Townhall...
Government
the Job Killer
By John Stossel
October 12, 2011
President
Obama says government will
have to build the nation out of the economic trough.
“We’re
the country that built the
intercontinental railroad,” Obama says. “So how can we now sit back and
let
China build the best railroads?”
Ironic
that he mentions the Chinese.
Progressives used to complain that to build the railroad, bosses abused
Chinese
workers -- called them “coolies” and treated them badly. Now this is
big success?
I
guess Obama doesn’t know that the
transcontinental railroad was a Solyndra-like Big Government scandal.
The
railroad didn’t make economic sense at the time, so the government
subsidized
construction and gave the companies huge quantities of the best land on
the
continent. As we should expect, without market discipline -- profit and
loss --
contractors ripped off the taxpayers. After all, if you get paid by the
amount
of track you lay, you’ll lay more track than necessary.
Credit
Mobilier, the first rail
construction company, made enormous profits by overcharging for its
work. To
keep the subsidies flowing, it made big contributions to congressmen.
Where
have we heard that recently?
The
transcontinental railroad lost
tons of money. The government never covered its costs, and most rail
lines that
used the tracks went bankrupt or continued to be subsidized by
taxpayers. The
Union Pacific and Northern Pacific -- all those rail lines we learned
about in
history class -- milked the taxpayer and then went broke.
One
line worked. The Great Northern
never went bankrupt. It was the railroad that got no subsidies.
We
need infrastructure, but the beauty
of leaving most of these things to the private sector -- without
subsidies,
bailouts and other privileges -- is that they would have to be
justified by the
profit-and-loss test. In a truly free market, when private companies
make bad
choices, investors lose their own money. This tends to make them
careful.
By
contrast, when government loses
money, it just spends more and raises your taxes, or borrows more, or
inflates.
Building giant government projects is no way to create jobs. When
government
spends on infrastructure, it takes money away from projects that
consumers
might think are more important.
When
government isn’t killing jobs by
sucking money out of the private sector, it kills jobs by smothering
the
private sector with regulation. I talked to Peter Schiff about all
this. Schiff
is a good authority because he was one of the few people to warn of the
housing
bust. Now he’s had a run-in with the federal government over job
creation.
Schiff,
who operates a brokerage firm
with 150 employees, recently complained to Congress that “regulations
are
running up the cost of doing business, and a lot of companies never
even get
started because they can’t overcome that regulatory hurdle.”
Schiff
claims he would have hired a
thousand more people but for regulations.
“I
had a huge plan to expand. I wanted
to open up a lot of offices. I had some capital to do it. I had
investors lined
up. My business was doing really well. But unfortunately, because of
the
regulations in the security industry, I was not able to hire.”
So
if he wants to hire an analyst, he
can’t just hire him?
“I
had to get permission to publish their
research, which I didn’t get for years. And so I can’t pay analysts if
I can’t
sell their research.
People
don’t appreciate the number of
regulations entrepreneurs face. Schiff pays 10 people just to try to
figure out
if his company is obeying the rules.
“You
can’t just act very quickly,
because everything has to be done through this maze of compliance. Even
my
brokers ... find out that maybe 20 percent, 30 percent of their day is
involved
in compliance-related activity, activity that is inhibiting their
productivity.
... All around the country, people are complying with regulations
instead of
producing, instead of investing and growing the economy. They’re trying
to
survive the regulations.”
This
is no way to create jobs or
wealth. Keynesian pundits and politicians can’t understand why
businesses sit
on cash rather than invest and hire unemployed workers. It’s really no
mystery.
Government is in the way.
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