks supposedly placing their hopes and dreams in the U.S. Congress:

Toronto stocks bounce back on bailout hopes
Russian stocks gain on US bailout hopes
Indian shares close higher on hopes of new U.S. bail-out package
Mexican stocks, peso bounce back on bailout hopes
European, Asian markets improve on US bailout hope

On and on it goes. How do they know what drives investors?  These headline are not reporting news, they’re interpreting it.  That should not be the function of the media, but they do it whenever they want to make sure you evaluate the actual news appropriately and learn what you are supposed to learn (what they want you to learn).

Here’s what they want you to think: “See, everyone is pulling for government intervention. If you damn conservatives will just let big government intervene, stocks will rise and all will be well!” This narrative is predicated on the assumption that every time the stock market goes up it is good, and all drops are bad. As a rule of thumb, this is a fairly adequate framework to help people evaluate what’s going on most of the time. It is not, however, completely accurate. Rises and falls are good or bad in so far as they signal that the economy is strengthening or weakening. Only when prices reflect an honest evaluation of market strength, then, should it be assumed that stock increases are good.  When they do not, they create “bubbles,” and the inevitable result is an eventual downward correction.

One such bubble, in the housing market, has just been popped.  This bubble was created by government intervention, the primary culprit (there are many) being the Fed’s holding of interest rates at levels lower than the market otherwise would have accorded.  It did this, let us not forget, after another bubble, the 90’s dot com bubble, collapsed.  The lesson one should take here is: we should not attempt to fight corrections with more interventionist policies that will only create yet more bubbles.  Even if we assume the media is correct, that investors want an infusion of taxpayer money to prop up flailing business engaging in risky practices, that is not a sound reason to formulate government policy.  We should not make bad long term decisions just because stocks might fall in the short term.  If that fall reflects a realignment of capital toward more efficient uses, as it does in this case, the end result will be much better in the long run if it is allowed to happen.

Wednesday

1

October 2008

2

COMMENTS

More Consequences Of Market Interventions

Written by , Posted in Free Markets

While much of the discussion lately has been over one big interventionist created disaster, the “financial crisis,” I thought I’d highlight another, though ultimately less severe, government created mess.

Several southern states are currently experiencing gas lines and shortages. News reports typically chalk these up to nothing more than the consequence of supply disruptions from Hurricanes Ike and Gustav. While the closing of refineries has reduced supply, mere reductions in supply do not create shortages and lines. What creates shortages and lines are rules that prevent prices from adjusting accordingly.

The affected states all have one thing in common: price-gouging laws that kicked into effect after the hurricanes hit. In Tennessee,

It’s safe to say all drivers in the Middle Tennessee area felt some pain over the past two weeks. At first, there were only signs of possible price gouging. Reports came from East Tennessee and North Carolina of $7 a gallon gas. Tennessee officials began monitoring an increase in consumer complaints of price gouging and warned of penalties.

Price complaints tapered off when the shortages began. For the first time since the late 1970s, the Nashville area saw tempers flare in lines at the gas stations, and large numbers of residents worried less about the price of gas than about whether they would have enough fuel to get to work or home.

The same happened in Georgia:

Earlier in September, the governor asked for and received several waivers from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on clean-fuel regulations. He also declared a state of emergency — the first part of the emergency plan — which enabled anti-price gouging laws. On Tuesday, he eased licensing restrictions for haulers.

Here‘s how it worked out for them, as described by a September 29th article:

As a gasoline shortage in the South drags through its second week, drivers have gone from being mildly annoyed to deeply frustrated, with lines hours long at service stations in Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee.

Let me reiterate to make it perfectly clear: “Early in September” the government enables anti-price gouging laws, by the end of September there had been 2 weeks of gas lines. In every case the government price gouging actions precede the shortages.

Price gouging laws -> shortages and lines.

The John Locke Foundation describes the same phenomenon in North Carolina:

Consumers can blame North Carolina’s price-gouging law for the gas lines and shortages appearing in the wake of Hurricane Ike. That’s the assessment of a John Locke Foundation analyst who has studied the unintended consequences of price-gouging legislation.

“Gas station owners are afraid to raise prices in light of threats of prosecution from state government,” said Dr. Roy Cordato, JLF Vice President for Research and Resident Scholar. “Because those owners refuse to raise prices, consumers continue to flock to the pumps, and the stations run the risk of running out of gas.”

The current problem with shortages and gas lines is far different from the situation that followed Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Cordato said. “North Carolina had no problems with shortages or long lines at the gas pumps after Katrina because the price system was able to work,” Cordato said. “The only difference between 2005 and 2008 is the new version of the state’s price-gouging law.”

The news reporters and commentators fail to make this connection.

The same Tennessee article from before suggests that part of the problem was hoarding:

Finally, there are lessons for us, average consumers, many of whom were not on best behavior during this gas shortage. As state officials have rightly noted, hoarding tactics — jumping into lines at the station to top off the tank, and filling up extra cans with gas — only made the shortage worse. Not to mention that lugging around multiple containers of gas poses a safety hazard.

And Georgia:

Both supply and demand are perpetuating the shortage. Refinery damage and power failures in Texas created the conditions, said Brandon Wright, a spokesman for the Petroleum Marketers Association of America, but drivers contributed by refueling more often than necessary.

“You hear stories about tankers pulling into gas stations and people are already waiting — and they have half a tank,” Dr. Medlock said. “It’s akin to hoarding.”

If only we had a system to discourage this kind of behavior, something that could take into consideration the supply of a product and insure it goes to those with the greatest need.

In fact, we have such a system, though politicians refuse to allow it to do its job without interference. If the market was left alone, the result would be less irrational and unnecessary hoarding, limited or no shortages, and far less hassle. We would all benefit if politicians would let the price system work.

Wednesday

24

September 2008

5

COMMENTS

What Really Happened In The Financial Market

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Liberty & Limited Government, Waste & Government Reform

The False Explanation

You’re going to hear a lot of stories in the coming days, and probably have heard a few already. Following the high profile collapse of the giants in the financial sector, there are going to be a number of groups jumping to advance their agenda by telling you falsehoods about who is to blame. Socialists, statists, anti-capitalists and all manner of other market and freedom haters are already jumping to lay blame at the feet of capitalism. Yet many of these people have themselves played a part in this mess. The Obama campaign is already out to make “deregulation” a dirty word, and has released an ad making two false claims: first, that deregulation had anything to do with the financial crises and, second, that allowing competition in health care would create a similar situation. Even the New York Times, criticizing the ad for its falsehoods, acknowledged that “[deregulatory changes] were viewed by many as having benefited consumers by encouraging competition, and those changes have not been linked to the current crisis.” But in order to advance the socialist regulatory agenda, it is constantly necessary to demonize the free market.

The most hypocritical market-basher, by far, is long-time Democratic Party embarrassment Barney Frank. Frank has been making the rounds dispensing his distorted account of what has happened. For instance, he attributed AIG’s troubles to “lack of regulation,” and self-righteously declared, “the private market screwed itself up and they need the government to come help them unscrew it.” On the overall financial meltdown he says, “Some private-sector people made irresponsible decisions because there wasn’t adequate regulation.” Not quite. There was inadequate regulation, but of government, not the private-sector. It is government policy and government sponsored entities Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that are the drivers of this meltdown. And when it came to regulating their behavior, Barney Frank was a chief roadblock.

Freddie and Fannie became a half-way house for democrats heading out of government.

In 2003 President Bush attempted to address the problem created by Fannie and Freddie’s insulation from market incentives. The President proposed an agency to oversee the quasi-governmental companies. Democrats, bought and paid for by F&F, were strongly opposed.

Granted, I would have preferred that President Bush had chosen market incentives over regulation by cutting Fannie and Freddie loose from government altogether. But, and this is a big but, if government is going to insist on socializing risk, it’s better that it also provide even a crude form of accountability (and crude is all the accountability government can muster compared to markets), to make up for it. Leaving F&F roaming free as part-private and part-governmental, with the dueling and often contradictory missions it implies, without either market or government forms of accountability, was the worst possible solution. It’s also the one Barney Frank demanded when he opposed Bush’s effort and declared that, “[Fannie and Freddie] are not facing any kind of financial crisis,” before also concluding, “The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we will see in terms of affordable housing.” And that is exactly what led us to this mess: the government’s reckless demands for “affordable housing.”

A Government Created Mess

In 1977 a Democratic Congress, working with a Democratic President, produced the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA). The CRA forced banks to make unsound loans to poor, uncreditworthy borrowers, all in the name of liberal fairness. Required to keep extensive records of their minority lending practices, banks became targets of racial shakedown artists. If they weren’t satisfied with a bank’s submission to their extortionist demands, they could have them denied the right to expand or merge with other banks.

In 1994 Clinton revamped the CRA and kicked off a new wave of reckless lending. This is where Freddie and Fannie jumped in to corner the market on bad loans, loans which wouldn’t have ever been made if rules requiring money down and sufficient sources of income hadn’t been thrown out the window in the name of racial equality.

Another contributing government factor was the loose monetary policy pursued by the Fed. By keeping interest rates too low, the Fed contributed to an influx of dollars into the market. When money is created faster than productivity warrants, it results in a misallocation of resources in certain assets, creating “booms.” Former vice president and economic advisor at the Federal Reserve Bank in Dallas, Gerald P. O’Driscoll Jr., blames the Fed for not properly weighing the costs of their inflation targeting methods:

In a vibrant market economy with technological innovation and ever new profit opportunities, the monetary policy that maintains price stability in consumer goods (or zero price inflation) requires substantial monetary stimulus. That stimulus will have a number of real consequences, including asset bubbles. These asset bubbles have real costs and involve misallocations of capital. For example, by the peak of the tech and telecom boom in March 2000, too much capital had been invested in high-tech companies and too little in “old economy firms.” Too much fiber optic cable and too few miles of railroad track were laid.

The Democrats’ Revolving Door

While government policy was meddling with the financial markets, government officials made themselves quite comfortable in the financial sector. Freddie and Fannie became a half-way house for democrats heading out of government. Franklin Raines, currently Barack Obama’s financial advisor and former Clinton era budget director, spearheaded Fannie Mae into countless Enron-style accounting manipulations and scandals. Foreshadowing the left’s current strategy to peg their failures on advocates of free markets, Raines derided those who pointed out his companies risky and shady practices as “ideologues” trying to “undermine” Fannie Mae.

Jim Johnson, also a former Fannie CEO and a board member of Goldman Sachs, is a policy advisor who was chosen by Obama to lead his vice-presidential selection team. Johnson was forced to fall on his sword when it was revealed he and several other prominent democrats received special perk loans from Countrywide Financial’s CEO Angelo Mozilo. With no banking or financial experience whatsoever, Jamie Gorelick, former Deputy Attorney General under Clinton, was appointed Vice Chairman of Fannie Mae in 1997, and got fat off of Raines’ accounting scandals. Rahm Emanual, the 4th highest ranking democrat in the House, was similarly shuffled onto Freddie’s board after leaving the Clinton White House.

Meanwhile, their Democratic colleagues who remained in government were assured their part of the take. Chris Dodd, now Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, raked in the most from Freddie and Fannie, at $165,000. Perhaps these donations are what Dodd had in mind when, in July, he referred to Fannie and Freddie as “fundamentally sound and strong.” Number 2 on the graft list is Barack Obama, who took in over $125,000 in his short tenure in the Senate. The government’s pet mortgage lenders further feathered their nests by opening “partnership offices” in the district of key members of Congress, where they could funnel millions of dollars to their supporters. The bribes paid off. Compared to IndyMac, which didn’t offer democrats any protection money and was thrown to the wolves by Chuck Schumer, Fannie and Freddie are now looking at billions in taxpayer support.

It’s not hard to see why, when President Bush sought to counter Fannie and Freddie’s government created incentives for recklessness, he was fought by Democrats at every turn. According to the White House, 17 attempts at reform were blocked by democrats. Government’s inability, thanks to Democratic cronyism, to replace the market checks which it destroyed by demanding reckless behavior on the one hand, and subsidizing risk with an implied guarantee on the other, provided the perfect financial storm for disaster.

One would think it would be difficult for those on the left to so easily absolve themselves of any responsibility, while simultaneously blaming those who attempted to stop them from creating this disaster, but that is exactly what they’ve done. Phil Gramm, who sought to relax the Democratic created requirements that banks issue risky subprime loans, has been tagged a “deregulator,” which is, in their view, automatic proof of guilt. Barack Obama blames the problem, as he does everything, on “Bush-McCain,” even as he found room in his campaign for those actually responsible and belongs to a party which protected Fannie and Freddie from reform. In short, the left is trying to rewrite history even as it’s being made. The ink hasn’t yet dried on the reporting of their government sponsored mess, and already they are blaming those who believe in freedom and oppose their interventionist programs. They think the failures of government should justify yet more government. They are wrong and their lies shouldn’t be allowed to disguise this fact.

Tuesday

23

September 2008

0

COMMENTS

Not Quite The Chicken And The Egg

Written by , Posted in Free Markets

Sometimes questions can escape obvious answers despite being pondered by our greatest thinkers. How did our universe come into existence? What happens when we die? Which came first: the chicken or the egg? Can markets exist without government?

Ok, we all know that last one shouldn’t be there. The answer, surely, is obvious: markets most certainly can exist without government. But this is not so obvious to Fareed Zakaria:

This crisis should put an end to false debates about government versus markets. Governments create markets, and markets can exist only with regulation. If you want to be truly free of regulation, try Haiti or Somalia. The real trick is to craft good regulations that allow markets to work well. No regulatory structure will be perfect, none will eliminate risk, nor should they. At best they can tame the wildest gyrations of the market economy while maintaining its efficiency.

Government creates markets? They can only exist with regulation? This is hyperbolic nonsense.

Markets are created by free and voluntary exchange, not governments. Without government the fisherman would still exchange some of his catch for clothes from the tailor, and to suggest otherwise is pure folly.

There is no doubt that the rule of law provides the best environment for markets to function.  Zakaria, however, misconstrues the meaning of “regulation” and confuses it for rule of law. Those who, as a rule of thumb (there are always exceptions), find regulation prohibitive to the best functioning of markets are not calling for an abolition of government, as Zakaria implies. Nor do Haiti and Somalia accurately represent what a market without regulation would look like. It is entirely dishonest for him to point to these as examples of unregulated market outcomes, as if the only alternative to busy-body bureaucrats deciding all manner of economic decisions is ethnic cleansing and a total breakdown of law and order.

There certainly are situations in which government can be used to unleash the power of the market. Common market failures can often be improved with government rule-making, but to claim that government creates markets is to suggest that the grease on the wheel creates motion.

Wednesday

3

September 2008

0

COMMENTS

Who Are They Protecting?

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Health Care, Welfare & Entitlements, Liberty & Limited Government

From Britain, but the same basic story could just as well be told from America:

The head of the NHS rationing watchdog has said he is ‘genuinely sorry’ for a delay in approving a new treatment for blindness.

But campaigners said Andrew Dillon’s comments would be of little consolation to the thousands of Britons who have lost their sight in the two years it took NICE to make its final decision.

The watchdog has now approved Lucentis, which is used to treat wet age-related macular degeneration, a condition which affects 26,000 new sufferers every year.

NICE’s original recommendation was that patients had to wait until they went blind in one eye before they would be given treatment to save the sight in the other.

The proposal caused a huge public outcry from doctors and campaigners, prompting a U-turn in December last year before further consultation resulted in the final decision today.

NHS thought it was their responsibility to decide what level of risk warranted use of this drug. The public vehemently disagreed with the determination that the drug was only worth taking after eye-sight was lost in one eye.

Why is the individual’s own judgment not sufficient? Let people decide when they want to take a drug and risk the side-effects, not government. If they want to wait until they are blind in one eye, then they can. But no one knows better than the individual how to properly weigh the consequences of their choices.

Proponents of government interventionism always promote these watchdog groups as protecting consumers, but what they really do is needlessly delay the operation of the market. The real beneficiaries are the drug manufacturers, whose already approved products need not face the level of competition they otherwise would without government meddling.

Freedom is a wonderful thing. Let it happen.

Hat tip: OpenMarket.org

Sunday

17

August 2008

0

COMMENTS

Free Trade Defeats Terrorism?

Written by , Posted in Foreign Affairs & Policy, Free Markets

Given the current political climate, I suppose I should be happy to see an op-ed coauthored by two left-leaning individuals arguing for free trade. However, I must take issue with the central premise of their case.

When trade flares up as a political issue — as it is likely to do in the presidential campaign this year — one aspect of the debate is almost always neglected. There is a fierce competition among foreign countries to sell their products here, in the United States, the largest commercial market in the world.

Moreover, by opening up our market to Muslim countries, we could not only help American consumers, but also serve a larger strategic goal: that of boosting the economies which now produce large pools of unemployed, embittered youth. We can make trade an effective weapon against terrorism.

Our tariff regime puts many nations in the Middle East, whose young people are susceptible to the sirens of Islamic fundamentalism, at an unintended disadvantage. This works against our efforts to stamp out jihadism. Fortunately, the problem is easy to fix.

First off, putting others at a disadvantage is exactly the intention of tariffs.  But that’s a minor quibble.  My real concern is with the flawed understanding of jihad exhibited in this argument.  The implication is that, if only they weren’t poor, there wouldn’t be so much terrorism.

There is little evidence to support this claim.  The few empirical studies on the matter have indicated no direct relationship between poverty and support for terrorism.  If anything, there’s a reverse correlation.  The 9/11 hijackers were not poverty stricken youths with no opportunity.

They were not born to be soldiers — none seems to have come from a military background — and there was little in their early lives to suggest that they would become what they did. The pilot of the first plane to hit the World Trade Center, Atta, came from “an ambitious, not overtly religious middle-class household in Egypt” and had led “a sheltered life” until he arrived in Hamburg, Germany, in 1992 to do graduate study in architecture. The pilot of the second plane, Marwan al-Shehhi, was an amiable, “laid-back” fellow from the United Arab Emirates who had joined the UAE army, “not the world’s most effective fighting force but one of its most generous, paying [its scholarship] students monthly stipends of about $2,000,” which may have been his primary reason for enlisting; this enabled him to go to Hamburg, though there is little evidence that he “had any serious scholarly ambitions.”

Hani Hanjour, the Saudi pilot who flew American Airlines flight 77 into the Pentagon, “had lived in the United States off and on throughout the 1990s, mostly in Arizona, intermittently taking flying lessons at several different flying schools.” He was, in the view of one of his flight instructors, “intelligent, friendly, and ‘very courteous, very formal,’ a nice enough fellow but a terrible pilot.” He finally got a commercial license from the FAA but was unable to find work here or in the Middle East. As for Ziad Jarrah, the pilot of the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania, he was “the handsome middle child and only son of an industrious, middle-class family in Beirut,” a “secular Muslim” family that “was easygoing — the men drank whiskey and the women wore short skirts about town and bikinis at the beach.” At university in Germany he met Aysel Sengün, “the daughter of conservative, working-class Turkish immigrants”; eventually they got married, but he disappeared for long periods, usually without explanation, leaving her frantic.

The benefits of free trade are myriad and, to anyone who bothers to observe the evidence, undeniable; but I see little evidence to suggest that defeating jihad is among them.

Wednesday

13

August 2008

0

COMMENTS

How Is This Possible?

Written by , Posted in Energy and the Environment, Free Markets

We’ve been told that we’re in an energy crises. Over and over it’s routinely asserted that any solution will require leadership. Leadership, of course, implies top down direction from governmental elites. It seems few people today think anything can be accomplished without such centrally directed leadership. They are wrong.

High gas prices cut U.S. driving for 8th month: government

Americans scaled back their driving during June by almost 5 percent in response to soaring fuel costs, the government said on Wednesday — a day after announcing the biggest six-month drop in U.S. petroleum demand in 26 years.

The Transportation Department said U.S. motorists drove 12.2 billion fewer miles in June compared to a year earlier, marking the eight month in a row that travel declined in the face of record gas prices as Americans change their driving habits, buy more fuel-efficient cars and switch to public transport.

“Changes in consumer behavior have essentially erased five years of growth in gasoline demand,” the American Petroleum Institute said on Wednesday in a separate report that showed gasoline use during the first seven months of 2008 fell by 2.1 percent to the lowest level for the period in five years.

This is, or should be, the common sense predicted outcome. Consumers adjust their behavior in response to changes in prices. Facing higher energy prices, users will seek more cost effective traveling methods. Knowing this, where is the crisis we hear so much about? What, exactly, do we need leadership for that can’t be accomplished by the dynamic free market? The fact of the matter is there is no energy crisis, but rather a political crisis, otherwise known as a presidential election.