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Rockwell's
Thirty-Day Plan
When
Eastern Europe broke free in 1989, we all realized just how little
thought had been given to the transition from socialism to capitalism.
Mises had told us the collapse was coming, and we should have been
prepared.
As
America comes to resemble a command economy, we need a transition
plan here too. Yuri Maltsev proposed a "One-Day Plan" for the U.
S. S. R. We're not in that bad a shape (yet), so we could do it
in 30 days.
DAY
ONE: The federal income tax is abolished and April 15th is declared
a national holiday. The 40% reduction in federal revenues is matched
by a 40% cut in spending. The budget is still almost twice as big
as Jimmy Carter's.
DAY
TWO: All other federal taxes are abolished, including the corporate
income tax, the capital gains tax, the gasoline tax, "sin" taxes,
excise taxes, etc. Businesses boom, and the few legitimate federal
functions are funded with an inexpensive head tax. People who choose
not to vote need not pay it. (Note: this was a mainstream view in
the 19th century.)
DAY
THREE: The federal government sells all its land, freeing up
tens of millions of acres for development, mining, farming, forestry,
oil drilling, private parks, etc. The government uses the revenue
to pay off the national debt and other liabilities.
DAY
FOUR: The minimum wage is reduced to zero, creating jobs for
ex-federal bureaucrats at their market wage. All pro-union laws
and regulations are scrapped. The jobless rate falls dramatically.
DAY
FIVE: The Bureau of Labor Statistics, like the rest of the Labor
Department, is sent to that big hiring hall in the sky. Without
detailed economic statistics, future economic planners will be blind
and deaf.
DAY
SIX: The Department of Commerce is abolished. Big business has
to make its own way in the world, without subsidies and privileges
at the expense of its competitors and customers.
DAY
SEVEN: The plug is pulled on the Department of Energy. Oil and
gas prices plummet.
DAY
EIGHT: All regulatory agencies, from the Interstate Commerce
Commission to the Federal Trade Commission, are deep-sixed. Competition
is legalized.
DAY
NINE: HUD is squashed like a bug. There's a buiding boom in
cheap, private, apartments.
DAY
TEN: The interstate highways reopen as private businesses. Road
entrepreneurs price travel according to consumer demand. Using modern
technology, drivers get bills once a month. Credit risks-and drunks
and dangerous drivers- aren't allowed on the road. Non-drivers no
longer subsidize car owners.
DAY
ELEVEN: Government welfare is wiped out. Bums work or starve.
The deserving poor find a cornucopia of private services designed
to make them independent. Private charity explodes, as the American
people, already the most generous in the world, find their incomes
almost doubled, thanks to the tax cuts.
DAY
TWELVE: The Federal Reserve closes its open-market operations
and stops protecting the banking industry from competition. But
banks can now engage in all the non-bank financial activities previously
forbidden to them. The business cycle, which is caused by monetary
expansion through the credit markets, is liquidated.
DAY
THIRTEEN: Federal deposit insurance is scrapped. All insured
deposits are redeemed from federal assets, which include the personal
assets of high-level government employees. The threat of bank runs
forces banks to keep 100% reserves for their demand deposits, and
prudent reserves on all other accounts. There are no more inherently
bankrupt banks propped up by the government, at taxpayer expense,
and no more bail outs.
DAY
FOURTEEN: The shaky fiat dollar is defined in terms of gold,
with the ratio determined by dividing the government's gold stock
by all existing dollars on that day.
DAY
FIFTEEN: The federal government sells National and Dulles airports
to the highest bidder, and stops all subsidies to other socialist
airports around the country. All constraints on airline prices and
service cease. It costs more to fly during peak hours than off-peak,
but overall, air travel drops in price.
DAY
SIXTEEN: All government regulations that create and sustain
cartels are abolished, including those for the post office, telephones,
television, radio, and cable TV Prices plummet, and a host of new
and unforeseen services becomes available.
DAY
SEVENTEEN: Centrally planned agriculture, as imposed by Hoover
and Roosevelt, is repealed: there are no more subsidies, payments-in-kind,
marketing orders, low-interest loans, etc. Farm prices drop. Entrepreneurial
farmers get rich. Welfare farmers go into another line of work.
The poor eat like kings.
DAY
EIGHTEEN: The Justice Department shutters its anti-trust division.
Companies, big and small, are free to merge up, down, or sideways.
Stockholders can buy any other company, or sell their stock to anyone
else. Marginal producers can no longer battle their competitors
with bureaucratic weapons.
DAY
NINETEEN: The Department of Education flunks the constitutionality
test, and is kicked out. Private charities set up remedial reading
and writing programs for the former bureaucrats. Federally subsidized
sex education and other anti-family programs go out of business.
Local school districts become responsive to parents or close, pressured
by a fast-growing private school sector (which many more parents
can now afford).
DAY
TWENTY: All federal monuments are sold, in some cases to non-profit
groups based on the Mt. Vernon Ladies Association, which owns and
runs George Washington's home. The VFW buys the Vietnam memorial.
There is much bidding for the Jefferson and Washington monuments.
Nobody wants FDR's, so it's torn down and the land sold to a farmer.
(With the federal government cut back to its constitutional size,
much of Washington reverts to productive uses like agriculture,
as in late 18th century.)
DAY
TWENTY-ONE: The computerized financial and political dossier
maintained by the government on every American is erased. The public
wanders through the federal offices to make sure, in a reprise of
the East Berliners' visits to Stasi headquarters.
DAY
TWENTY-TWO: Equal rights are granted to all Americans, even
members of non-victim groups. There is no affirmative action, no
quotas, no set-asides, no public accommodations laws. Private property
and freedom of association are fully restored.
DAY
TWENTY-THREE: The EPA is cleaned out, with all "clean air" and
similar big-government laws repealed. Ten thousand lawyers leap
from their balconies. Private property is established in air and
water. Americans harmed by pollution are free to sue the polluters,
who are no longer protected by the federal government.
DAY
TWENTY-FOUR: Americans are given complete freedom of contract,
restoring rationality to malpractice and product liability law.
DAY
TWENTY-FIVE: Government scrambles for more assets to sell (i.e.,
the National Zoo, also known as Washington, D.C.) to pay off the
liabilities of the privatized Social Security system.
DAY
TWENTY-SIX: Porno artists have to earn their own livings, as
the National Endowment for the Arts tries to raise its budget through
sidewalk painting sales.
DAY
TWENTY-SEVEN: Foreign aid is outlawed as unconstitutional, unjust,
and un-economic. Foreign politicians have to steal their own money.
The World Bank, IMF, and United Nations close their super- luxurious
doors.
DAY
TWENTY-EIGHT: The American people are given the unrestricted
right to keep and bear arms.
DAY
TWENTY-NINE: The Defense Department is reoriented towards defense.
American troops come home from all around the world. We adopt a
policy of armed neutrality, remembering the Founding Fathers' teaching
that we could not have an empire abroad and a constitutional republic
at home.
DAY
THIRTY: All tariffs, quotas, and trade agreements are put through
the shredder. Americans can trade with anyone in the world, without
barriers or subsidies. Japanese car prices drop an immediate 25%.
In
just 30 exhilarating days, we have established the outlines of free
market. Radical? Maybe so. Me, I can't wait until Month Two.
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