Quasi-fascist and Nobel economics laureate, Milton Friedman, explains why there is no free lunch in Amerika.
While Friedman makes some outstanding points about how our system of legalized theft always takes from the mouths of the working man, I want to add a
little about the spending side of the equation.
Once government has forcibly taken the fruits of one man's labor, it typically then spends that money back into the economy.
Consider the case of the criminal government ordering a tank for use in destroying other people's property:
If the economy produces 10,000 units of steel in a given year and the private sector is using all 10,000 units to produce goods and services we need
(which is necessarily the case, because markets always clear), but then the tank order is placed by government which requires 100 units of steel, what
will happen to the cost of steel in the private sector?
The cost must necessarily increase for all goods that use steel because the tank order has deprived the private sector of resources that would
otherwise be put to use producing things the public actually needs.
If the market is using 10,000 units, and suddenly there are only 9,900 units available, the marginal producers will get pushed out of the market by
the government spending.
This means less ball point pens, less wrist watches, and less iPhones in terms of real numbers. This also means the prices for the remaining goods
will be higher because there are less of them availible.
This principle of government spending not only applies to physical resources such as steel, but it also applies to the labor markets. If the
government were to hire 200,000 software developers, the cost of hiring a software developer in the private sector would necessarily skyrocket. This
additional labor cost would be directly passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices.
Not only is the theft government engages in bad, but the spending it conducts with that stolen money is equally as bad.
edit on 24-11-2010 by mnemeth1 because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by MMPI2
Isn't this just basic supply/demnd theory?
What I wrote is.
You'd be shocked by how many people can't grasp these simple facts. When people think of government spending, they seem to forget that resources have
a limited supply. No one thinks about the fact that when government spends money, it necessarily deprives private industry of resources.
Friedman however is driving home the fact that there is no such thing as a "business tax."
edit on 24-11-2010 by mnemeth1 because: (no reason given)
You know if you think about it, business taxes are even more perverse than income taxes.
Since only profitable businesses pay "business taxes" (capital gains) - we can say that only the corporations who are actually producing things the
public needs are being forced to pay the tax (unless of course they are defense contractors or other government subsidized industry.)
If you run a business that barely makes any profit or even takes a loss, that means you are not producing things the public actually wants or
needs.
Since you didn't make a profit, you don't pay any taxes.
Only those who produce things people want actually have to pay business taxes.