The whole civilized world is doomed, they say, by this reduction
in government. To their minds, an expanding government leads to an expanding
economy, as measured by gross domestic product (GDP).
Does government drive the economy? How could it? Everything it
has, it has taken from us. It produces nothing, but only exists to the extent
it can feed off its host — wealth creation aimed at serving customers in the
private economy.
Of course, the GDP is just another phony government number. The
number doesn’t tell us anything worth knowing. It tells us nothing about
prosperity.
Here in the U.S., private business is adding workers, but The
New York Times reports that governments are handing out pink slips, and that is
hurting the recovery. Some 706,000 government positions have been axed since
April 2009.
More than a quarter of municipal governments are planning
layoffs this year, the Times reports. Federal and state government support has
declined, and property tax bases have been devastated.
Federal and state governments depend upon private sector
economic growth that can be taxed. In turn, local governments are dependent
upon that same economic vitality — none of which is generated by the
government. It’s backward to think government jobs create economic growth when
in fact government jobs can only be supported by economic activity in the
private sector.
But President Obama doesn’t understand economics or
cause-and-effect any better than those writing for the New York Times. He
thinks the public sector must grow to compensate for the private sector not
hiring.
This implies that all jobs are homogeneous. But a particular
private sector job serving customers can’t be replaced in government doing
something that consumers don’t want for the same effect.
The worker had that job because he or she produced more than he
or she cost the employer in the pursuit of satisfying customers. Fewer
customers means fewer jobs are needed. Less economic activity means fewer tax
dollars going to government. Fewer tax dollars means government doesn’t have
the resources to hire more people.
The idea that hiring more government workers stimulates economic
activity stands reason on its head.
Economics professor Tyler Watts makes the point in “The
Freemanonline”: “Perhaps we’ve been spoiled by hundreds of years of a generally
prosperous and growing market economy into assuming that all workers
necessarily add to economic output by exactly the value of their paychecks.”
But professor Watts quickly makes the point that government
workers don’t provide the same value. There is no market test to determine if
government workers are generating value. Only political rules apply.
The fact that government employment is shrinking is only a
signal that economies worldwide are attempting to recover from decades of debt
and malinvestment, which includes too much government.
Government austerity is, in the long run, a blessing to the rest
of the population.
Source: The Western Center for Journalism, By Doug French
September 1, 2012 http://www.westernjournalism.com,
Comments:
This is “spot on”.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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