A
MINORITY VIEW
BY
WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE:
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2008, AND THEREAFTER
A Nation of Thieves
Edgar K.
Browning, professor of economics at Texas A&M University, has a new book
aptly titled "Stealing from Each Other." Its subtitle, "How the
Welfare State Robs Americans of Money and Spirit," goes to the heart of
what the book is about. The rise of equalitarian ideology has driven Americans
to steal from one another. Browning explains that certain kinds of equality
have been a cherished value in America. Equality under the law and, within
reason, equality of opportunity is consistent with a free society. Equality of
results is an anathema to a free society and within it lie the seeds of
tyranny.
Browning
entertains a discussion about when inequalities are just or unjust. For
example, college graduates earn income higher than high-school dropouts. Some
people prefer to work many hours and earn more than others who prefer to work
fewer. Students who spend 25 or more hours a week on classroom preparation earn
higher grades than students who spend five hours. Most would agree that these
inequalities are just. There are other sources of inequalities that are unjust,
such as: when incomes result from fraud, corruption, stealing, exploitation,
oppression and the like. Such sources of inequality play an insignificant role
in producing income inequality in America. Most economists agree that income is
closely related to productivity.
Much of the
justification for the welfare state is to reduce income inequality by making
income transfers to the poor. Browning provides some statistics that might help
us to evaluate the sincerity and truthfulness of this claim. In 2005, total
federal, state and local government expenditures on 85 welfare programs were $620
billion. That's larger than national defense ($495 billion) or public education
($472 billion). The 2005 official poverty count was 37 million persons. That
means welfare expenditures per poor person were $16,750, or $67,000 for a poor
family of four.
Those figures
understate poverty expenditures because poor people are recipients of
non-welfare programs such as Social Security, Medicare, private charity and
uncompensated medical care. The question that naturally arises is if we're
spending enough to lift everyone out of poverty, why is there still poverty?
The obvious answer is poor people are not receiving all the money being spent
in their name. Non-poor people are getting the bulk of it.
Browning's
concluding chapter tells us what the welfare state costs us. He acknowledges
the non-economic costs such as infringements on liberty and strains on the
political process, but focuses on the quantitative economic costs. The
disincentive effects of Social Security have reduced the GDP by 10 percent, the
federal income tax (as opposed to a proportional tax) by 9 percent and past
deficits by 3.5 percent for a total of 22.5 percent. He guesses that welfare
programs have reduced GDP by 2.5 percent. The overall effect of
redistributionist policies has created incentives that have reduced GDP by a
total of 25 percent. Without those, our GDP would be close to $18 trillion
instead of $14 trillion.
So what's
Browning's solution? First, he reminds us of the biblical admonition "Thou
shalt not steal." Government income redistribution programs produce the
same result as theft. In fact, that's what a thief does; he redistributes
income. The difference between government and thievery is mostly a matter of
legality. Browning's solution is captured in the title of his last chapter,
"Just Say No," where he proposes, "The federal government shall
not adopt any policies that transfer income (resources) from some Americans to
other Americans." He agrees with James Madison, the father of our
Constitution, who said, "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."
For years
I've used Professor Browning's and his colleague Mark A. Zupan's excellent textbook
"Microeconomics: Price Theory and Applications" in my intermediate
microeconomics class. "Stealing from Each Other" is a continuation of
his academic excellence.
Walter E.
Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more
about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.