Stephane Budge
unread,Feb 4, 2009, 2:37:28 PM2/4/09Sign in to reply to author
Sign in to forward
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to The Education of America
Every major industry in the world, including food, commodities,
housing, transportation, medicine, energy, and money, is regulated at
almost every level of government. Just listing the regulations
pertaining to any single industry would take vol umes.
In the field of finance, the government regulates (among other things)
the amount of interest each type of financial company can pay on
loans, the amount that can be charged for loans, the way interest must
be disclosed to borrowers, where finance companies can open offices,
what their advertisements can and cannot say, what types of securities
can be issued, what must be and what cannot be said about securities,
who can sell them, and how the sellers can be compensated for their
sales.
In the field of medicine, the government regulates (among other
things) who can practice medicine, what schools can teach medicine,
what courses are to be taught, what types of medicine are acceptable,
where doctors can practice, what prescriptions are allowed, what drugs
can be sold, under what conditions drugs can be sold, who can sell
them, what education is required for those who sell them, in many
cases what can be charged for them, who can manufacture them, and what
can be said about them in advertisements.
In the field of transportation, government determines (among other
things) who can operate airlines, buses, taxicabs, and railroads, what
equipment is acceptable, how often equipment must be serviced, the
timetable of service, where passengers can be taken, who can operate
the equipment, how much can be charged, what attendants must tell
passengers, how passengers must behave while being transported, and
how much can be carried aboard the transporting vehicle.
In the transporting of goods, government regulates (among other
things) the amount that can be shipped by different types of carriers,
what routes carriers can take, how much each carrier can carry, what
hours drivers and pilots can operate, what carriers can charge, who
can operate transport equipment, how old operators must be, and what
training and experience they must have.
Of course, food is perhaps the biggest industry of all, and certainly
the most highly regulated. Take the case of a simple hamburger. A
study by Colorado State University identified over 41,000 state and
federal regulations that apply to this common sandwich. These
regulations apply to everything from the grazing of beef cattle to the
assembly of the burger at your local fast food outlet.
This is a small sample. Mountains of regulations suffocate every field
of human endeavor, from medicine to manufacturing, from construction
to energy. The government is out to protect us—from ourselves. How did
politicians and bureaucrats become so concerned about our well-being?
The Source of Regulation
On the surface, the government’s regulation of business appears to be
a genuine attempt at consumer protection. The regulations are
justified on the grounds that they protect us from greed, ensure open
competition in the marketplace, and protect our domestic economy.
While there is a growing feeling that many government regulations are
stifling business because of the inefficiency of the bureaucracy,
still, almost everyone is for them in principle. But that is a part of
every good sting. The victim must be totally convinced that he is
benefiting even as he is being robbed.
The only reason individuals take action is because they believe they
will get something they want by taking that action. People, in
general, are not altruists. Yet it would seem that there must be some
self-sacrificing individuals who are willing to devote their lives to
designing regulations to protect us from greedy businessmen who would
sell us shoddy or dangerous products. After all, how could a
politician benefit from supporting business regulation? It must be
that he has a genuine concern for the safety and well-being of the
public. Otherwise, why would he work so hard to pass so many laws
regulating business?
It’s simple. Politicians who support business regulation are not doing
so because of deep-seated concern for public safety—they are merely
meeting the demands of lobbyists who are hired and paid by
businessmen. With only a few exceptions, the entire body of government
regulations applying to business in the world today was designed and
created by the very businessmen who are being regulated. These are
self-imposed restrictions. However, do not think for a moment that
these businessmen are altruists. These regulations are not aimed at
them; they are aimed at you. Business regulation is the cleverest of
all methods ever devised for taking money from you without your
knowledge.
Sound far-fetched? Of course it does. We have been programmed our
entire lives to believe that the government acts in the interest of
the individual. We believe it is one giant consumer protection agency.
In fact, it is nothing of the kind. It is one giant agency programmed
to protect the business interests of established firms at the expense
of the individual consumer.
Confidence Games Designed to Curb Competition
In real life, there are three ways that a businessman can limit his
competition and thus gain your business by default: first, he can get
the government to prevent the competitor from offering products at
all; second, he can get the government to force the competitor to
raise his price; and third, he can get the government to force his
competitors’ costs up, thus indirectly forcing up the price.
All three of these methods are widespread confidence games that have
been around for centuries. By getting government to limit the
introduction of competitive products into the marketplace, any
businessman can set his own prices for the same products much higher
and you will buy from him without suspecting that he has forced you to
do so.
If you still question this analysis, examine the evidence. Take some
time and research the records regarding which individuals lobbied for
regulations, designed the regulations, and reported violations of the
regulations. Time after time, you’ll find that it was not wounded
consumers who were responsible, but businesses already active in the
market. Established airlines lobbied for creation of a Civil
Aeronautics Board, volunteered to draft regulations governing
airlines, and then screamed when deregulation was mentioned.
Established banks lobbied for establishment of the Federal Reserve.
Established trucking firms demanded regulation of interstate trucking;
established shipping firms demanded regulation of ocean freight;
established railroads demanded regulation of the rails. Established
firms do not like competition. It threatens to take away their
customers, and lower their profits. Free enterprise is a fine concept
when a businessman wants to complain about government interference in
his own affairs, but when competition threatens his markets, he is
quick to point the political guns at his adversary.
When the entrenched firms succeed in getting the government to
regulate their industry, you, the consumer, are the loser. You are not
protected by these regulations; you are denied the chance to buy the
product of someone who might have been willing to offer you a lower
price or a different quality. You are deprived of your chance to set
your own values on goods.
Conclusion: Intervention Lowers the Standard of Living
Price controls, wage controls, antitrust laws, professional licensing
laws, minimum wage laws, immigration laws, tariffs, and all other
forms of personal and business regulation result from the attempt by
one individual to limit “your ability to spend your money with
whomever you choose, or to sell your property at whatever price you
choose.
These laws are justified on the grounds that people are somehow
injured because the individual who owns goods or services is asking
too high a price for them. If you catch a fish, how is someone else
injured if you set a price he thinks is too high? Why is someone
else’s opinion better than yours as to what price you should sell it
for? Whose fish is it, anyway? Does it belong to you, who caught it,
or another individual who wants it, or to all the other individuals
who make up society?
When the majority of individuals in a society try to enforce their
claim on the production of others through the legal process, they are
guaranteeing that their society will have a lower standard of living
than if they honor each person’s right to enjoy and set his own value
on the fruits of his labor. The standard of living of any nation is
directly proportionate to the personal freedom enjoyed in that nation.
The people of China and India are not poor because they are stupid;
they are not poor because they lack natural resources; they are not
poor because they lack modern industrial tools. They are poor because
they have lived for decades under social systems in which the
established, entrenched classes are able to use law and custom to
control the production, price, and sale of all goods and services
produced. By removing the ability of individuals to benefit from
ingenuity and hard work, they have destroyed the incentive of
individuals to produce and save. Without savings, there is no capital
for the creation and improvement of the tools of production, and
without tools there is only poverty.
Legalized plunder destroys the standard of living of any nation
because it attempts to violate all of the economic laws that are an
immutable part of human nature. Legalized plunder has strangled China,
India, and most of the rest of the socialist or communist world. It is
the reason for their abysmally low productivity, and the subsistence-
level existence of their citizens.
By the same token, the people of the United States are not rich
because of any special intelligence, natural resources, or work
habits. We are rich because for the first 150 years after the founding
of the nation individuals were allowed nearly total freedom to produce
and control the products of their labor. This freedom encouraged
individuals to develop habits of hard work and thrift, and to apply
their intelligence to the natural resources in order to create the
wealth of this nation. As one person after another discovered that
government is a willing agent that will plunder others on request,
plunder has grown and the rewards of production have fallen. Thus, the
freedom that created the nation withers, and so does your standard of
living.