tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-34915033516677100922024-03-13T14:13:30.412-04:00Modern Economic FreedomDavid Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.comBlogger35125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-27395437674049884272012-05-01T08:14:00.003-04:002012-05-01T08:16:09.585-04:00Real (non-EBT) Help for the PoorMassachusetts legislators recently passed reforms to the Electronic Benefits Transfer Card (EBT) system in hopes of stamping out abuse. Unfortunately, the focus only tangentially addresses the issue of how to help the poor. The government merely exacerbated the problem by strengthening the control it has over spending decisions. EBT promotes the kind of nanny statism that enhances the dependency of the poor on government. To effectively help the poor in Massachusetts, the government can and should do the following:
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<i>Just give cash</i>. If the government is going to make transfers to poor people, the form should simply be cash. Specialization and designation of government aid programs are wrought with inefficiency and waste. It further distances the decision making from the consumer. The most effective form of assistance is a cash payment. Empower the people to make choices for their families. They are in a position to know best what they need.
<i>Education reform</i>. Perhaps the most effective method of elevating from the depths of poverty is through education. Government at the state level should be focused on programs that provide the most benefit to disadvantaged children. For example, the Neighborhood House Charter School has been highly effective. The government should promote these kinds of charter schools. School choice should also be an option, and parents be given direct assistance to send their children elsewhere if local schools are failing.
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<i>Reduce or eliminate the minimum wage</i>. Though ostensibly created to boost income and help low income earners, the minimum wage actually creates a cap on employment. The negative effects most directly impact the poor – the unskilled and undereducated. A simple supply-demand chart demonstrates the adverse impact on jobs. The minimum wage does not raise income levels, but rather reduces the supply of low paying jobs – the bottom rung of the ladder people need to climb out of poverty.
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<i>Cut taxes and regulation on employment</i>. To create more of something, it needs to be taxed less. By reducing the taxation on employment, more jobs will be created which will help the poor. Unemployment taxes and various fees and regulations are a drag on job creation. They should be reduced.
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<i>Promote economic growth</i>. The logic is straightforward: a greater supply of jobs leads to higher income thus helping the poor, and jobs are created through economic growth. The greatest impact the government can have on economic growth is by reducing taxation and spending and regulation. Encourage companies to set up shop in Massachusetts by lowering the tax burden on income.
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EBT abuse and reform has recently been a hot topic in Massachusetts, and the legislature is taking action to address the issue. However, poor people in need of real assistance are being done a disservice. Government should focus on real and substantial solutions.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-14621663409641662892010-10-28T16:43:00.001-04:002010-10-28T16:45:35.164-04:00Deval Patrick's Massachusetts Economic Scorecard<em>Is Massachusetts better off than it was four years ago?</em> Since Deval Patrick took office in January 2007, over 100,000 jobs have been lost in the state as the unemployment rate nearly doubled from 4.6% to 8.8%. A lengthy list of clichés is applicable: You can’t argue with the tape, the scoreboard doesn’t lie, and you are what your record says you are. The employment figures are simply the tip of the iceberg on Patrick’s economic record. When contemplating keeping Patrick in his current position on November 2nd this simple scorecard should come in handy. <br /><br />• <strong>Over 100,000 jobs have been lost as unemployment rose to 8.8%</strong>. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, at the beginning of 2007 employment in Massachusetts was 3,282,773. By the end of August 2008, it stood at 3,171,545 – a loss of 111,228 jobs. The unemployment rate rose from 4.6% to 8.8% (a 91% increase). For comparison, New Hampshire went from 3.4% to 5.7% (up 68%). Of course when the score is this bad, Patrick wants to distract with the nebulous concept of 25,000 jobs “saved”. It is an affront to rational thought and an argument made by someone trying to sucker the people from the truth. By that reasoning he saved 3.2mm jobs! The reality is that over 100,000 jobs have been lost with Patrick at the helm. <br />• <strong>Government spending has risen by $2.6 billion, over twice the rate of inflation</strong>. The fiscal year 2008 budget had the Massachusetts government spending $26.8 billion. The fiscal year 2011 budget has the number at $29.4 billion. This is an increase of 9.7%. During that same period, the consumer price index rose from 208.4 to 218.0 – an increase of 4.6%. Had Patrick kept spending in line with inflation, $1.4 billion would be saved. While Massachusetts families are tightening budgets to gird for tough economic times, Patrick increases spending twice as fast as the cost of living rises. <br />• <strong>The unfunded pension liability has grown almost 50%, to $20 billion</strong>. On January 1, 2007, the Public Employee Retirement Administration Commission in their Commonwealth Actuarial Valuation Report pegged the unfunded actuarial liability at $13.3 billion. In the 2010 version, the number balloons to $20.0 billion. While the stock market dip will be blamed for this nearly 50% liability growth, it can realistically only have caused a small portion of it. Stocks generally declined in that time period by 20%, and bonds increased in value. The culprit is that it is easier to promise benefits than increase pay. In addition to actual budget spending increasing under Patrick, the total future bill has massively increased. Aside from current taxes owed, there is an implied forward tax rate, and the $20 billion is a massive future tax burden.<br />• <strong>Taxes have increased</strong>. Every dollar of government spending must come from a dollar of taxation. As spending has ramped up, so too have taxes. Property taxes have increased, though Patrick promised they would go down. Based on Department of Revenue data, total statewide property taxes in fiscal year 2008 were $5.3 billion. In fiscal year 2010, they were $5.7 billion. This is an increase of $400 million, or 7.3% in two years. The consumer price index is up 3.5% in that time period - less than half the pace of property tax. To add to the burden, the sales tax went up from 5% to 6.25%, an increase of 25%. This is a regressive tax raising the cost of living at the worst time, but claimed to be necessary to support the outsized increases in government spending. Never ask a barber if you need a haircut, and never ask Patrick if you need to pay more in taxes. He has a vacuum in your pocket. <br />• <strong>Healthcare costs are up</strong>. While Patrick inherited the current healthcare system, he is an unabashed fan and has exacerbated its massive cost increases. The cost to the state has gone up $2.2 billion. For fiscal year 2011, the office of the Secretary of Health and Human Services has a budget of $8.1 billion. The number for fiscal year 2008 was $5.9 billion, which means an increase of 37%. Massachusetts now has the highest cost for health insurance in the country, as well as the highest rate of cost inflation. Patrick embraced the incorrect assertion that the uninsured raise medical costs, when in actuality it is the mandates and government involvement in the market that drive prices ever higher.<br /><br />The last four years have been the result of tax and spend and promise - the failed economic policies of a one-party monopoly on power. And the dismal economic scorecard reflects that. Flowery rhetoric is one thing, but the numbers do not lie. The economic record is what it is and the buck stops with Deval Patrick. As the scorecard clearly shows, the Massachusetts economy is worse off than it was four years ago.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-72047828569042015802009-10-28T16:13:00.004-04:002009-10-30T12:31:15.064-04:00Massachusetts is a Health-Reform DebacleIn an October 15th op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, Governor Deval Patrick proclaimed that “Massachusetts is a Health-Reform Model.” The reality is that since its inception in 2006, the reform has been a debacle. Its most insidious characteristic could perhaps be that it is being touted as a model for the entire country. The Massachusetts healthcare program is actually the antithesis of economically sound and beneficial reform.<br /><br />Patrick at least correctly described the problem with healthcare as one of cost. The solution, though, is not the plan implemented in Massachusetts. There are two paths government intervention in a market can take: it can structure a set of mandates that force prices to rise, or it can implement price controls which inevitably lead to shortages. The Massachusetts model achieves both. <br /><br />Instead of giving consumers more choice and control, the Massachusetts plan shifts power to government. It imposes a set of mandates that have forced prices up for all. Massachusetts is not only the costliest state in the country for insurance, but also is experiencing the greatest price inflation. The high costs fall on both the people directly, as well as putting a crunch on state government. Governor Patrick self-congratulates a balanced budget, but also must acknowledge that rising healthcare costs crowd out other government spending. The plan has not completely annihilated the budget because it receives an outsize subsidy from the Federal government. Thus, the rest of the country is actually subsidizing healthcare in Massachusetts – if the model was expanded, that subsidy only can come in the form of higher taxes. In the meantime, the available supply of healthcare in Massachusetts is declining as waiting times increase. Higher costs, lower quality – this is the Massachusetts model. <br /><br />Mitt Romney, who signed the program into law as Governor, infamously quipped in a Presidential debate, “I like mandates. The mandates work”. Unfortunately, mandates are counterintuitive to free market principles. Mandates create distortions that lead directly to higher costs for all - this is a logical and empirical precept. Romney believed the cause of high healthcare costs is the uninsured utilizing the system and that their expenditures were being spread to the insured. He claimed in 2006 that, “Every uninsured citizen in Massachusetts will soon have affordable health insurance and the costs of health care will be reduced.” The opposite actually ensued as insurance has become less affordable, though more subsidized, and costs have risen dramatically. The Massachusetts reform was based on the specious concept that the uninsured are driving up costs. This conclusion unfortunately directed attention away from the real underlying sources of outsized inflation in healthcare costs. <br /><br />In a market, the distance between payer and consumer is directly proportional to the level of pricing inefficiency. The current system of insurance propagates a discrepancy between the people who receive the healthcare, and those who pay for it. The cost of a visit to an emergency room is not exorbitant because of the uninsured who visit, but rather because virtually no one who visits actually pays the bill directly. Add on the fact that billions of dollars are wasted each year on unnecessary procedures in an effort to stem litigation. The Massachusetts model does not address either issue, and thus is failing miserably. <br /><br />It is possible, fortunately, to tackle these problems. The current distortion in the tax code must be fixed such that all healthcare expenditures are treated equally. Additionally, health savings account should be expanded to become the norm. Consumers should direct their own dollars. Healthcare needs to be reformed in a way that gives consumers vastly more control than they currently have. Tort reform must be enacted to not only directly reduce the cost of healthcare, but also to eliminate the wasteful spending that indirectly increases costs. <br /><br />As costs are contained, healthcare becomes more affordable. And as prices drop, the ranks of the uninsured will follow. Those who then still cannot afford healthcare can be subsidized by the government. There is little logic in transforming the entire healthcare system into a government controlled program when only a small portion is in need of help. If anything, the government needs to vastly reduce its role, as it currently controls roughly half of all medical expenditures. This has only further exacerbated the problem. <br /><br />There seems to be a consensus that the central problem with healthcare is cost. The divergence, though, comes from the root cause of the high prices and how to reduce them. Prices are out of control because approximately 80% of costs are paid by someone other than the actual consumer, as well as a tort system that encourages wasteful spending. The Massachusetts reform addresses neither issue, and instead gives more control to the government. The results are as expected – higher costs and lower quality. Massachusetts is a health-reform debacle that provides ample evidence of a failed experiment and a blueprint of what not to do for the rest of the country.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-47482843112139662772009-08-13T12:03:00.001-04:002009-08-13T12:04:56.951-04:00Cash for Clunkers Should be HeapedDemand has been so high for the Cash for Clunkers program that Congress increased funding from the initial $1 billion. The basics of the program are simple (and borrowed from the British “Cash for Bangers” – not nearly as catchy). The government will cut you a check for $3,500-$4,500 for turning in your gas guzzling clunker and buying a new, fuel-efficient car. There are certain parameters, of course. The clunker must be scrapped, and the amount paid depends on the gain in fuel efficiency. <br /><br />Because the clunker is junked, the government is essentially handing out a check. As in, it is a four thousand dollar payment in exchange for purchasing a new car, and eliminating an old one. As the precept goes, every dollar of government spending must be paid for with a dollar of taxes. Thus, the taxpayer is shelling out a few billion dollars to get old cars off the road. Yes, some might posit that there is an ancillary Keynesian stimulation benefit – giving people money to spur the purchase of new cars (for the simple counter, see the precept two sentences prior). <br /><br />Should the taxpayer be in the business of paying money to get old cars off the road? The approximate math of the program stacks up as follows. The $1 billion covers the purchase of 250,000 clunkers. The average car is driven about 15 thousand miles per year. That totals just less than 4 billion total miles driven. Assume the average fuel economy of the clunkers was 15 miles per gallon, and the average increase was 10 miles per gallon (the level required for the maximum government handout). The new cars, in aggregate, will use 100 million less gallons of gas. As a not so insignificant side note, the cost savings to the subsidized owners of the new cars would be roughly $300 million per year.<br /><br />The reduced gasoline consumption is significant. That translates to roughly two billion less pounds of carbon dioxide production. An acre of trees consumes about 10,000 pounds of carbon dioxide per year (this varies widely, depending on the type of tree and the density – but the approximation is what counts here). Thus 200 thousand acres of trees would equate to the amount of gasoline usage eliminated. The cost to plant an acre of trees varies widely as well, though for this analysis $1,000 per acre will be used. It would then cost about $200 million to plant the equivalent trees. The $1 billion spent to buy the 250,000 clunkers would be enough to plant five times as many trees as would be required to cover the difference in carbon dioxide emissions. Yes, enough to cover twice the total CO2 produced by the clunkers in the first place. <br /><br />Of course, the issue goes well beyond the simplified math. Average fuel economy has been steadily increasing over the years. Trading up from clunker to new car is part of the natural progression. If the government wanted to facilitate the process, there is an economically sound way to do it: reduce the burden of government spending and taxation. The economy will grow, jobs will be created, and people will have more money with which to buy new, more fuel efficient vehicles.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-30499927309049492262009-07-28T11:13:00.001-04:002009-07-28T11:24:42.527-04:00Who Should Pay for Betty Beauchaine's Hot Dog? (Have your cake and eat it Part II)A cover article in the July 28th Wall Street Journal describes the efforts of healthcare professionals to reduce repeat visits by patients (“Cutting Repeat Hospital Trips – Simple Idea, Hard to Pull Off”). The first paragraph ends with the question, “Can hospital persuade discharged patients such as Betty Beauchaine to pass up a Fourth of July hot dog?”<br /><br />The article proceeds to describe Betty as a 75-year old who suffers from heart failure. She went to the table at a picnic and said “I’m going to have a hot dog. If I’m dead in the morning, I’ll never know.”<br /><br />Good for Betty! As great-grandmother, she has lived a lifetime and earned the right to make those kinds of decisions. From her statement, it is clear she is fluent in the risks and rewards of her behavior. She wants to eat the hot dog, and knows that it can kill her to do so. <br /><br />But the Federal Government wants to take that decision away from her. Actually, it has been trying to do that for quite some time. Medicare has already socialized healthcare to a substantial degree. Thus, the outcomes between the delicious rewards of a July 4th hot dog and the ultimate risk of death generally fall on society to pay for. If Betty makes it through the night, but needs to head to the hospital as a result of the nitrate stick she consumed, everyone pays. <br /><br />Should hot dog eating be banned? Of course not. Should healthcare be socialized? Of course not. Americans should be free to make decisions for themselves and receive both the benefits and suffer the potential consequences.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-13211787384480119782009-05-12T10:52:00.001-04:002009-05-12T12:07:54.807-04:00Your Implied Tax Rate Is...The wool is being pulled over the eyes of the American people. The President has revealed a budget with $3.5 trillion in spending and a $1.2 trillion deficit. The wool is in the latter number, and the eyes are really our collective pockets. Every dollar the government spends must eventually be paid for with a dollar of taxes. At some future point in time, the deficit must be made whole. But since the money is not being taken out of the peoples’ pockets today, outrage over the obscene level of spending is muted. <br /><br />Unfortunately, most people are not computing their implied tax rate. As in, if instead of deficit spending, taxes were raised to cover the difference, tax rates would be much higher than they currently are. Estimated receipts for 2010 are $2.4 trillion, with $1.2 trillion of that coming from income taxes (both individual and corporate). If the entire budget deficit were covered by an increase in income taxes, rates would have to double. Double. Double? Double! Repeat: Double!<br /><br />For reference, $940 billion of the remaining $1.2 trillion in receipts comes from social security and other payroll taxes – thus, it is assumed for purposes of calculating the implied tax rate that the increase is covered by income taxes. <br /><br />If taxpayers understood that their implied tax rate is double in order to cover the budget deficit, would it still be tolerated? Of course, if actual income tax rates were doubled, would income tax receipts double? Both questions are a few notches beyond rhetorical. <br /><br />The question remains on how to adjust the implied tax rate given that the taxes will be paid in the future. Is the number higher because of the interest cost on the debt, or should it be lowered due to the massive inflation that will no doubt be generated by the absurd government spending and printing of money? <br /><br />Maybe we will all feel better after seeing our government healthcare provider. Wait – is that cost included in our implied tax rate?David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-68122590197877541502009-05-12T10:49:00.003-04:002009-05-14T13:51:52.661-04:00Have Your Cake, Eat it Too, Pay Tax on Cake, See Government DoctorA proposal is being floated to tax sugary drinks such as soda and Gatorade. Coincidentally, a proposal is being floated to socialize the healthcare industry. The two are inextricably linked. If everyone is paying for everyone else’s healthcare, unquestionably behavior linked to health should be dictated by everyone. <br /><br />As the precept goes, when something is taxed, there is less of it. Thus, by taxing the consumption of sugary drinks, there will be less consumed. A better diet will no doubt lead to better health, and thus the collective costs to society will be lowered. The same, of course, goes for things like cigarettes. If the taxpayer is on the hook for treating lung cancer, then it is in the taxpayer’s interest to minimize smoking. It should not end there, though. Really any behavior that poses a risk to health should be taxed, or banned altogether. <br /><br />It must be so. Another precept is that price ceilings lead to shortages. As in, the myth being propagated that the government can simply control healthcare prices is just that. There is no messianic hand wave that will magically keep costs under control when healthcare is “free” to all. Thus, the only way to keep the cost of socialized healthcare even remotely palatable is to massively regulate behavior. <br /><br />Everyone must be coerced to live a healthier lifestyle. No activities with injury potential can be tolerated, and should be banned. Eating right and regular exercise will be a requirement. People must be eating their five servings of fruits and vegetables, taking their vitamins, and getting plenty of cardiovascular workouts. Urine samples can be used to ensure the proper consumption of essential nutrients. The government will regularly screen blood samples of the population to monitor important indicators of health. A workout database can be constructed to keep everyone on a regimen. People will log their routines via a government web site. Better yet, exercise equipment – whether at a gym or in the home – can be fitted with a wireless device to automatically send data to the centralized system. Government inspectors can regularly make visits to properly calibrate the meters. We will need full genetic screening of the population as well. The government must know each individual’s susceptibility to various ailments, and enforce proper preventative measures. <br /><br />Or…We can choose to live in a free society where people make their own decisions, and also assume responsibility for the consequences of their actions.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-72947154179290942532009-05-05T10:30:00.001-04:002009-05-05T10:30:54.330-04:00Maybe We Can Steal ProsperityIt might be time to start getting creative to deal with the current economic crisis. In Hazlitt’s classic Economics in One Lesson, he described the concept of the government spending money to stimulate the economy. He claimed that the purchasing power argument, whereby money is funneled through the government and thus spent in the economy, was akin to a thief robbing you and spending your money at restaurants and to buy cars. He says, “But for every job his spending provides, your own spending must provide one less, because you have that much less to spend. When your money is taken by a thief, you get nothing in return. When your money is taken through taxes to support needless bureaucrats, precisely the same situation exists.” <br /><br />While on the surface Hazlitt sounds completely and totally logical, the concept of stealing money to get the economy going might not be all that far fetched. Hazlitt was writing well before the modern era. He must not have pondered all the consequences of widespread theft, and the numerous benefits to the economy as a whole. Maybe the government should create a new agency that hires thieves (yes, more employment) to break into people’s houses and steal their stuff. <br /><br />Not only does the thief have money to spend in the economy, but the victims (if that word is even appropriate in this case) will now need to replace the stolen items and thus create more demand in the economy. But wait – what about the concept that the money used to replace goods could have been used to buy new goods instead? First of all, those stolen from probably had too many goods to begin with, and were likely sitting on cash – so the thief actually stirred up demand. Second, the insurance company will compensate for the stolen items anyway. <br /><br />Yes, the cost of insurance is miniscule compared with the value of the goods. Thus, the actual cost of the theft is spread out over the entire insurance-buying population. And when the insurance companies become insolvent from paying out the increased volume of claims, the government can simply intervene and subsidize the industry. <br /><br />And where will the extra money come to pay the insurance companies? Well, the government can simply print more money. What about the inflation? No problem, the government can set a ceiling on the price of goods. What about the shortage of goods that comes from the regulation of a price ceiling? Hey, the government now has a stockpile of stolen goods to meet the demand!<br /><br />Somehow this should work, no? No. It just simply does not. <br /><br />“Facts are the only antidote to a seductive vision” – Thomas SowellDavid Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-68082242103064184942009-03-17T09:04:00.002-04:002009-03-17T09:16:06.833-04:00And So Begin the Trade Wars...The Obama administration is taking directions straight from the playbook, "How to Turn a Recession Into a Depression." It was written about 80 years ago and has recently resurfaced at the White House. Step one is protectionism. <br /><br />The U.S. fired the first shot, rescinding the ability of Mexican truckers to operate here. The retaliatory strike was received yesterday - higher tariffs on American goods exported down South. The result is that everyone loses. <br /><br />There is no more universally accepted concept in economics than the benefits of free trade (and, of course, the harmful effects of protectionism). Though there might be some isolated beneficiaries of a protectionist agenda, both economies are worse off. Resources are distributed less efficiently, and perhaps more importantly, consumers pay more for goods. Real wages go down. Yes, the poor are generally hurt most by barriers to free trade.<br /><br />The United States should be moving in the opposite direction. We need more free trade, not less. Congress has already inexplicably stalled free trade agreements, such as the one with Colombia. What should be done is a unilateral free trade agreement, whereby the United States assumes the role of leader of the free (market) world and drops all of its barriers to free trade. <br /><br />While protectionism provides a siren song, it is free trade that promotes economic growth and job creation. It is free trade that benefits consumers and increases real wages. A vociferous free trade policy will be enormously helpful in facilitating this economy out of recession.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-82055690902698502492009-03-13T08:57:00.002-04:002009-03-13T09:22:14.948-04:00Congratulations, You’re Broke: Down 20% and $11 Trillion Vastly Underestimate Wealth DestructionThe Federal Reserve released data yesterday showing a 20% drop in household wealth from a peak in the second quarter of 2007. The wealth loss for the year of 2008 was $11.2 trillion, $5.1 trillion of which came in the fourth quarter. As astounding as the numbers are, they almost certainly vastly underestimate the magnitude of wealth destruction the country is experiencing. <br /><br />Part of the differential is obvious – the markets have continued to plummet in the first quarter of 2009. One estimate, given the decline in stocks and housing prices, lops another $2.5 trillion, or 5%, off of household wealth. Leaving all prediction of future stock and housing market movements aside, the Fed number still likely comes under the reality. Given the leveraged nature of home ownership, the actual wealth decline from an absolute drop in price is magnified. <br /><br />Much more importantly, though, the Fed calculation misses a vital side of the wealth ledger – liabilities. The “New Era of Responsibility” budget entails a deficit for next year that is greater than the previous eight years combined. It also projects similar deficits as far as the eye can see. The estimates of GDP growth are suspect, but the spending bonanza is certain, and gargantuan. Trillions upon trillions of new debt to finance the spending is slated for the next several years. A household’s credit card debt represents a net reduction in overall wealth. The government’s debt represents a net reduction in the country’s collective wealth. The massive projected increase in government spending is essentially a repugnantly awe-inspiring obliteration of household wealth. <br /><br />Yet it gets worse. There are several aspects of household wealth that are difficult to put a number on, but are nonetheless a vital aspect in the calculation, even if the amount itself is theoretical. A household’s wealth includes the present value of its projected future income stream. To the extent that potential future income has been squashed, there is a corresponding reduction in household wealth. Unemployment is on the rise, millions of jobs are being lost, and wages and bonuses are being suppressed. Exacerbating the loss of potential future income is the decreasing value of what little money households have left. As the government prints more and more dollars to satisfy its corpulent spending habits, the value of that money decreases.<br /><br />From the theoretical to the abstract, the picture gets even uglier. There is a wealth value associated with simply being an American. Sadly, this value is diminishing. Again, while the computation of the number is vague, the logic is clear. The American way of life has intrinsic economic value. It comes from the rule of law, the natural resources, the technology and infrastructure, and our core fundamental values. It is a major part of what causes millions to flock to our borders and seek entry. The level of economic freedom we enjoy is a vital component of household wealth. But it is on the wane, and headed down a terrifying path. <br /><br />Thankfully, all of the above aspects of wealth destruction can be reversed. To do so, we must get government to about-face from socialistic tendencies to pro-growth fiscal sanity. And we must right the ship towards economic freedom. We must drastically change the course we are on, lest the phrase cometh, “Congratulations, you’re broke!”David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-40510059938958566022009-03-03T08:54:00.000-05:002009-03-03T08:55:08.997-05:00The Good News: Rich-Poor Gap Has Been ObliteratedIs there a light amidst the economic darkness? Those who have for years been excoriating the widening of a rich-poor gap should now be ecstatic. As countless trillions of dollars of wealth has been wiped out in the bursting of the housing bubble and the ensuing financial market meltdown, there can be no question the difference in wealth between rich and poor has shrunk considerably. Be careful what you wish for.<br /><br />Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman is one such cheerleader. Back in the day, Professor Krugman was expounding on the technicalities of comparative advantage, and how free trade is one rising tide that lifts all boats. Since then he has become unhinged. Krugman has borrowed with enthusiasm the phrase Great Compression to describe the period from 1933 to 1945. Many have been and currently are enamored with the concept of economic woes leading to higher equality of wealth - or lack thereof. <br /><br />This obsession with the rich-poor gap should seemingly be satiated by the massive destruction of wealth in the present. No need to worry anymore about private jet travel – that mode of transportation is now reserved for only government officials. Are Wall Street bonuses a thorn in the side? No longer – modern finance has one foot in the grave (the cemetery being lower Manhattan). The dreaded McMansions are becoming a novelty of a previous way of life. Got 401(k) envy? Now it must be only half the jealousy. <br /><br />Yes, the economic meltdown and present march towards socialism is evening the playing field. As unemployment rises, by definition more people are earning similar wages (a number that trends towards zero). While the stock market continues to free fall, the collective lack of wealth increases. As economic growth disappears, the dimming of prospects becomes more universal. <br /><br />The debate over trickle-up or trickle-down economics also diminishes. The slowing of economic activity means there is no trickling in any direction. The real bright side is that hopefully we can dispel the notion that getting rich is bad and that it is desirable to have as narrow a rich/poor gap as possible. The means certainly do not justify the ends, but actually create a self-fulfilling prophecy whereby all get poorer. The desire might be good-hearted, but it is simply wrong-headed. Everyone suffers. Only sound economic principles will lead to economic growth and enhanced prosperity for all.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-65119952113858409802009-01-28T08:10:00.003-05:002009-01-28T09:25:28.598-05:00The "Stimulus" is an Abomination of Rational ThoughtThe House is set to vote today on the now infamous "stimulus" bill. Yesterday, President Obama cruised down the block to make his pitch to Congress. He pleaded to "keep politics to a minimum." Unfortunately, the President has it backwards. The "stimulus" bill is maximum politics - it is logic and reason that are kept to an absolute minimum. <br /><br />Has the President, or any Congressman for that matter, even attempted to put forth a rational argument as to how the "stimulus" will actually accomplish its stated mission of stimulating the economy? Of course there have been claims as to what the results will be: According to Congressional Budget Office Director Doug Elmendorf the “stimulus” will provide a substantial boost to the economy - an increase of GDP between 1.2 and 3.5 percent by Q42010 and a boost in employment of between 1.2 and 3.6 million jobs. President Obama said that the American people "want us to put together a recovery package that puts people back to work." He cited recent announcements by companies like Caterpillar and Home Depot regarding job cuts nearing 100,000. But there has been nary a whisper about how increasing government spending has even the chance of achieving that. <br /><br />The reason for the silence is simple: There is no plausible explanation. As Thomas Sowell stated, "Facts are the only real antidote to a seductive vision." And the fact is that the government cannot create economic growth by spending money. If it could, then there would be no reason to limit the size and scope of the “stimulus”. The seduction lies in a simple equation to calculate GDP which includes G (government spending) as one of its terms. Increase G on one side, and GDP must increase on the other. The logic flaw is that G must be increased at the expense of the other terms. A dollar spent by the government is a dollar less to be spent or invested by the people. Private investment will fall more than government spending will increase. Further, “stimulus” proponents are expecting some kind of Keynesian multiplier effect that simply does not exist (both empirically and logically). The last 100 years can be examined, and there will be no evidence to support the irrational theory that increased government spending leads to economic growth and job creation. Common sense will tell the same thing.<br /><br />Not that such a link has even really been attempted. The President and a majority in Congress are simply expecting the people to go along with it. They are playing on fear, on the assumption that something must be done. They make no pretense that the people deserve at least a cursory explanation of just how economic growth will be spurred. The reality is that the “stimulus” bill is an excuse bill. As in, the economy is being used as an excuse to push a particular agenda. White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel at least had the decency to express this view by referring to the crisis as “an opportunity to do the things you couldn’t do before.” Would the people normally tolerate a massive increase in government spending on an unprecedented scale? A debate about the desired size and role of government would be welcome – that would be an honest discussion. To claim, however, that an increase in government spending and economic growth go hand in hand is mind-bogglingly ridiculous. <br /><br />A member of Congress who votes in favor of the stimulus is saying one of two things: “I have abandoned all sense of rational thought” or “I am using the current economic woes as a guise to ludicrously increase government spending.” Voting in favor of the “stimulus” is simply irresponsible and signals a departure from any sense of obligation to represent the people. The Constitution compels the government to promote the general welfare of the people. The “stimulus” does the opposite. <br /><br />As always, an entry that is critical of the “stimulus” should include an alternative. There is only one way the government can stimulate the economy to grow and create jobs (empirically and logically): reduce taxes and spending. A pure flat tax which eliminates the taxation on investment (capital gains, dividends, and interest) will spur economic growth and job creation the instant it is signed into law.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-77542600430946068232009-01-02T09:34:00.004-05:002009-01-02T09:44:53.390-05:00Instead Spend the Trillion To Privatize Social SecurityAs the new year begins, Congress is looking to ram through a trillion dollar "stimulus" package. Obviously the concept is ridiculous: Extract money from the private sector and have the public sector spend it. The goal, though, is correct: Increase economic growth. <br /><br />If a trillion dollars is on the table, why not use it correctly? The government should issue a trillion dollars of Treasuries - which are currently trading at low yields/high prices. Deposit them into private savings accounts for each taxpayer, based on current age and projected social security liability. Replace the payroll tax with a compulsion to contribute to the newly created retirement account. Three birds are killed with the same stone.<br /><br />First, the Ponzi scheme known as social security is fixed.<br />Second, a real lock box is created for the taxpayer: an account with their name on it.<br />Third, economic growth will be greatly stimulated.<br /><br />If for whatever illogical reason privatizing social security is too much for Congress to stomach, there is another simple alternative stimulus package: flat tax.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-34163409386914781502008-12-29T19:01:00.007-05:002008-12-29T19:32:37.277-05:00Simple Math From the Other HalfEvery once in a while, it is interesting (scary?) to peek over and see how the other half thinks (well, hopefully it is not quite half). <br /><br />Somehow, <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/hale-stewart/senator-mcconnell----idio_b_154061.html">this post </a>was recently stumbled upon. It defines seeing is believing, and other concepts such as the pot calling the kettle black ("idiot", "dolt", etc.). <br /><br />Okay, there <em>is</em> some semblance of an intelligent point: There is hypocrisy in a Republican leader of the 2001-2006 era calling for spending restraint. <br /><br />But from there it loses all semblance of rational thought. The post claims a simple formula for GDP: C+I+E+G = GDP. It is seemingly discernable from the text that a higher GDP is a desirable goal - an assumption that this site will always make. The post continues to cross off terms from the equation. To paraphrase: C(onsumption) is in the tank, I(nvestment) is weak, E(xports) are out. That leaves G. Thus, if GDP is to rise, the only way to do it is to increase G. If you do not want a depression, you must make G stand for ginormous. <br /><br />If the teachers' union were really interested in increasing school funding, they need merely present the post to the taxpayers (this half). In all fairness, the simple math is correct, the logic (or lack thereof) is what boggles the mind. <br /><br />G cannot be created out of thin air. Dollars added to G are taken from C and I. So what, pray tell, are those in control of G to do to increase GDP? <strong>Lower taxes </strong>and C + I will increase! Even if one thought that the change in G would be equal to the change in C + I (which empirically and logically it would not), which is preferred: a dollar of G, or a dollar of C + I???<br /><br />Scary...David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-6311260208880275912008-12-10T14:17:00.003-05:002008-12-10T14:35:05.123-05:00Where in the Constitution is a Bailout of the Auto Industry Described?An astute reader might have expected an economic attack of the proposed automotive industry bailout. Though the truly shrewd would also understand that some issues are actually precepts, needing little in the way of explanation. Congressman Jared Polis (D, CO) stated in today's Wall Street Journal, "Any pretension of a government bailout being a good deal for taxpayers should be abandoned for the insincere (or perhaps ignorant) rhetoric that it is." Really, what more needs to be said? <br /><br />Nonetheless, even sans a team of legal experts, it is somewhat interesting to delve into the Constitutionality of the bailout. One might argue the Preamble says it all ("in order to...promote the general welfare"). Perhaps more explicitly, Article 1, Section 8 spells out the powers of the Congress ("The Congress shall have the power to...provide for the...general welfare of the United States"). These two references seem to be the closest the Constitution comes to touching on the auto industry. The definition of "welfare" is vague at best, and open to wild interpretation at worst (with the current Congress clearer in the latter camp). <br /><br />This, of course, begs the question of how exactly bailing out the auto industry promotes the <strong>general </strong>welfare of the United States. It is barely debatable whether it even promotes the welfare of the auto industry itself. The answer is that it simply does not. <br /><br />As a side note (though of great importance nonetheless), Congressman Polis' piece was a suggestion to cut capital gains taxes on investments in the auto industry. He is correct in theory, but wrong in practice. Government should not be determinative in the allocation of capital. Thus, the solution is to simply eliminate all capital gains taxes.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-30636342061550036902008-12-05T08:40:00.004-05:002008-12-05T08:57:22.395-05:00Socialized Medicine Part 857Yesterday on the "Ask the Governor" show that is regularly hosted by Jim and Margery on WTKK in Boston, MA Governor Deval Patrick made a comment regarding healthcare that required at least five Advil. <br /><br />A caller had been taking care of three foster children. She complained to the Governor that the assistance they were receiving from the state was insufficient. But it lacked relative to what the deadbeat, drug addicted parents were receiving. As in, she was not complaining as much about her lack of assistance - more so the lack of relative assistance. She then touched a nerve. She mentioned health insurance. <br /><br />Governor Patrick quickly chimed in, (paraphrasing) "Now, you're not suggesting that they shouldn't be receiving health insurance, but rather that you should be".<br /><br />Of course not! Who would even conceive of suggesting that the government should not provide healthcare to such people???David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-78795052755243349462008-12-04T12:50:00.001-05:002008-12-04T12:52:55.959-05:00A Simple PlanFront page headline in today's WSJ: U.S. Eyes Plan to Lift Home Sales. <br /><br />From the text of the article: The Treasury has struggled for months to come up with a plan that would ease the strains on borrowers without appearing to bail out homeowners and lenders.<br /><br />A simple plan: FLAT TAXDavid Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-13137372350000540292008-11-25T13:28:00.001-05:002008-11-25T13:30:26.785-05:00Happy Thanksgiving<<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/KO2HaGOui4U&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/KO2HaGOui4U&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-54095066765390247832008-11-24T12:46:00.003-05:002008-11-24T12:55:05.914-05:00The "People" Own Your Liver<a href="http://apnews.myway.com/article/20081122/D94K34B01.html">British May Ban Happy Hour<br /></a><br />When you don't pay for something, it isn't really yours. The same is true for healthcare. In a socialized healthcare system, the "people" collectively pay. This presents the slippery slope of control - over behavior that is.<br /><br />Smoking is not healthy. But when the "people" are paying to treat smoking related illness, their desire to ban smoking increases. Same goes for drinking, McDonald's, lack of exercise, etc. There is a direct relationship between directness of purchasing and control over related behavior. Go ahead and have the government pay for healthcare, but be ready for society to then regulate each and every behavior that has an impact on your health.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-76396475015047090842008-11-24T09:35:00.003-05:002008-11-24T09:49:17.860-05:00Healthcare: It is the Cost! It is the Cost! It is the Cost!Governor Phil Bredesen wrote a piece in the Nov 22 Wall Street Journal titled, "What Tennessee Is Doing About Health Insurance." His basic premise is that the government needs to make sure that everyone has a Chevy of a healthplan, rather than a few people having a Caddy and "letting the rest walk."<br /><br />Aside from the obvious (that the reason there is more than one kind of car on the market is that one size does not fit all), the Governor does himself a major disservice in citing a particular example to make his case. Dottie Landry was uninsured back in 2000. She got sick from a tick bite to the tune of $9,000. She put it on credit cards and paid it off over the next few years. Fast forward to 2007. Dottie was bitten by a dog, the treatment of which cost $4,000. But thankfully, she was on the Governor's healthcare plan: CoverTN. Thus, most of the 4k tab was picked up by the taxpayer.<br /><br />The temptation is to end the blog entry right here. After all, just as the sky is blue, the problem with healthcare is NOT that many people are sans insurance- it is the cost! Instead of addressing the REAL problem back in 2000 - which is that the $9 grand bill is absurd, the Governor pinned the problem on the fact that Dottie actually had to pay for it herself. A consumer-driven healthcare system in which most participants are responsible for their own healthcare expenses (including major medical insurance) is the only remedy for ridiculously escalating costs. Spreading the bill amongst taxpayers has only served to exacerbate the problem.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-6910556863018505632008-11-14T08:40:00.002-05:002008-11-14T08:55:36.234-05:00The Government as InvestorNo, this entry is not about the bailout - as ridiculous as it might be. Nor is it about the government looking to take over 401(k)s (as criminally ridiculous as that might be). However, the basis comes from a quote regarding the possible 401(k) Argentina-style debacle. It comes courtesy of Representative George Miller (D, CA). During a hearing on 401(k)s, Rep. Miller commented on the indirect subsidy caused by the non-taxation of the retirement accounts: "We have to start to think about it in Congress...whether or not we want to continue to invest that $80 billion for a policy that's not generating what we now say it should."<br /><br />Invest! It is an Advil-necessecitating concept. The Government invests when it does not tax. It is the same insane thought process that leads to the Road to Serfdom-esque concept that every dollar actually belongs to the Government, and any dollar left in your pocket is a gift.<br /><br />George Miller went from San Francisco State to law school at UC-Davis. He then was a legislative assistant in the California Senate, and then into the House where he has served for over 30 years. It is truly scary that the investment line of reasoning can pervade our Government and survive there for three decades. It is no wonder that Rep. Miller is a champion of Indian gaming. I suppose it is prefereable for the public to invest their money into the slot machines and at the craps tables than into a 401(k).David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-22011849405372256912008-11-03T13:38:00.002-05:002008-11-03T16:14:52.302-05:00The Official Modern Economic Freedom 2008 Election ScorecardIf it is a fill-in-the-blank electoral map you are looking for, you have come to the wrong place. This scorecard is not to be penciled in as states are declared each hour tomorrow night. You can expect nothing less from Modern Economic Freedom than a careful winnowing down to what really matters.<br /><br />A few weeks ago, a good friend pointed out that a candidate’s position on an issue is what has been most recently stated. Fair enough. And thankfully Obama wrote about his economic plan in today’s Wall Street Journal. This is the essence of the MEF Scorecard: What will Obama actually do once elected, and what will be the effects.<br /><br /><u>The Official Modern Economic Freedom 2008 Election Scorecard<br /></u><br />There are various Obama quotes on different topics (in italics), followed by MEF commentary. After each point, fill in what happened after the election.<br /><br /><strong>Tax Cuts</strong><br /><em>I’ll give a tax break to 95% of workers and their families. If you work, pay taxes, and make less than $200,000, you’ll get a tax cut.</em><br /><ul><li>Which is it: 95% of workers, or those who work AND pay taxes? </li><li>What is Obama’s Clintonian definition of “cut”? </li></ul><p><em>If you make more than $250,000, you’ll still pay taxes at a lower rate than in the 1990s</em> </p><ul><li>Does that include his plan to raise the cap on payroll taxes? </li><li>For most of the 1990’s the top marginal tax rate was 39.6% - so the Obama rate will presumably be lower than that. </li><li>Presumably, if you make between $200k and $250k you will experience no change in taxes.</li></ul><p><em>-and capital gains and dividend taxes one-third lower than they were under Ronald Reagan </em></p><ul><li>The rate is currently 15%. It was lowered from 28% to 20% in 1997. </li><li>In 1981, the rate was 23.7%, from 1982-1986 it was 20% (<em>with a 60% exclusion</em>), and in 1987/88 it was 28%. </li><li>Even assuming the 28% rate, one-third lower would mean a rate of 18.5% </li><li>Obama said on April 17, 2008: I would look at raising the capital gains tax for purposes of fairness. </li></ul><p><strong>Job Creation<br /></strong><em>We’ll create two million new jobs by rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure and laying broadband lines that reach every corner of the country </em></p><ul><li>Is he referring to jobs that come about from the economic growth enabled by an improved infrastructure, or simply the government hiring two million people on a temporary basis? </li></ul><p><em>I’ll invest $15 billion a year over the next decade in renewable energy, creating five million new, green jobs </em></p><ul><li>Conversely, the cap gains tax could be eliminated, encouraging private enterprise to invest in renewable energy. </li><li>The tally is seven million new jobs from these two policies (none noted from economic growth)</li></ul><p><strong>Health Care</strong> <br /><em>My plan will make health care affordable and accessible for every American </em></p><ul><li>Health care is currently accessible to all, and affordable to few. </li></ul><p><em>If you already have health insurance, the only change you’ll see under my plan is lower premiums.</em> </p><ul><li>LAUGHTER </li></ul><p><em>If you don’t, you’ll be able to get the same kind of plan that members of Congress get for themselves </em></p><ul><li>For free??? </li><li>Again, anyone can “get” the same kind of plan – but very few can afford it. What is Obama going to do to reduce the cost of health care? </li></ul><p><strong></strong> </p><p><strong>Selected Data</strong><br />Item 2008 2000 1992 1980</p><p>Dow 9,325 10,971 3,226 924<br />CPI 4.9% 3.5% 3.0% 12.6%<br />10-yr US Treasury 4.0% 5.8% 6.8% 12.5%<br />Unemployment 6.1% 3.9% 7.6% 7.5%</p><p>Barrel of Oil $68 $33 $21<br /><br /><br /><br /></p>David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-50742681560563320132008-10-31T10:32:00.001-04:002008-10-31T13:15:51.340-04:00Unions, Workers Should Favor Repeal of MA Income Tax(Vote Yes on Question 1)<br /><br />Massachusetts voters have the opportunity to repeal the state income tax in the upcoming election. In the simplest of terms, it is a choice between sending tax dollars to Beacon Hill to spend, or to keep them in a taxpayer’s pocket. More broadly, lowering income taxes by definition increases take-home wages, spurs economic growth, and creates jobs. The loudest opponent of Question 1 is the unions. This vehement opposition could be the most puzzling aspect of the 2008 election. Unions and workers should actually be firmly in favor of Question 1, and eliminating the state income tax.<br /><br />The basic goal of a union is to maximize the compensation of its members. A union provides a means of collective bargaining to enhance the ability of workers to increase their wages and benefits. The mistaken logic in the decision of union leaders to oppose Question 1 is that by limiting the pool of resources of the state government, the amount of money available for compensation will be lower, and jobs will be scarcer. This line of thinking is counter to simple economics.<br /><br />First, and easiest to understand, is the direct increase in compensation which results from eliminating the state income tax. Massachusetts currently taxes income at 5.3%. By eliminating this tax, a worker will receive a raise of more than 5.3%. This is a permanent raise (well, as long as the income tax is not subsequently re-enacted). Most negotiators would be pleased to walk away from the table locking in that level of a permanent raise. Especially given the current economic difficulties, this kind of an increase to take home pay is significant, and cannot be dismissed.<br /><br />Nor can the impact on the state economy be ignored. Massachusetts has lagged the rest of the country in growth and job creation. The unemployment rate is only dampened down by the fact that we have seen an out-migration of population (as in, those without jobs simply leave the state). A lower income tax, empirically and logically, leads to economic growth. Economic growth is what leads to job creation. Economic growth and job creation lead to higher compensation and a higher standard of living. With one ballot issue, unions and workers will have not only directly given themselves a raise of over 5%, but also enabled an economic environment that promotes growth and job creation and thus further increases in wages.<br /><br />However, the argument is made that by denying funds to the state government, jobs for teachers, fire fighters, and policemen will become scarcer. Again, this line of reasoning ignores basic economic principles. Efficiency is created when spending is sourced from the lowest common denominator. In other words, hiring for local jobs is best done at the local level. The current system sends tax dollars to Beacon Hill, which then in turn disperses it to municipalities. Yet this occurs only through a filter of mandates, restrictions, guidelines, and of course special and powerful interests. Waste, by definition, clogs the system. Yes, local taxes (generally in the form of property) will go up. Yet given the inefficiencies of the current system, they will go up by less than the reduction in income taxes. Jobs that are based at the local level and that are also funded at the local level are more secure jobs, and are thus more effectively compensated jobs. With a lower income tax burden, local residents will be more open to increased local expenditures. Further, with the increased economic growth that results from eliminating the state income tax, other sources of revenue will increase at both the state and local level (more spending will lead to more sales tax revenue while higher demand for housing and commerce will increase property tax revenue).<br /><br />Union members and workers need to carefully consider their position on eliminating the state income tax. A yes vote on question 1 is, by definition, in complete lock-step with the goal of a union: to maximize the compensation of workers. Eliminating the state income tax will cause a direct increase of after-tax income by more than 5%, at a time when it is especially needed. It will promote economic growth and thus job creation and higher wages. It will force more efficiency and shift hiring to the local level, eliminating the waste that comes from bureaucratic decision-making. Eliminating the state income tax will be an enormous benefit to union members and workers in the state of Massachusetts for a long, long time.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-64999514873035458022008-10-24T08:28:00.002-04:002008-10-24T08:54:20.334-04:00Markets (and Economy) Tanking Is Now On ObamaThe Director of Common Sense has finally acquiesced and allowed the release of important statistical information: Since Obama entered the race, there is nearly a 90% negative correlation between the S&P Total Return Index and Obama Presidential Contracts (on InTrade). This means that as Obama rises, the market tanks.<br /><br />That information was withheld until now because in the Director's words the argument is "specious". However, two issues compelled the release. First, Obama's lead is now dominant. He is trading above 80 (predicting a near-certain victory), and he has a substantial lead in the important state-by-state polls. Second, markets are forward looking. They are not mired in the blame game of Bush, Fannie/Freddie, CRA, Barney Frank, sub-prime, Greenspan, etc. They have moved past that. They are, as they have always been, the net present value of expected future cash flows.<br /><br />And therein lies the rub. The expectations are for malaise, and the brand of economic woes that come hand in hand with socialistic, anti-growth, high tax, more government policies (please excuse the redundancies). As the stock market opening bell approaches, the futures are calling for a substantial decline - that on top of already being down roughly 20% this month (and potentially making October 2008 the worst month on record for the S&P). Now it is firmly on Obama.<br /><br />It is on Obama because the argument has been settled by history and logic. Again, the markets care not about how we got here. They tell a story about where we are going. The path that Obama plans to lead us down is one of economic disaster. Amazingly, that path has been gone down before. Periods of government control via taxation and spending and programs lead to economic downturns (see 1930's, 1970s). Periods of government reduction lead to economic growth and job creation (see 1960s, 1980s). <br /><br />The future course is clear to see, and the markets are showing the way. Obama wins the election and Democrats strengthen their majority. Income tax rates go up. Taxes on investment go up (capital gains, dividends, interest). Wealth is redistributed. Less people actually pay any taxes at all, thus making it more difficult to fix the problem. Social security transforms further into welfare. Health care is socialized. The economy suffers. There is no growth. No job creation. And then there is no more wealth to redistribute.<br /><br />At that point, which is quite possibly a decade into the future (if history is any indication), we might restore rationality.<br /><br />Instead of suffering, why not simply reject Obamanomics?David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3491503351667710092.post-90840962044625649222008-10-17T09:09:00.002-04:002008-10-17T09:44:08.729-04:00Spreading the Wealth IS GoodHold on to your hats loyal Modern Economic Freedom readers, this post might perplex at first.<br />A few days ago, Obama said, "When you spread the wealth around, it's good for everybody."<br /><br />So here's the shocker: <u>He was absolutely correct</u>.<br /><br />Yes, you are at the correct site. There has been no fundamental shift to socialism here.<br /><br />The key word in the statement is "<strong>YOU</strong>". Of course, Obama meant the big G (government). But what we all know is that "you" means "you the people". If Joe the Plumber, with his knew found fame, spreads the wealth around, of his own volition, it is good for everyone.<br /><br />Spreading the wealth is simply the backbone of any economy. In many ways, it actually defines an economy. It is the exchange of goods and services amongst a population. Spreading the wealth is a necessity. It is the prerequisite for economic growth, and thus job creation and rising incomes.<br /><br />Again, that is based on the incredibly important assumption that "you" means "you the people". There are numerous ways that wealth can be spread around. One person can buy something from another person. One person might also hire another person to perform a service. That would be "you the people" spreading the wealth and helping the economy.<br /><br />The big G that Obama meant can also spread the wealth. That is when government taxes one person and distributes it to another person. Certainly there are some cases where this is desirable. But those aren't the cases that are "good for everybody" - those are the cases where necessity compels collective action, and we aspire for those to be rare.<br /><br />Of course, there is a good way that the big G can spread the wealth. Since it already accounts for a major portion of the wealth of the country, it can actually give it back to the people to do the spreading. Clearly spreading the wealth by "you the people" is the best way to spur economic growth. If government feels the need to get involved and assist the process, the one time-tested method that is empirically and logically proven to work is the reduction of taxes on income and investment. Now THAT would be good for everybody.David Sukoffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13822564942046367585noreply@blogger.com2