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Monthly Archives: August 2014

Celebrating Gains In Human Welfare

16 Saturday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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fascism, Human Achievement, Mark Perry, Matt Ridley

human_achievement

It’s easy to be a pessimist, but step back with Matt Ridley and take a look at the accomplishments and advances in living conditions that the world continues to experience. You’ll feel much better! I could take issue with certain points: Ridley acts as if fascism is confined to a few despotic regimes worldwide, yet fascism has its roots in the subversion of specific government powers for private gain, what would usually be classified as successful rent-seeking behavior. In that sense, I believe the world is doing pretty well despite the commonality of fascist tendencies, but we could do much better.

Nevertheless, Ridley makes a number of excellent points. Here are a few of my favorites:

The average person on the planet earns roughly three times as much as he or she did 50 years ago, corrected for inflation. If anything, this understates the improvement in living standards because it fails to take into account many of the incredible improvements in the things you can buy with that money. However rich you were in 1964 you had no computer, no mobile phone, no budget airline, no Prozac, no search engine, no gluten-free food.

The average person lives about a third longer than 50 years ago and buries two thirds fewer of his or her children (and child mortality is the greatest measure of misery I can think of).

The amount of food available per head has gone up steadily on every continent, despite a doubling of the population. Famine is now very rare.

Despite what you may have read, there is no global increase in floods, cyclones, tornadoes, blizzards and wild fires — and there has been a decline in the severity of droughts. 

Globally, your probability of dying as a result of a drought, flood or storm is 98 per cent lower than it was in the 1920s.

As Steven Pinker documented in his book The Better Angels of Our Nature, the number of deaths in warfare is also falling, though far more erratically.

As for inequality, the world as a whole is getting rapidly more equal in income, because people in poor countries are getting richer at a more rapid pace than people in rich countries.

All true. Mark Perry has a good summary list of Ridley’s points. Ridley, author of The Rational Optimist, is no Pollyanna, though he knows that he risks being branded as such. He recognizes that there are significant threats to prosperity and that many challenges remain. Still, naysayers who lose sight of the extent of human achievement, and the conditions that give rise to it, often prescribe policies that would stand as obstacles to continued gains.

Unicorns, The State and Sustainability

15 Friday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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Cafe Hayek, Don Boudreaux, Government Failure, Markets, Matt Ridley, Michael Munger, Platitudes, Sustainablility, Unicorns

Unicorn-meat

Every time someone says “the government should …,” ask them to replace the “G word” with “politicians I actually know, running in electoral systems with voters and interest groups that actually exist.” Does the speaker still think “the government should?” It’s a good test suggested by Michael Munger in his article “Unicorn Governance.” His point is that nearly all calls for state intervention really profess a kind of belief in unicorns. So let’s remove the unicorn from the argument. He says:

My friends generally dislike politicians, find democracy messy and distasteful, and object to the brutality and coercive excesses of foreign wars, the war on drugs, and the spying of the NSA.

But their solution is, without exception, to expand the power of “the State.” That seems literally insane to me—a non sequitur of such monstrous proportions that I had trouble taking it seriously.

Along the same lines, Don Boudreaux at Cafe Hayek offers a quote from Matt Ridley’s book, The Rational Optimist:

Economists are quick to speak of ‘market failure’, and rightly so, but a greater threat comes from ‘government failure‘. Because it is a monopoly, government brings inefficiency and stagnation to most things it runs; government agencies pursue the inflation of their budgets rather than the service of their customers; pressure groups form an unholy alliance with agencies to extract more money from taxpayers for their members. Yet despite all this, most clever people still call for government to run more things and assume that if it did so, it would somehow be more perfect, more selfless, next time.

Finally, Boudreaux has a recent piece in which he proposes a little Platitude Test. Is the speaker offering up a platitude? Well, “ask yourself if you can imagine a normal human adult believing the opposite.” If so, then there is truly something of substance at issue. Boudreaux notes that this is usually not the case when the word “sustainability” is trotted out:

<

p style=”padding-left:30px;”>You’ll discover, of course, that you can’t imagine anyone seriously supporting ‘unsustainability.’ Therefore, you should conclude that mere expressions of support for ‘sustainability’ are empty. And they can be downright harmful if they mislead people into supporting counterproductive government policies. Substantive issues involving sustainability invoke questions that have non-obvious answers. For example: At what rate must the supply of a resource fall before we conclude that continued use of that resource is unsustainable?

Ultimately, market mechanisms are fabulous guardians of real sustainability, since they price scarce resources so as to allocate them efficiently across time and space, providing incentives for conservation, to bring forth new supplies of the resource, and to develop rational substitutes. Unicorns and the state don’t do nearly as well.

NOTE: I apologize for the haphazard formatting in this post. I cannot seem to get the editor to cooperate tonight. I had similar problems last night but resolved them, though not in a fully satisfactory way. Tonight the issues seem worse.

Two Terms Will Do, Thank You

14 Thursday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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22nd Amendment, Constitutional Coup, Hot Air, John Hinderaker, Obama, Term Limits

pelosi-obama-waters

Hot Air paraphrases Vox: “Obama can’t govern, so let’s repeal the 22nd Amendment.” I’d be more amused if a third term in office (or lifetime?) wasn’t getting to be such a preoccupation with the President’s leftist, statist base. First, the argument goes, it is “the unwieldy structure of the American political system which is to blame” for Obama’s troubled second term. And a dysfunctional Congress that “just won’t do its job,” but Congressional inaction reflects a nation that is polarized on many issues. Oh, the laments of would-be tyrants!

Former Obama advisor Lawrence Summers’ view is discussed by Hot Air’s Noah Rothman: “Summers does not … recommend the outright repeal of the 22nd Amendment. ‘… my guess is that problems caused by lame-duck effects are much smaller than those caused by a toxic combination of hubris and exhaustion after the extraordinary effort that a president and his team must exert to achieve reelection,’ Summers noted.”

Toxic indeed. The president’s assertions of executive authority have already been described by some as a constitutional coup d-etat. Better not let it get out of hand.

Obama’s Fog Machine Politics

12 Tuesday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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Benghazi, DOJ, Fake Scandal, Fast and Furious, Gaslighting, Glenn Reynolds, Government Failure, Inspectors General, IRS Targeting, John Fund, Obama, Obstruction, Separation of Powers, Sharyl Attkisson

Corruption

President Obama and his aides have raised the ire of his own inspectors general, who are charged with oversight duties within each federal agency. A letter signed by 47 IGs to the Congressional Oversight and Homeland Security Committees claims that the administration has obstructed efforts to perform their investigative tasks. The “most transparent administration in history” has generated a series of controversies (Fast and Furious, Benghazi, IRS Targeting, and the Healthcare.gov rollout are just the most prominent) and has managed to shield them from effective investigation using delay tactics, apparent destruction of evidence and pure obstinance.

Sharyl Attkisson weighs in on the subject with “Six Serious Questions Regarding Elusive Federal Documents.” In “Stonewaller-in-Chief,” John Fund documents the blatant hypocrisy displayed by Obama last week when he told African leaders of “the positive role inspectors general can play in fighting corruption in government agencies.” More from Fund:

President Obama appointed most of the IGs in office today, and all those who were appointed by him have been confirmed by a Democratic Senate. 

That makes the complaints raised in the IGs’ letter all the more serious. More and more agencies are setting documents off-limits by declaring them “privileged.” The Peace Corps is said to have refused to provide documents for a probe into whether its administrators were properly handling charges of sexual abuse. The Environmental Protection Agency withheld documents by claiming they might fall under an attorney-client privilege, though the IGs’ letter makes clear that such privilege shouldn’t prevent another executive-branch official from reviewing them. Eric Holder’s Department of Justice withheld FBI records that had been previously produced to investigators in past administrations. FBI Director James Comey told Congress in June that the DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel was still reviewing what “was a difference of view as to what the law permitted here.”

As Glenn Reynolds has mentioned in the past (though I can’t find a link), the administration seems to be engaged in an unending campaign to “gaslight” the public, rather than any effort at transparency.

No Country For Executive Fiat

08 Friday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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Deferred Action, Executive Orders, Immigration reform, Megan McArdle, Obama, Prosecutorial Discretion, Ron Fournier

1903-unrestricted_dumping-ground

President Obama says he wants to allow the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE) to exercise “prosecutorial discretion” in deportation efforts, focusing on individuals convicted of serious crimes instead of immigration violators. He might also expand “deferred action,” by which  legal status and work permits are issued temporarily to certain younger adults and to children arriving illegally. Obama would accomplish this via executive order of questionable legality. An advocate of liberalized immigration, Megan McArdle offers a strong critique of this “trial balloon”:

Whatever your opinion on immigration policy, I hope it doesn’t involve supporting giving the president extremely broad powers to simply rewrite any law that he thinks ought to be different. To see why, you need only ask yourself a simple question: Would you like to give this power to a president from the opposing party on a law where the two of you disagree?

Obama gives lip service to the separation of powers, but he blames the current Congress and the GOP for the current impasse. Ron Fournier is strongly sympathetic to that point of view, but he also lays plenty of blame at Obama’s feet:

Obama’s party is partly responsible for this mess, because of the cynical choices made during his first two years in office to punt on reform, in part because the Democrats who ran Congress wanted to be able to portray the GOP as anti-minority in the 2010 elections.

Obama denies culpability, but the record is clear, and almost any Democrat in Washington will concede, privately, that the president broke his promise to make immigration reform a top priority in 2009-10.

Many arguments can be made against full amnesty for illegal immigrants, most of which I find objectionable, but under the constitution, existing laws must be enforced “faithfully” by the president. Immigration reform is extremely important, but it must be thrashed out through the legislative process.

A Dumb Tax Code Tests Loyalty

07 Thursday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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Corporate Form, corporate taxes, fascism, IRS, J.D. Tuccille, Jonathan Alter, regulation, tax inversion, TaxProf

taxes

The complex and punitive tax treatment of U.S. corporate income creates incentives for firms to seek relief through various maneuvers. According to the TaxProf Blog, quoting KPMG, the U.S. corporate tax rate is the highest among industrialized countries and the second highest in the world. U.S. corporations are taxed on profits earned overseas, which is disadvantageous relative to so-called “territorial” tax systems. Corporate income is taxed twice, as well: once as corporate income and again when income is paid to shareholders, though often at a favorable “qualified dividend” rate (and double taxation of dividends is not uncommon internationally). Of course, there are myriad provisions in the tax code that reduce the severity of the corporate tax bite by providing deductions (some of which are mentioned at the first link). But the code is quite complex and it creates unnecessary compliance costs; on balance, it provides compelling reasons for corporations to attempt to shift income overseas to obtain more favorable treatment. A growing number of firms have engaged in so-called corporate “tax inversions,” which involve shifting ownership to an overseas corporate parent. This is said to represent a threat to the U.S. tax base, and it has recently captured the attention of the media.

What should be done about this trend? The first link above, from the TaxProf, discusses two options: “… a general reform of the U.S. corporate tax and specific provisions to deal with tax-motivated international mergers.” The first option would involve a vastly simpler tax code, with fewer and less generous deductions and lower tax rates. That change would be desirable if only to reduce compliance costs, but it could also be used to make the U.S. tax code more competitive internationally. A strong case can be made for eliminating the corporate income tax entirely, based on the likely favorable impact on employment, wages and international competitiveness that it would engender.

The second option mentioned in connection with reducing tax inversions involves more targeted measures which do nothing to reduce the complexity of the tax code. Apparently, the Treasury is investigating a “long list” of alternative administrative actions to discourage inversions. Again, from the TaxProf:

The President’s FY2015 budget proposes to treat all mergers as U.S. firms if the U.S. firm’s shareholders have 50% or more ownership of the combined firm or maintains management and control in the United States. Similar legislation has also been introduced in the 113th Congress.

Public attention may have discouraged Walgreens from pursuing an inversion, and the Obama administration is clearly “jawboning” in an effort to stop the activity.

Finally, Jonathan Alter wants U.S. corporations to take “loyalty oaths” to prevent them from seeking out inversion opportunities. This proposal is certainly “creepy,” as noted by J.D. Tuccille in Reason Magazine. Loyalty oaths? Seriously? From Tuccille:

… this whole “economic patriotism” crusade starts at a bad place and spirals down into a cesspool. So, if that’s the model you work from…

To make it clear where this all goes, the National Recovery Administration once boasted, “The Fascist Principles are very similar to those we have been evolving here in America.” Its head, Hugh Johnson, noted about the adoption or rejection of the blue eagle symbol and its code, “Those who are not with us are against us.”

Where else might this go? Will “buy American” form the basis of a loyalty oath of some kind? What tax consequences might await violators? What other forms of cooperation with intrusive authorities might be enforced in this way? David Harsanyi has some interesting thoughts on the question of “properly channeled nationalism”:

It’s worth remembering that when Alter proposes that Obama discipline companies that have done nothing illegal or illegitimate, he’s simply taking Obama’s “economic patriotism” to its next logical step. He wants the administration to threaten the close “easy access to American markets” companies enjoy. And really, haven’t we all suffered enough with all this unhindered access to affordable goods, exotic merchandise and cool gadgets? Samsung. Honda. Toyota. Nestle. GlaxoSmithKline. Do you believe shoppers concern themselves with the fact that Food Lion is subsidiary of a Belgium company? I suspect that most Americans, in their everyday lives, don’t care where their favorite companies are situated, because intuitively they understand the benefits of trade.

Too many times already, I have heard statements implying disloyalty after daring to criticize the president’s initiatives. That’s a very bad sign. The U.S. achieved greatness in large part because it offered basic freedoms in personal, social and economic life. Decisions about what and with whom to do business, though not completely free of government interference, must be a person’s own, even in voluntary association with others (as in the corporate form). People should be free to transfer their assets abroad or to sell their assets to anyone, regardless of domicile. If this is a desirable place to live and do business, such freedoms should never be a source of concern. In fact, with a tax code that is simpler and more competitive, it could never be anything but a source of strength.

Hamas’ Goal: Death to Jews. Could They Be Anti-Semites?

06 Wednesday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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hamas-child-abuse

Bret Stephens has another excellent op-ed today regarding the raging condemnation by the press, and many world “leaders,” of Israel’s defense against Muslim terrorists; the reaction to the slaughter of innocent civilians in much of the rest of the Muslim world has been seemingly ho-hum by comparison. Of course this is a blatant double standard.

The fine piece penned by Stephens last week on Israel’s enemy in Gaza, Hamas, is here. Hamas, in fact, is a totalitarian theocracy dedicated to the annihilation of Jews, and they act accordingly. Do you think they might be anti-Semites? Just a little? Refusal to support Israel’s defense against this aggressor, or refusal to condemn Hamas’ belligerent actions, is itself either borne out of pure naïveté or it must be unvarnished anti-Semitism. Of course, many on the Left are cowed by anti-Israeli propaganda, but today’s Stephens piece demonstrates that even many of the the naive apply a double standard by their relative silence at the concurrent Islamist slaughter of innocent Muslims elsewhere. Hamas is ultimately responsible for the death toll in Gaza, but they also contribute directly to the Palestinian death toll in important ways: See here, and even worse here.

One debate tactic used by Leftists is the accusation of ad hominem name-calling at makers of claims such as mine above. However, some anti-Zionists think nothing of calling Israelis “racist,” “murderous,” and “slaughterers,” despite the defensive nature of Israel’s efforts. These verbal attacks are obviously insulting to Israel’s supporters, but that must be an objective. I leave open the question of whether any supposed anti-Zionist is ignorant and naive or truly anti-Semetic. Turnabout may be fair play, but this is not quite turnabout.

It should come as no surprise today that Hamas has alienated much of the Arab world due to its radical and brutal approach to relations with Israel and its abusive treatment of other Arabs, including Palestinians. Nevertheless, Arab states have been attempting to broker a deal for a more lasting cease-fire between Israel and Hamas (beyond the 72-hour break in hostilities that started today — if it holds). Yet John Kerry acted to undermine that effort in an attempt to arrange a deal that would have made major concessions to Hamas, which were, of course, unacceptable to Israel. This latest example of Kerry’s misadventures in diplomacy is covered by here by Charles Krauthammer, and here by David Harsanyi. From Krauthammer’s piece:

Kerry did not just trample an Egyptian initiative. It was backed by the entire Arab League and specifically praised by Saudi Arabia. With the exception of Qatar — more a bank than a country — the Arabs are unanimous in wanting to see Hamas weakened, if not overthrown. The cease-fire-in-place they backed would have denied Hamas any reward for starting this war, while what Kerry brought back from Paris granted practically all of its demands.

The conflict now playing out in Israel and the Gaza Strip, in which Israel is engaged in an aggressive defense against an intransigent and uncompromising enemy in Hamas, is a continuation of a long history of Israel’s battles with opponents who have vowed its destruction, and who wish to “push the Jews into the sea.” Elan Journo provides excellent perspective in a series of four lectures in “Understanding the Arab-Israeli Conflict.”

Israel’s dilemma vis-a-vis Hamas, and its moral position in the conflict, is addressed by Yaron Brook and Peter Schwartz in “Israel Has a Moral Right To Its Life.” And a full-throated defense of Zionism is offered here by Michael Oren. Oren is not exactly an advocate of small government, but he understands Zionism and the positive role it can play in promoting peace, stability and prosperity in the Middle East, if only the Islamists could reform themselves.

Executive Privilege and Constitutional Shrivelage

01 Friday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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ACA, Andrew Napolitano, Daniel Rivkin, Elizabeth Price-Foley, Executive Privilege, Separation of Powers

Sue-Me

There is disagreement about the merits and wisdom of a lawsuit filed this week by the House of Representatives against President Obama for his refusal to enforce various provisions of the Affordable Care Act, even among those who have opposed the president’s decisions. David Rivkin and Elizabeth Price Foley, the attorneys who crafted the suit, explain its rationale in “The Case for Suing the President.” (I hope the link remains ungated, but if not, search “rivkin foley wsj” and you might get in.) The subtitle: “Rewriting ObamaCare laws on the fly is a violation of the constitutionally mandated separation of powers.” They explain the duties assigned to the branches of government by the constitution, certain principles underlying the separation of powers, and they review some relevant case law. They say:

… the Supreme Court has come to recognize that preserving the constitutional separation of powers between the branches of government at the federal level, and between the states and the federal government, is among the judiciary’s highest duties.

A separate WSJ editorial  (I hope ungated) notes some of the doubts about the merits of the suit. Courts have ruled that individual lawmakers do not have standing to bring a suit of this kind, but:

…the House is making an institutional challenge to executive abuse. The courts may take such a challenge seriously, in particular because the suit claims that Mr. Obama’s abuses are usurping the institutional power of Congress under the Constitution. [emphasis added]

Some salient points are established in “Top Ten Myths about the House’s Proposed Suit Against Obama.” My favorite is myth #8: “It’s a huge waste of money since the suit is just a political stunt.” Many contend that the suit will be dismissed on the grounds that it is political, but this argument is a straw man. Conflicts between the branches of government will often have a political dimension. The reality of politics does not diminish the importance of the principles at stake. Quite the opposite.

Surprisingly, Judge Andrew Napolitano believes that the lawsuit is frivolous because it is political, despite his strong condemnation of Obama’s many attempts to exploit executive privilege. He explains his view in “Is the President Incompetent or Lawless?.” Napolitano’s solution to this constitutional crisis is the more extreme impeachment route, which is more risky politically for those pressing the case, even with a GOP landslide in this fall’s election. Nevertheless, the judge asserts that impeachment is the correct constitutional remedy.

I view the lawsuit against Obama as politically risky, but I believe it has merit and may well succeed.

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