President Obama says he want to make society more fair.
Advocates of big government believe fairness means taking from rich people and giving to others: poor people; or people who do things politicians approve of, like making “green” energy equipment (Solyndra); or old people (even rich ones) through Social Security and Medicare.
The idea that government can “make life fair” is intuitively appealing to people — at least until they think about it. I’ll try to help.
Obama says fairness requires higher taxes, but as the Wall Street Journal’s Stephen Moore asks, “Is it fair that the richest 10 percent of Americans shoulder a higher share of their country’s income-tax burden than do the richest 10 percent in every other industrialized nation, including socialist Sweden?” Or as economist Art Laffer asked, is it fair that American corporations pay the highest corporate tax rate in the world?
Beyond taxes, again quoting Moore, “Is it fair that President Obama sends his two daughters to elite private schools that are safer, better-run and produce higher test scores than
public schools in Washington, DC — but millions of other families across
America are denied that free choice and forced to send their kids to
rotten schools?” No. Parents ought to be able to spend their education
money at any school they choose.
Big-government politicians bemoan income inequality, but would equalizing incomes make life fair?
To
many, it is intuitive that such inequality is necessarily unfair. If
someone makes his income by looting the taxpayers — sure, that’s unfair.
His gains are ill-gotten, and honest taxpayers are out hard-earned
money. But there’s nothing unfair simply in making more money through
productive work. People have a range of talents and ambitions. Some will
serve consumers better than others and therefore make more money.
Government should not worry about that.
It should spend its time abolishing political privileges so that people compete fairly — in the marketplace.
You
want to know what’s unfair? Social Security. Progressives say Social
Security is the best-working government program ever, but they are
wrong.
“Think
about Social Security in terms of what would happen if a private
company came up with a deal like this,” said Charles Goyette, author of Red and Blue and Broke All Over. “The
president of the company says, ‘We’ve got to sell some new policies
tomorrow to pay you what you’re due when you cash in today.’ They’d lock
these guys up.”
Goyette
was referring to the fact that your payroll taxes are not invested. The
money is spent right away, and the government counts on new money from
current workers to pay retirees. The touted trust fund doesn’t exist.
“There’s
no trust. There’s no fund. There’s no security. And the really bad
thing — this is what’s really destructive — it has changed the
propensity of the American people to save for themselves.... We’re
creating a multigenerational calamity. And it’s right at our doorstep.”
We’ve taught people to be dependent. But dependence robs us of our dignity and keeps poor people poor.
Few politicians will touch the issue because seniors vote. And so trouble is not far up the road.
“We’ve
loaded kids up with a debt that they will be burdened by for the rest
of their lives,” Goyette said. “What kind of people, what kind of
country does something like that?” It’s even worse for Medicare. We’re
talking tens of trillions in unfunded liabilities. Where’s that money
going come from? Since seniors resist cuts, will politicians keep their
promises by devaluing the currency? And why do the guardians of fairness
never talk about this?
It
might seem reasonable for government to make life more fair. But when
it takes your money and freedom trying to do that, life becomes less
fair. Everyone is poorer and less free.
As government grows, individual liberty shrinks. That’s not fair.
It
might help if instead of talking about fairness, we talked about
justice: respecting other people, their freedom and their honestly
acquired belongings. Real fairness, or justice, requires limiting
government power. That means the same rules for everyone. No special
favors. No handouts. Or, in Frederic Bastiat’s phrase, no “legal
plunder.”
John Stossel is host of “Stossel” on the Fox Business Network. He’s the author of Give Me a Break and of Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity. © 2012 Creators.com