Townhall
Finance...
Obama
Proposes New Department of Corporate Welfare
by Tad
DeHaven January 23, 2012
Contrary to
what various news outlets are reporting, President Obama is NOT
proposing to
cut government. The administration is proposing to take four
independent
federal agencies that specialize in corporate welfare – along with the
Office
of the U.S. Trade Representative – and combine them with corporate
welfare
programs at the Department of Commerce to form what would I would argue
should
be called the Department of Corporate Welfare.
According
to reports, this rearranging of the deck chairs would save $300 million
a year.
That’s peanuts. Worse, those alleged savings will be of no consequence
to
taxpayers as there is nothing to suggest that the president intends to
cut
overall spending for the agencies comprising the new bureaucracy. That
portends
bigger government, not smaller. The president is trying to sell the
American
taxpayer a false bill of goods.
The
president’s proposal is also an attempt to counter the perception – an
accurate
one – that the administration’s policies are detrimental to commerce.
But
corporate welfare is detrimental to commerce because the market
distortions it
creates hinder economic output. Making it easier for select businesses
to help
themselves to taxpayer-financed subsidies would only perpetrate the
same sort
of crony capitalist schemes that gave us Solyndra and the Chevy Volt.
Of course,
no transparent attempt to appear “business friendly” would be complete
without
a bone toss to the Small Business Administration. The “bone” this time
is the
president’s intention to elevate the head of the SBA to the Cabinet. As
I
discuss in a Cato essay on the SBA, rather than helping small
businesses
compete against big businesses, the SBA’s loan guarantees mainly help a
tiny
share of small businesses compete against other small businesses. In
reality,
the biggest beneficiary of the SBA is the banks, which reap the profits
from
the loans guaranteed by the agency.
Finally,
Republican policymakers talk a good game about cutting government, but
they
often hide behind calls for making the federal government “more
efficient.” Now
that the president has seized a political opportunity to sing from the
GOP’s
hymnal, it’ll be interesting – if not entertaining – to see how
Republican
policymakers respond. To avoid embarrassment, I recommend offering
specific
spending cuts.
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