Why Does Anybody Get Federal Farm Aid?
by Wilton D. Alston
and Stefan Molyneux
by
Wilton D. Alston and Stefan Molyneux
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"Everything
the state says is a lie and everything it has, it has stolen."
~ Nietzsche, from Thus
Spake Zarathustra
As of Tuesday,
June 12, 2007, a Washington, DC not-for-profit named The
Environmental Working Group (EWG)
is hosting a website that lists all the people receiving federal
farm aid. As any regular reader of sites such as LRC would expect,
more than a couple of people on this list
of farm aid recipients are not exactly "needy." In
fact the purpose of the group’s efforts is to shine a bright light
on the number of "rich" people getting federal farm aid.
While exposing
these gifts-to-the-non-needy is certainly a noble goal, not
everyone is excited about the EWG and what they claim to be
after. That disclaimer about the EWG aside, the question with which
we title this essay still seems pertinent. In fact, this situation
provides another example of one of the early "truths"
that drove us inevitably toward radical libertarianism. That truism
is simply this: the State steals money and then gives it away
stupidly. (Nietzsche said it first, and better, but one would
expect that.)
The real problem
is that, as with almost any government program, the implementation
of farm aid results in, shall we say, "improper" recipients.
For instance, it was recently revealed that almost three quarters
of farm subsidies go to the richest 10% of American farmers, and
that the cost to the average American family was over $400 a year.
According to the Associated Press, the database, which was culled
from information recently released by the United States Department
of Agriculture, includes about 358,000 beneficiaries who received
$9.8 billion in crop subsidy benefits between 2003 and 2005. (Not
a bad payday for a rich non-farmer!)
What we really
wonder is this: is anyone surprised when people fall all
over themselves vying for free cash? We’ve long maintained that
one should view federal funds like a large sow with many juicy,
succulent teats and those who take the funds like greedy little
pigs. No one expects a little piggy to eschew a teat, right? For
that matter, is there anyone who thinks the most able-bodied pigs
would let the sickly (read: under-represented, disadvantaged, etc.,
assuming one can define those terms) pigs suckle first? Of course
not. (Hell, were we pigs, we very likely wouldn’t let any loser-pigs
ahead of us either!) And so it goes.
Unexpected
Consequences, As Expected
As you would
naturally expect, the violence at the root of farm subsidies begets
more violence. In underdeveloped countries, locally-grown goods
are often much more expensive than heavily-subsidized American imports.
Poor farmers are thus unable to compete – and, since these countries
lack the capital and stability to compete in the manufacturing sector,
destitute farmers have little choice but to turn to the government
for employment, or crime for survival. Thus the public sector swells,
crime increases – and hey, whadaya you know, but here come the Americans
with wonderful foreign aid packages. These packages always seem
to contain lots of fine print about buying US goods, hiring US companies,
and purchasing US weapons, but no matter – there’s always a boatload
of lovely greenbacks left over to line the pockets of local warlords!
This is how
the cycle of violence escalates throughout the world. US taxpayers
are forced to subsidize domestic farmers; foreign countries retaliate
with tariffs; the US government retaliates with counter-tariffs,
which raises the price of goods for US citizens. Undercut by subsidized
US farm products, destitute foreign farmers turn to public-sector
employment – or even more direct forms of criminality – and thus
US taxpayers are further preyed upon to pay for foreign aid programs.
The proceeds
of foreign aid programs are used by increasingly-despotic governments
to repress their own citizens and buy more weapons from US manufacturers.
The resentment that foreigners feel towards the US government for
destroying their local economies – not to mention their personal
liberties – emerges as anti-American rhetoric; the US government
then inflates fears of terrorism, and further attacks its citizens
to pay for additional "defense." Since they cannot profitably
grow and sell "legitimate" crops, farmers in the Third
World turn to the production of marijuana, heroin and other illegal
drugs. This drives the price of drugs down in the United States,
causing increased consumption, which then further allows the government
to attack its citizens on the grounds of the endless "war
on (some) drugs" – as well as attack foreigners – by napalming
poppy fields, overturning governments, or straight-on invasions.
Conclusion
The take-home
message here is just as it always is when one examines the results
of government intervention in the free market: money for those who
don’t need it, violence for those who don’t deserve it, and more
power for those who shouldn’t have it, all financed with tax dollars.
Ironically, whenever this type of gubmint waste is identified, the
response is almost always a hue and cry for more gubmint waste,
via oversight, regulation, enforcement, etc. One such magic bullet,
offered as a sure-fire cure for not only things like rich people
getting farm aid but also the "improper" application of
social security payments, is means testing.
Call us ungrateful,
but from where we sit means tests are just a methodology that allows
those who stole our money to better spend it. It’s analogous to
the Sopranos hiring a financial planner for the protection money.
How about we go back to the beginning and let us just keep it? If
a program with specious pedigree – like farm subsidies – can be
depended upon to result in people like Texas oil billionaire Lee
Bass and former NBA star Scottie Pippen getting a subsidy, the problem
isn’t lack of oversight. The problem is that the program exists
at all. The problem, as always, is the initiation of violence.
In fact, from
a libertarian perspective, the goals of the EWG in this regard seem
to be all about seeking a more equitable distribution of farm subsidies,
versus the real answer: stopping them altogether. It’s as
if they’re saying, "Let’s keep stealing, but let’s make sure
we do it more accurately." No thanks.
Paying
a farmer to not grow/grow a crop – outside the "pull"
of the market – was stupid the first time some lobbyist thought
of it.
Enough
already.
August
21, 2007
Wilt
Alston [send him
mail] lives in Rochester, NY, with his wife and three
children. When he’s not training for a marathon or furthering his
part-time study of libertarian philosophy, he works as a principal
research scientist in transportation safety, focusing primarily
on the safety of subway and freight train control systems. Stefan
Molyneux [send him
mail] is a full-time philosopher. His first novel, Revolutions
was published in 2004, and his new book On
Truth: The Tyranny of Illusion was published this year.
Listen to his podcast, which you can get by clicking here
– or, you like iTunes better, you can click here.
For more articles, please see
his archives. He is the host of Freedomain
Radio.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Wilton
D. Alston Archives
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