Subsidized wealth destruction
2009-04-09
As crisis-response measures go, the scrap subsidy is a fairly
minor matter. Even in Germany, where €5bn is going toward it,
there are issues that are much more consequential, such as
whether the EU should inflate the money supply through
quantitative easing. The scrap bonus gets outsized attention
because it's an easily understood, direct benefit to a single
sector of the economy. It clearly saves jobs and promotes
spending in the short term. The existential aspect of it is
overlooked, though, and it's in this sense that the subsidy is
indeed significant. It speaks volumes about the willingness of
Western society to deal with the causes of the current crisis. The
subsidy is based on decommissioning and crushing cars that are
old but fully operational. This is merely a turbocharged version
of the planned obsolescence that is already the lifeblood of
economic growth. Almost everyone agrees that we've been living
beyond our means, but for some reason we still suffer from the
illusion that wealth can be created by destroying wealth.
[Czech Republic European Union printing money inflation
hyperinflation cash for clunkers]
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