Brad Wardell's views about technology, politics, religion, world affairs, and all sorts of politically incorrect topics.
Mortimer Zuckerman's fractured view of economics
Published on October 30, 2006 By Brad Wardell In US Domestic

In the classic book, Atlas Shrugged, the government begins a program in which wealth is distributed based on need rather than merit. This requires that wealth is confiscated by those who are producing it to be handed to those who aren't.  The more productive a citizen you are, the less of what you produce you get to keep. The less productive you are, the more you receive. Eventually, the producers of America go on strike and the country collapses.

The points made in the book are stunning for their obviousness -- government doesn't make wealth, people do.

In the October US News and World Report, Editor-In-Chief Mortimer Zuckerman has an editorial entitled "A fairer America" with the point "The income gap between the richest and poorest Americans is wider than at any time in history and we must take urgent measures to begin closing it."

Who's 'we'?

What Zuckerman fails to realize is that the only way to close the gap is to make everyone poorer. If you want a society in which everyone is equal, it will be a society in which everyone lives in misery. The question, therefore is, how much poorer do you want everyone to live in order to satisfy some arbitrary statistical result?

The people who produce the items that enrich our lives -- homes that are very inexpensive per square foot despite having a wealth of features we take for granted, personal computers, cell phones, automobiles, televisions, Internet services, you name it, can be classified as the top 5% or so of the economic population.

When those top 5% are targeted by the government, they adapt and everyone else faces the consequences. These consequences, are amazingly ignored by Zuckerman who behaves as if some of today's realities (outsourcing, automation, downsizing) were somehow inevitable.  But I'm getting ahead of myself.

Zuckerman writes that in the late 1800s there was a huge gulf between the rich and the poor. And yet somehow, most Americans were far better off than their parents were. (By magic one presumes).

"Capitalism played a big role, but government did too, with the passage of the Homestead Act of 1862 giving 160 acres to settlers who would live on the land for at least five years.."

The government was very generous with other people's lands weren't they? I am not condemning the Homestead act, but I would not be quick to praise the confiscation of millions of acres of lands from one people to hand to another.  Nor would I be quick to claim that "giving" 160 acres unearned helped the economy anywhere near what free market did. 

Perhaps Zuckerman should take a look at a map of the United States and look at the areas that were covered by the Homestead act.  Was providing 160 acres, unearned, to settlers the cause of the economic boom of the late 1800s?  Was Colorado, Wyoming, Montana (for example) the center of the industrial revolution?  372,000 farms were created but is anyone going to argue that this is what made the average American better off than his parents?

Zuckerman, who as a reminder, is promoting the concept of closing the income gap, notes that the 1970s were known as "the great compression" where the income gap between rich and poor shrank sharply.  Does anyone want to go back to the 1970s?

In the early 80s, Ronald Reagan was able to get through massive tax cuts and massive deregulation of industry.  Most adults alive today know the results -- a great increase in the real world standard of living.  But laments Zuckerman, the gap between rich and poor increased.

Let's be clear: The gap between rich and poor is a measurement of how regulated an economy is. Period.

It is not about "fairness".  If you have two runners in a marathon, the gap between them will grow over time as one runs faster. The only way to shrink that gap is to force the faster running to run more slowly.

But since the 1980s, the government has increasingly meddled, especially in the area of corporate taxes. If my company makes $100,000 profit, almost 40% of that profit will go to the federal government. Moreover, the federal government has opened US companies up to "free trade" by enabling foreign competition in (which is good) but forced companies to continue to have to face mounds of regulation and taxes compared to those companies (that is bad).

But what does Zuckerman conclude of the obvious result:

"Today, however, the wealth escalator doesn't work. In fact, while many families thought they were going up, they have actually been going down. In sectors of the economy where jobs could be mechanized or automated, tens of thousands now have no work. At the same time, most of the income gains we have reaped from productivity went to just the top 1% of Americans..."

Well DUH. 

First off, families thought they were going "up" because they were. They don't pay attention to CPIs. They pay attention to how they are living -- bigger houses with air condition, nicer cars, computers, better food at lower prices, etc. Clothes that don't look and feel like a now-illegal method of interrogation.

Secondly, the guys at the top 1%, let's call them what they are -- business owners -- faced with foreign competition thanks to "free trade" but still faced with a myriad of government imposed costs in hiring human beings (there is no payroll tax on machines) did the only sane thing -- they replaced low skilled labor with machines. And who's fault is that?

The problem with people like Zuckerman is that they think that the government has something to do with the production of wealth. It doesn't. It merely sets the rules. And business follow those rules (in general).

Business owners are motivated by profit. Profit is not the same as greed (greed is a term used by class warriors to smear the productive class).  Profit to them is merely the measure of how effective they are.

So if you make it more profitable for business owners to either replace human beings with machines / hire the same work force that the foreign competitors are using instead of hiring Americans because you've made it impractical to do so, that is what they'll do.

Zuckerman, whose article reads almost as a parody of one of the sad sacks in Atlas Shrugged makes some startlingly illogical conclusions:

"Even college graduates, who have long enjoyed a big edge in wage and benefits, are feeling the pinch because of soaring costs of tuition..."

And why are college tuitions "soaring"? Most universities are publicly funded. Name a single privately produced product that has not changed in quality or quantity and is not in short supply whose costs have "soared"?  Only a government run system could function in an environment in which it charges more while producing inferior results.

But Zuckerman's prescription? (and I'm not kidding, it's in the same article):

  1. MORE support for education at all levels
  2. A major effort to brake soaring healthcare costs
  3. A NEW minimum wage

I'm serious. After making a fantastic case (unintentionally) for getting the government out of education and for decreasing its interference in the private workplace he recommends the opposite.

And why are healthcare costs going up? There's a lot of reasons. $10 co-pay? What the hell were they thinking? How about 10% co-pay. There's no incentive right now for competition based on price in the healthcare market and we're paying -- literally -- the price. 

And we Americans demand ever more sophisticated medical technology. You want cheap healthcare? Then let's go back to 100 years ago when Asprin was the treatment. That was cheap. Or maybe just 30 years ago where you had antibiotics but if you got anything serious (heart disease, cancer, or any chronic illness) the prescription was for you to die. That was pretty cheap too. 

Here's a clue to Zuckerman: More stuff costs MORE than less stuff. Especially if there's no incentive ($10 co-pays) for that top 1% to produce drugs based on price as opposed to effect.

If any American reading this thinks they are worse off today than they were 30 years ago, I can only wish they could find a time machine to go back to 1976. Land of lead smelling air, obscenely expensive air travel (before adjusting for inflation even), no cell phones, no computers, no DVD players, 8-track, no air conditioning if you lived in the North, no Internet and if you got cancer or had heart problems, or any other serious medical condition, you died.  Yea, those were the days. And it was a "fairer" America too!

Amazingly, Zuckerman ends with "Inequality and insecurity have simply become too pervasive a feature of American life. The American Dream shouldn't be just a dream."

Apparently, to Zuckerman, who must have emigrated from the former Soviet Union, the American dream is for everyone to live equally, presumably in state mandated housing because, you know, if someone has more than you, it hurts you -- it's at YOUR expense. And job security is a god-given right that can only be provided by the government one supposes.

 


Comments (Page 1)
4 Pages1 2 3  Last
on Oct 30, 2006
I am not surprised.  The level of economic ignorance in this country amazes me.  Zuckerman is an editor of dubious quality.  He is not an economist, and should stop pretending to be one.
on Oct 30, 2006
While we might like to think we are altruistic and care about helping others, the fact is that we are motivated to work for our paycheck and for ourselves. I do care about other people but do I drag my butt out of bed and work everyday for them - nope. I work to earn my paycheck that I use to pay my bills and take care of my family. I see the benefit of my working.

I do have concerns about our economic divide though. I think minimum wage should be increased. I think something should be done about escalating healthcare and education costs. I think that matters more than gay marriage and steroids in baseball.

I do agree that I am doing better financially than my parents were at my age. I definately think in my family at least our standard of living has increased with each generation.
on Oct 30, 2006

The stuff you discuss (saying it was suggested and discussed by Zuckerman) has been tried before - it was called Communism - and didn't work.

Anything like Zuckerman has really proposed (for closing the wealth gap) almost always fails because people that have earned their wealth are smart enough to figure out ways to keep earning it, or they're smart enough to realize that they shoudln't kill themselves trying to earn wealth while others reap the rewards of their own hard work.

Those that get wealth handed to them for free typically wind up squandering it and failing to realize the true value of what was given to them.

Eventually you wind up with (as you mentioned) a country where the producers revolt and decide to take matters into their own hands.  They either quit working entirely, or they decide to find ways to hide their wealth so they don't have to share any of it.

If Zuckerman really wants fairness, he'd learn to keep Government out of it, and let the marketplace find it's own solutions.  Of course Zuckerman's article can't say that because he'd lose a bunch of readers in the process.

on Oct 30, 2006

I do have concerns about our economic divide though. I think minimum wage should be increased. I think something should be done about escalating healthcare and education costs.

These are reasonable concerns to have.  The question is, what should be done and what are the logical consequences of those actions?

Minimum wage increases pushes more outsourcing and more automation. Next time you're at the grociery store and see those automated check out lines, ask yourself why they made that choice? Push minimum wage a bit higher and pretty soon McDonalds will have automated order taking machines reducing their staffs by a third instantly resulting in hundreds of thousands of lost jobs. But will politicians blame themselves? Will the "compassionate" take a hard look at how the policies they advocated cost those jobs? No, they'll blame "greedy" corporations.

Healthcare will continue to rise as long as quality times quantity is the metric.  We can reduce health care costs by decreasing the amount of health care we use and the quality of it we want.

on Oct 30, 2006

I have yet to see the member of the cultural elite who is willing to live a modest lifestyle in order to share their bounty, just to keep things "fair".... On the other hand, I have seen many of them bill charities just for making an appearance.  I wonder why hollywood and other celebrities don't make it known that, in exchange for an appearance, The American Cancer Society (for example) is required to provide understandable fees like room, transportation, and food... but also wardrobe for the appearance, "riders" in the hotel room and often tickets for local special events not related to the appearance.

Then, many have the nerve to champion the cause of "Socialism".  

 

on Oct 30, 2006
The ultimate problem is everyone wants to have their cake and eat it too. We want to all work at obscenely high-paying jobs (hey, who wouldn't!?). We want all of our friends and family to do that well too. In fact, we would love it if everyone made a lot of money and could buy whatever they wanted or needed and never had to worry about bills again. It's a great dream. It's something for all of us to work towards.

On top of wanting lots of money, we also want all of our good to be insanely cheap. WalMart has bred in us an aversion to prices above $20 for most articles of clothing, the idea that good should be sold to consumers for pennies above manufacturing costs.

So we want everyone to make lots of money doing whatever they do, and we want goods to remain so cheap that they aren't a budget concern to the average American. If everyone involved in making, distributing and selling a toy that is sold on the shelves of WalMart made $50,000 a year, that toy would be astronomically expensive. Costs are low because there are ways to decrease the expense of goods through offshoring and automation.

But, we don't want those workers in the plant to make less money, or for fewer of them to be employed. Everyone must be employed, and everyone must make a wage that is above the poverty line, to ensure a comfortable and equitable standard of living. As you increase wages, the cost of goods increases, and then the poverty line goes up. Almost immediately inflation jumps into play and even if a janitor is pulling in $50k, it's suddenly just as valuable as his $5/hr job relative to living expenses now.

Not only does forcing wage equity, or redistributing wealth, discourage producers from producing as much (and feeding the economy that way), it actually does not fix the problem, in the long-run, it just changes the numbers, the the scale stays roughly the same.

on Oct 30, 2006
I read Atlast Shrugged year ago and am continually amazed to see politicians doing exactly those things that seem so absurd when read in the book. Glad you brought it up.

I won't make any comments about politicians who ignorant people who want simple answers to extremely complex issues - what I wanted to comment on was the term that comes up so many times in your article and the comments: wants.

First - the idea of fairness is flawed becuase it assumes that everyone will be happy if they all have the same stuff. I have a set of twins and they don't want the same stuff. One likes to play with Lego, the other would prefer to play Gamecube. They don't feel discriminated against because they got different stuff. Why do we (speaking of adults here) feel that if someone has more or different stuff than us that we are somehow inferior or are getting the short end of the straw? I'm an academic and often have students that make 3 times my wage within a year or two of leaving - and that's with a bachelors degree vs. my PhD. Do I care? No, because I am happy with what I have. I have a brother who is a very successful doctor. He has a large house on a river etc., but I don't feel jealous. He loves to fish etc., I am scared of the water and would be paranoid of my children drowning in the river so that I wouldn't enjoy the location.

The point is, I would be happier in a small apartment with access to a good library than I would be with a mansion and grounds etc... How can anyone ever measure what is 'fair' when everybody doesn't necessarily want a 'fair share'.

I was just interrupted and can't remember where I was going with the other points I wanted to make, so I'll just say that I'm not making myself out to be some great person - there are plenty of things I'd like that I just can't afford, but I don't think that means someone ought to give them to me. I just don't understand where this sense of entitlement comes from. When my kids say "That's not fair" I tell them that life isn't fair. Is it fair that they got born in a free country, have enought food and clothes, sleep inside a house and are all healty while millions of kids there age are orphaned and starving and have HIV or other illness too? Is it fair that my neighbor's baby was stillborn and ours was healthy? How are the politicians going to fix that? Take my baby away and give it to them? There are some things that can not and should not be legislated. I don't know the answers, but I do know that the problems are very complex and nobody should presume to fix them with a few laws or a bump to the minimum wage.
on Oct 30, 2006
Thanks Aviris for commenting on my article. Very well put.
on Oct 30, 2006

Reply By: Aviris(Anonymous User)

I am duly impressed!  Can you tell me your university so I can direct my children there?

on Oct 30, 2006
"Fairness isn't Fair and Equality is Never Equal"~ ParaTed2k's (Not So) Famous Sayings.
on Oct 30, 2006
While I do not agree with Zuckerman's assertion completely, the gulf between rich and poor should be a concern. The main reason is that when the gulf increases, it means that there are more poor, and thus a smaller middle class. This is important because the middle class supports a large burden of the economy. The top 1% may own production, but it is the middle class that actually buys most of the things produced. The rich spend most of their money on investments, and the poor simply try to get by. That leaves the middle class to drive the economy.

This is not to say that everyone should always make the same amount. That would not work. A huge part of whay communism failed was the lack of the profit motive. People had no incentive to work hard, because the job paid the same no matter how well you did. I simply believe this gulf is something to be deeply conserned about, and that a vast gap is not necessarily a good thing.
on Oct 31, 2006
Good points Tov.  But wouldn't the gap be self-correcting then? That if the middle class becomes too small that the system should self-correct.
on Oct 31, 2006
What should be of concern is the ability of Americans to secure a job that enables them to support their family. That is the issue. The jobs that are being created are paying LESS then the jobs that were lost. The people that have not lost their jobs find that their pay after inflation buys less every year.

The ability to secure a job and the adequacy of the pay for those that have a job has both social and economic consequences. People who can not find work or whose job does not enable them to support their family produces unrest. In addition, the lower income of the masses has an impact on spending and can contribute to lower economic growth (the 1.6% increase in the last quarter for example).

A recent survey shows that the average CEO makes 450 times the amount of the average worker. That means that in one day the CEO makes as much as the average makes in TWO YEARS of work. That is not reasonable and breads resentment! Bringing the wealth distribution into better balance is NOTHING like Communism.
on Oct 31, 2006
There are some things that can not and should not be legislated. I don't know the answers, but I do know that the problems are very complex and nobody should presume to fix them with a few laws or a bump to the minimum wage.


Well said.

The whole thing is IMHO a Robin Hood fixation. Rob from the rich and give to the poor and everything will be right with the world.

I am not among the rich and will likely never be so. I am squeaking by from paycheck to paycheck and thanks to some pretty severe injuries sustained in a car crash can't work as much as I used to work and am hopelessly in debt due to the very high medical bills. That doesn't mean that I expect the government to step in and take money out of Brad's pocket and hand it to me in the interest of "fairness". There would be nothing fair about that.

Anyone who thinks that life is supposed to be fair and society somehow owes them a living is seriously deluded.
on Oct 31, 2006
ColGene:

And I'm sure, in the name of fairness, Gene, you made sure that you distributed your Colonel pay to all your troops, and insisted your supbordinate officers and Senior NCOs did the same.

And now that you are making a retired Colonel's pension, I'm sure you lobby Congress to make all military pensions equal to yours, even if it means you recieving less (as long as others make more).

Give me a break Gene, a full bird with 30 years makes $9,216.30 a month while a Command Sergeant Major with 30 makes $5788.50. Are you telling me that, if you were in today, you would push for equal pay between Flag Officers and Senior NCOs? Unless you are, then your rhetoric is meaningless. All it tells me is that you expect others to work for parity where you refuse to, even though you preach it.
4 Pages1 2 3  Last