Townhall...
The
Welfare State: Too Many Takers --
Not Enough Givers
By Larry Elder
9/1/2011
The
Irish cabdriver complained almost
nonstop during our half-hour drive to the Belfast International
Airport. He
especially worried about the job prospects for his 20-something son
and, for
that matter, about those for the generation of young people who face a
“sh-tty”
future on this beautiful island full of friendly people.
“Give
me,” I finally said, “the No. 1
reason for the economic problems here.”
He
looked almost stunned.
“Huh...”
he said, “let me think.”
We
drove silently for nearly a
half-mile. Then he turned to me and said, “Too many takers -- not
enough
givers.”
Little
by little, inch by inch, drop
by drop, governments both in America and in Europe began taking more
and more
from people, diminishing the incentive of those on both sides of the
transaction -- the taker and the giver. In America, nearly half of wage
earners
pay not one single dime in federal income taxes. Many of them trudge
down to
the local polling place or vote via absentee ballot -- and vote
themselves a
raise.
The
Founding Fathers conceived a
brilliant document to restrain the federal government and allow maximum
freedom
for the people to make their own way. It leaves people the power to
make their
own decisions and to deal with the consequences. Almost before the ink
dried,
Congress tried to circumvent the Constitution.
James
Madison, the fourth U.S.
president and the “Father of the Constitution,” warned against using
the
document -- especially the “general welfare” clause -- to dispense
money, no
matter how well-intended or deserved: “With respect to the words
general
welfare, I have always regarded them as qualified by the detail of
powers
(enumerated in the Constitution) connected with them. To take them in a
literal
and unlimited sense would be a metamorphosis of the Constitution into a
character which there is a host of proofs was not contemplated by its
creators.”
When
Congress appropriated $15,000 to
assist French refugees in 1792, an appalled Madison wrote, “I cannot
undertake
to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution, which granted a
right to
Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their
constituents.”
“Too
many takers -- not enough
givers.”
Hollywood
left-wingers understand the
corrosive effect of burdensome government on their own industry. Those
working
in Hollywood long complained about “runaway” productions, where other
states
and countries lured television and movie productions away from
California by
offering tax incentives and less restrictive union rules.
What
did Hollywood do about this?
The
industry lobbied state and city
lawmakers to lower the tax and regulatory burden on production
companies in
order to keep the work local. It worked. Still the left screams at “Big
Oil”
for taking advantage of legal tax breaks -- offered to other companies
-- to
reduce their tax burden, just as Hollywood producers try to do.
Meanwhile,
an MSNBC pundit talks about
the damage inflicted on the East Coast by Hurricane Irene. This shows,
he said,
the vital and unique role played by the federal government in disaster
relief.
He criticized some Republicans for wanting Irene disaster relief offset
by
spending cuts elsewhere in the budget. But aside from
Republican-libertarian
presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul and his senator son, has anyone
asked
under what congressional authority does Congress take money from its
citizens
to pay for state “disaster relief”?
Obama,
after a two-year spending and
regulatory binge, has learned nothing about Economics 101. He recently
nominated left-wing economist Alan Krueger as chairman of his Council
of
Economic Advisers. President Clinton, among others, relied on Krueger’s
widely
cited minimum-wage study to push for a higher minimum wage. Economists
disagree
about a lot of things, but there is a mighty strong consensus among
them on
this: Forcing employers to pay higher entry-level wages means fewer
people will
be hired.
Economist
Milton Friedman called
minimum-wage regulations among the “most anti-black” laws on the books.
Why? A
disproportionate number of blacks are unskilled and, therefore, are
disproportionately harmed when laws force employers to pay more than
the market
value of labor. In fact, before federal minimum-wage laws began in the
1930s,
black teens were more likely to be employed than white teens because
they were
willing to work for less. Bosses, no matter how racist, were more than
willing
to pay less for labor. Similarly, so-called federal and state
“prevailing wage”
laws and “living wage ordinances” disproportionately hurt low-skilled
workers
of color, women and others who wish to work part time. Yet like
clockwork,
Democrats and many Republicans pass laws to raise the minimum wage to
an
“affordable level,” unconcerned about the unnamed person now out of a
job.
The
“welfare state” chickens, as the
Belfast cabbie observed, are now coming home to roost. As governments
take more
away from their producing citizens and give it to their nonproducers,
growth
stagnates and opportunities dry up.
As
my eighth-grade dropout, WWII
ex-Marine dad used to say, “When you try and get something for nothing,
you
usually end up with nothing for something.” Dad would have enjoyed
chatting
with the cabbie: “Too many takers -- not enough givers.”
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it at Townhall
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