In the Garden of Eden there is no scarcity. Food, clothing, and shelter in are abundance. Resources merely fall from the heavens upon command. It is economic paradise precisely because economics does not exist. The universal laws that hold in the world of scarce goods vanquish in the land of the plenty.
The vision of Eden is the politician’s main source of employment. That is, promising to lead the suffering masses toward utopia by government decree makes for great electoral results. The voting fodder ignorant of economics falls in line to cast a ballot to grant themselves other people's money. But of course many voters don’t see it this way. Their vision of the state is that of Eden. They see the bureaucrats and enforcers capable of tapping an infinite pot of wealth to pass along prosperity to those subservient enough to put them in office.
This in turn has lead to the establishment of the welfare state and its plethora of entitlement programs.
For those who see the modern day welfare state as corrosive to the productive capacity of any given country, no where is this theory more evident than the scheme of unemployment insurance. In a recent National Post article, the entitlement attitude was on full display:
Jenna Somerton views her layoff from a
job at Algonquin College in June of 2010 as a blessing in disguise: She
lived on employment insurance benefits for eight months, took stock and
decided what she really wanted to do with her life.
Of course, she admits to taking advantage of her EI cheques at the beginning, after hunting for a job with no luck.
“I was thinking ‘Free money, the
government owes me, I paid for school … I deserve this,” the 27-year-old
Ottawa resident says now.
She soon got serious, using the
subsidized income to hatch plans to start her own web development
business. Some of her friends, she said, have not been so diligent.
“I’ve known lots of people on EI and I
know a lot of them just stayed on EI and as soon as it ran out they
started freaking out and then they started looking for jobs…. [The
government] makes it so easy.”
The proper understanding of government is that it is parasitical in nature. It can only spend what it first forcefully takes. Because the political class is beholden to how much theft it can get away with before sparking an enraged uprising, it also invents new schemes to not be reliant on tax collection alone. This includes borrowing and accumulating debt; which is nothing more than the promise of future taxes. And there is inflation which benefits the first receiver of new money, that is the state, to spend freely before prices adjust economy wide.
Whatever the devious method, each comes at cost to the taxpayer. Again, the nominal price of taxation by itself is easy to calculate. What is often neglected is what the pilfered funds could have been used for if left in the necessarily more prudent non-public sector. It was recently came to light how the great technological innovator Apple Inc. sets up branches in cities with low corporate tax rates in order to lower its tax bill. This is of course a great thing as Apple, constrained in income by how much it receives from consumers, is a better steward of scarce resources then the state. Apple’s tax avoidance is obvious. The further technological innovations financed by money the government bandits don’t help themselves to is not readily apparent.
The general public is blind to this state of affairs. Many have been conditioned through years of public schooling to see the state as Eden. The short term benefits of government transfer payments override any conceivable long term gains of genuine wealth creation in the private sphere.
Decades of the predominant welfare state have not only created a reliable voting constituency dependent on handouts, it has perpetuated the Santa Clause-like image of the state. What isn’t considered is the overall social degeneration that is a byproduct of the so-called “social safety net.” As noted economist Thomas Sowell explains:
While liberals may think of the 1960s as
the beginning of many “progressive” trends in American society, cold
hard facts tell a very different story. The 1960s marked the end of many
beneficial trends that had been going on for years — and a complete
reversal of those trends as programs, policies, and ideologies of the
liberals took hold.
Teenage pregnancy had been going down for
years. So had venereal disease. Rates of infection for syphilis in 1960
was half of what it had been in 1950. There were similar trends in
crime. The total number of murders in the United States in 1960 was
lower than in 1950, 1940, or 1930 — even though the population was
growing and two new states had been added. The murder rate, in
proportion to population, in 1960 was half of what it had been in 1934.
Every one of these beneficial trends
sharply reversed after liberal notions gained ascendancy during in the
1960s. By 1974, the murder rate had doubled. Even liberal icon Sargent
Shriver, head of the agency directing the “war on poverty,” admitted
that “venereal disease has skyrocketed” even though “we have had more
clinics, more pills, and more sex education than ever in history.”
As for black economic advances, the most
dramatic reduction in poverty among blacks occurred between 1940 and
1960, when the black poverty rate was cut almost in half, without any
major government programs of the Great Society kind that began in the
1960s.
Back to unemployment insurance, no matter how much it is denied by entitlement apologists, there is no escaping the truth that if someone is paid not to work, they will generally not work. As Murray Rothbard writes in his magnum opus Man, Economy, and State:
For almost all actors, leisure is a consumer’s good,
to be weighed in the balance against the prospect of acquiring other
consumer’s goods, including possible satisfaction from the effort
itself.
have found themselves competing with the
EI system for workers who are weighing opportunity costs: Would I toil
in a hard labour job for $10 an hour or not go to work for roughly the
same amount of cash?
A CFIB survey published in September,
2009, found 22% of small businesses owners had trouble hiring people who
are on EI, as workers said they would rather continue collecting
benefits than work in the more hands-on jobs. Another 16% said that in
the past year, they had had an employee ask to be laid off so he or she
could collect EI benefits (these rates were higher in Newfoundland and
Prince Edward Island).
As long as the public still operates under the fallacious assumption that the state is costless, they will continue to vote themselves into destitution. Living standards will decline as productivity gains begin to taper off. A generation of the entitled will soon find themselves deserving of nothing because the real wealth producers will have long since abandoned their efforts to serve others.
Host bodies only ever have so much blood to give.

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