R
Ridgerunner
Guest
The “Ryan Budget” doesn’t reduce government programs at all. It reduces their rate of growth to be more consistent (but still at a deficit) with the economy’s capacity to pay.So, let’s say we follow the ideological path (deontological libertarianism, Ayn Rand-style) of the Ryan-budget to its eventual end – either a dismantling or serious reduction of welfare programs. Do people really think that charity would pick up the slack? I am going to say no. If people disagree, how about some arguments to support the notion that charity can serve people just as well as government programs? Certainly, there is no current organization capable of this, but perhaps one could see this developing in some way. I have to ask, though - if charity works so well, why was welfare implemented in the first place?
Now, if we suppose that charity will be insufficient, we are apparently left with a position saying that it’s more important that rich people keep more of their money (the Ryan budget will cut taxes for the rich), even though almost all of the wealth-generation over the last 30 years has been going to the top. Look at the statistics on the ongoing increase in income inequality in the US. The US has the worst income inequality in the western world, with a gini-index of 40+.
So given that fact, perhaps we can say this to the rich: “Look, over the last 30+ years, almost all of the economic growth has been going to you guys. Between 1979 and 2007, the top 1% have seen their income increase by 275%, whereas income for the working class and the middle class has stagnated. In 2007 (it’s probably worse now), the top 10% took home 50% of the income. The top 1% took almost 24% of the income. You have gotten all the increases in income, so you have to pay more of the taxes. Either that, or the working class and middle-class gets paid more, so they can afford to pay more in taxes. Your choice. But you have to choose between the two. You cannot have all the increases in income without taking on the burden of higher taxes.”
In 1929, the government first started keeping statistics on the relative shares of national income going to property (capital) and labor. Ever since then, it has varied almost not at all. Both basically move up and down together, but labor’s share is greatest at full employment.
There are reasons for all of that.
But transfer payments all come from labor’s share. When one looks at income stagnation for working people, one really needs to look at increases in involuntary transfer payments. They, and the take from working people to sustain them, have increased tremendously in the last few decades.
Some of that is due to the slowly encroaching “demographic winter” that abortion on demand has brought about, and the resultant increase in non-working people relative to working people. Clearly, then, increasing involuntary transfer payments (due both to aging and increased welfare) presses down on earnings from work.
But the whole thing is a downward spiral. The lower the income from work, the lower is the birth rate. That’s because income from all sources only goes to two places; individual consumption and transfer payments. Transfer payments are of two kinds; voluntary and involuntary. Voluntary transfer payments go to things like raising children, educating them, gifts, charity, support of a spouse, etc. Voluntary transfer payments tend to have a beneficial economic effect. Involuntary transfer payments are of two kinds: taxes and theft. We are all aware how we can be impoverished by theft. We are less aware how we become impoverished by taxation. Regardless, involuntary transfer payments reduce voluntary transfer payments. That’s just simple math.
That’s why childlessness and taxation are the primary enemies of prosperity for working people. That’s also why it is not only incorrect, but destructive, to think of increased taxation as a route to prosperity. And increasing taxes on those who invest in property (capital) is destructive to the income of labor because they both move up and down at the same time, and have ever since the government started analyzing it statistically. You can’t improve your food supply by eating the seed corn.
So, the real cures for low income are full employment and child-rearing. Neither is being encouraged today as a matter of policy. On the contrary, both are being mightily discouraged by government policy.
And it will get worse the way things are going. Right now, every man, woman and child owes $140,000 as his/her portion of the government debt. I have four working adult children. When my wife and I die, their share increases by $70,000 apiece, to $210,000. Just like that. And that would be if the government never borrowed another dime. It is fashionable to talk about the burdens of college debts (average about $30,000). But at least education confers a measurable economic benefit. Government debt doesn’t. Under no circumstances should we be blase about increasing that individual debt even further. Yes, they will have to pay it, in one way or another. They will do so by increased taxes, inflation and/or higher interest rates. There is no way out of that.
So, while it might be emotionally satisfying to raise taxes, it is a worthless enterprise or worse if, by doing so, the downward spiral is accelerated.