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Cash from Kleptocrats

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How Much is That Clunker in the Window?

The parable of the crushed clunker.

ThoughtRogue:  Jonah may have beat me to illustrating the “Broken Window Fallacy” lesson here, but man, did he nail this one on the head.  There’s so much nonsense and ignorance contained in the “wildly successful” Cash for Clunkers “stimulus” program that only a completely ignorant, out-of-touch, out-of-control arrogant Congress could trumpet this boondoggle as a “success” (and add 2 $Billion more as did our RINO Rep. Reichert).  Folks, on net, it is DESTROYING your wealth.  The Cash from Kleptocrats program creates a plethora of new broken windows.  The grand point of this famous economic parable, which eviscerates Obanomics, is that without the hoodlum breaking his window, the baker will buy whatever goods he was going to buy in the first place, AND he has an intact window (retains more wealth!).  But, of course, in C4C, the genius kicker is that the baker’s other out-dated windows (which still have value in a free market) are also broken for his added convenience – so he can replace them with more efficient “green” windows.

By Jonah Goldberg, National Review

 

Gilded Excrement Award Winner: Cash for Clunkers!

Gilded Excrement Award Winner: Cash for Clunkers!

Ce qu’on voit et ce qu’on ne voit pas.

That may exhaust my French-phrase quota for the year, but it’s worth it. The saying is the title of an essay by 19th-century French economist Frédéric Bastiat and means “that which is seen, and that which is not seen.”

Bastiat’s essay is most famous for the “parable of the broken window,” in which a young boy shatters a shopkeeper’s window and, after some initial outrage, the villagers conclude that the rascal helped the local economy. Why?

Because if no one broke windows, window makers would be out of business, and if window makers were out of business, they wouldn’t buy any more bread or shoes, hurting the bakers and cobblers. So the six francs the shopkeeper must spend for a new window is really a boon to the community.

The problem with this argument can be gleaned from the title of Bastiat’s essay. By counting the money the shopkeeper spends to replace a perfectly good window (that which is seen), we ignore the money he might have spent on something else (that which is unseen). The shopkeeper might have instead dropped six francs on new shoes, a book, or a bonus for his assistant. Those who celebrate the broken window as a generator of growth take “no account of that which is not seen.”

Sorry for the long digression, but the parable of the broken window is worth keeping in mind, or perhaps even worth updating to the parable of the crushed clunker.

This parable is more convoluted, but the upshot is that Uncle Sam pays people to destroy their own cars as long as they use the money to buy a new, more expensive car.

As you’ve no doubt heard, the “cash for clunkers” program gives buyers up to $4,500 of taxpayer money toward the purchase of a new car if they trade in their old cars for vehicles with better gas mileage. The old cars, still roadworthy, are then destroyed just like the shopkeeper’s window.

The thinking behind the program is that the car companies need a boost, Michigan needs a boost, the environment needs a boost (through lower emissions), and Americans need help too.

Unsaid, but just as relevant, is that the authors of the government’s mammoth stimulus plan need some proof that something is being stimulated.

The program’s $1 billion funding evaporated in days rather than months as consumers, most of whom had been waiting to trade in their clunkers anyway, lined up for free cash. Washington is now agog with its successful effort to give out free money.

That Washington is shocked by the news that Americans like getting free money shows how thick the Beltway bubble really is.

Like the drunk who only looks for his car keys where the light is good, Washington can only see the economic activity it has created, not the activity it has destroyed.

For starters, who says the smartest thing for people with working cars is to buy new ones? Personal debt is supposed to be a problem, so why not look at this as bribing consumers into taking out car loans they don’t need? Even with the $4,500 subsidy, not all of these customers are going to be paying cash for their new cars. So they’ll be swapping serviceable-but-paid-for cars for nicer cars that are owned by banks.

Besides, maybe some people would be smarter to buy a savings bond or max out their kid’s college fund or — here’s a crazy thought — buy health insurance. But instead they’ve been seduced into spending the equivalent of their six francs on a car they don’t really need.

But, you might say, some buyers surely do need a new car. True. But if they needed a new car, they’d get one anyway, eventually. Indeed, they might already have gotten it, but rationally opted to wait for the program to kick in.

Or maybe they’d have needed to delay the purchase until next year, or buy a cheaper car, possibly even a used car, which will now become more difficult for poor people to find because we are taking all these cheap cars off the market.

But at least under these scenarios, they’d be spending their own money.

Under the government’s program, tax dollars are being diverted to people with cheap cars so they can buy expensive ones. That’s just really inefficient wealth distribution, not wealth creation. But government can see it, and that’s all that counts.

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Can’t Wait for Socialized ObamaCare?

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Wait – How much time do you have?

TR:  Watch this video, and carefully note the horrors just below Steven Crowder’s humor.  It may seem like a parody – but it is a real look at the wonders of “free” health care in Canada.  This is what you can look forward to if we allow ObamaCare to be shoved down our throats.

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Subsidizing Bad Decisions

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-ThoughtRogue:  It’s an inconvenient fact that whatever is subsidized, it encourages getting more of it.

By Thomas Sowell, Author of Economic Facts and Fallacies

The only person toward whom there is no compassion is the taxpayer.

 

A Must-Read!

A Must-Read!

The federal government has decided to bail out homeowners in trouble with mortgage loans up to $729,000. That raises some questions that ought to be asked, but are seldom being asked.

 

Since the average American never took out a mortgage loan as big as 700 grand – for the very good reason that he could not afford it – why should he be forced as a taxpayer to subsidize someone else who apparently couldn’t afford it either, but who got in over his head anyway?

Why should taxpayers who live in apartments, perhaps because they did not feel that they could afford to buy a house, be forced to subsidize people who could not afford to buy a house, but who went ahead and bought one anyway?

We hear a lot of talk in some quarters about how any one of us could be in the same financial trouble that many homeowners are in if we lost our job or had some other misfortune. The pat phrase is that we are all just a few paydays away from being in the same predicament.

Another way of saying the same thing is that some people live high enough on the hog that any of the common misfortunes of life can ruin them.

Who hasn’t been out of work at some time or other, or had an illness or accident that created unexpected expenses? The old and trite notion of “saving for a rainy day” is old and trite precisely because this has been a common experience for a very long time.

What is new is the current notion of indulging people who refused to save for a rainy day or to live within their means. In politics, it is called “compassion” – which comes in both the standard liberal version and “compassionate conservatism.”

The one person toward whom there is no compassion is the taxpayer.

The current political stampede to stop mortgage foreclosures proceeds as if foreclosures were just something that struck people like a bolt of lightning from the blue – and as if the people facing foreclosures were the only people who mattered.

What if the foreclosures are not stopped?

Will millions of homes just sit empty? Or will new people move into those homes, now selling for lower prices – prices perhaps more within the means of the new occupants?

The same politicians who have been talking about a need for “affordable housing” for years are now suddenly alarmed that home prices are falling. How can housing become more affordable unless prices fall?

The political meaning of “affordable housing” is housing that is made more affordable by politicians intervening to create government subsidies, rent control, or other gimmicks for which politicians can take credit.

Affordable housing produced by market forces provides no benefit to politicians and has no attraction for them.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Free Ice Cream for All – Costs Udderly Forgotten

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Promises of Free Ice Cream

Promises of Free Ice Cream

-From a teacher near Nashville

Who worries about the cow when it is all about the ice cream?The most eye-opening civics lesson I ever had was while teaching third grade this year.

The presidential election was heating up and some of the children showed an interest. I decided we would have an election for a class president. We would choose our nominees. They would make a campaign speech and the class would vote.

To simplify the process, candidates were nominated by other class members. We discussed what kinds of characteristics these students should have. We got many nominations and from those, Jamie and Olivia were picked to run for the top spot.
The class had done a great job in their selections.

Both candidates were good kids. I thought Jamie might have an advantage because he got lots of parental support. I had never seen Olivia’s mother.

The day arrived when they were to make their speeches Jamie went first He had specific ideas about how to make our class a better place. He ended by promising to do his very best.

Everyone applauded. He sat down and Olivia came to the podium. Her speech was concise.

She said, “If you will vote for me, I will give you ice cream” She sat down.

Welcome to the Land of Free Ice Cream!

Welcome to the Land of Free Ice Cream!

The class went wild. “Yes! Yes! We want ice cream.”

She surely could say more. She did not have to.

A discussion followed. How did she plan to pay for the ice cream? She wasn’t sure. Would her parents buy it or would the class pay for it? She didn’t know.
The class really didn’t care. All they were thinking about was ice cream.

Jamie was forgotten. Olivia won by a landslide.

Every time Barack Obama opened his mouth he offered ice cream and 52% of the people reacted like nine year olds. They want ice cream.

Sorry, Kids, Ice Cream is Never 'Free'.

Sorry, Kids, Ice Cream is Never 'Free'.

The other 48% of us know we’re going to have to feed the cow and clean up the mess.

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