In Defense of Ron Paul’s Earmarks
by Eric Phillips
by Eric Phillips
DIGG THIS
One of the
questions asked of Dr. Ron Paul after his speech to the Robert Taft
Club came from a guy I met at an Institute for Humane Studies (IHS)
conference the previous summer. At that event, he was apoplectic
after Randy Barnett’s talk, in which the
supposed Rothbardian outlined his justification of the state.
We’ll never be accepted by average Americans if we don’t tailor
our message and moderate our demands, my fellow IHS alum
argued. I talked to him later in the week and he explained to me
that while he was sympathetic to the free market, he considered
himself a libertarian chiefly because he was a consistent social
liberal who despised the restrictive social atmosphere that conservatives
advocate. A beltway
libertarian if there ever was one!
"Congressman,
I have tremendous respect for you," the IHS alum averred, "but
I was shocked to read in a Reason Magazine profile that you
actually stuff earmarks into appropriation bills just like every
other member of Congress and I thought you were different, sir,
ah, you of course vote against the bill, but I was curious how you
could justify stuffing earmarks just like every other member of
Congress" (see here
at 4:25). Dr. Paul’s response is clear and convincing, but I’d like
to go into more depth here. The issue is complicated and while earmark
critics have some reasonable points, Dr. Paul’s earmarking is ultimately
not at odds with his philosophy.
As Paul notes
in his answer, cutting the number of earmarks does not cut
spending. An earmark is a congressional provision that directs federal
agencies to spend funds already authorized on specific projects.
If the funds aren’t earmarked, the agencies can spend the money
any way they see fit. That is, the executive branch, rather than
Congress, will determine how the taxpayer’s money is spent. This
point cannot be stressed enough because even the writers at the
Wall Street Journal do
not understand it. After quoting a spokesman from Paul’s office
reminding them that earmarks do not directly increase spending,
the WSJ reports, "On the other hand, good libertarians
should want to start cutting somewhere." Didn’t Paul’s office
just point out that cutting earmarks does not cut spending? Some
argue that earmarks can indirectly increase spending by encouraging
corruption – this problem will be dealt with below – but in this
passage the WSJ seems to imply that adding earmarks directly
increases spending. After writing that good libertarians should
start cutting somewhere, they continue:
The problem
with earmarking is that each year the habit grows by leaps and
bounds so that it now represents real money. It is also
a gateway to political corruption – a la Duke Cunningham, and
other Congressmen currently under investigation for trading favors
for earmarks. [Emphasis added]
By writing
"it is also," the writers imply that in addition to
increasing spending, earmarks encourage corruption rather than the
more coherent argument that earmarks increase spending by encouraging
corruption.
Ramesh Ponnuru
has
more sense on this issue than most other mainstream movement
conservatives. He recognizes that earmarks make up less than two
percent of the federal budget and that fiscal conservatives should
be spending more time and energy on more important spending programs.
His response to Senator Jim DeMint’s criticisms of the earmarking
process, however, is less than convincing. "The game,"
DeMint complained, "encouraged everyone to be asking for money
and everyone to be voting for bills that were bigger than the budget
that had been voted for earlier." Ponnuru counters that, "It
is certainly true, as DeMint says, that earmarks can buy support
for government-expanding bills. But they can buy support for government-shrinking
bills, too [like NAFTA]." First, the hundreds of pages of legislation
that created NAFTA did not shrink the size of government. Second,
while it is conceivable that earmarks could be used to buy support
for a government-shrinking bill, given the nature of government,
the number of government-expanding bills is going to far outstrip
the number of government-shrinking bills. On net, therefore, the
quid pro quo of earmark trading is likely to increase government
spending. Yet considering that Dr. Paul always votes "no"
on the appropriations bills he requests earmarks for – as his critics
concede – he is not involved in this negative aspect of the earmarking
process. No amount of earmarks promised to him will convince him
to vote "yes" on the bill. They are – as he says – projects
meant to return some of his constituents’ money that was stolen
from them by the federal government, within the context of the current
system. The excerpt of the Congressional Quarterly article
that Tim Russert referenced
(see 6:50) on the Meet the Press interview that reads, "There
isn’t much that Rep. Ron Paul thinks the federal government should
do…Apparently, though earmarks [that benefit his district] are okay,"
leaves the impression that Paul would support increasing the federal
budget by $400 million just to benefit his district. He would not.
He supports forwarding the requests of his constituents that $400
million of funds that the federal government has already taken from
them and designated for spending be returned to their district.
Given that
Paul isn’t involved in the trading of earmarks for "yes"
votes, his requests for earmarks must be judged on the other pros
and cons of the practice. Earmarks can lead to ridiculously inefficient
projects like the infamous "Bridge
to Nowhere" because, critics
contend, earmarked funds do not go through a merit-based selection
process as they would if granted to an executive agency. It’s not
surprising that President Bush is
a leading advocate of this argument. Ultimately this argument
is part of a fruitless crusade to make government more efficient.
But that is impossible. There
is
no
way government
can allocate resources rationally, no matter what part of it has
the authority to dispense funds. The absence of market prices and
the profit-and-loss mechanism makes it impossible for governments
to accurately compare the value of inputs with outputs. No matter
how many forms an executive agency makes you fill out to receive
a grant, government cannot accurately measure merit. The phony free
market Wall Street crowd’s dream of cutting spending and streamlining
government by empowering a unitary
executive is both hopeless and fraught with danger. What if,
for example, the WSJ gets its way and the president is given
the line item veto? Couldn’t the president, as
Dr. Paul points out, threaten to cut funding from a recalcitrant
congressman’s district if he didn’t support the president’s proposed
legislation?
Senator Tom
Coburn claims
that "the Porkbusters represent what is arguably the only grassroots
movement since 1994 to gain traction and build momentum
on the core American principle of limited government" [Emphasis
in original]. I’ve lived in DC for almost four years now and I’ve
been involved with the beltway conservative/libertarian crowd since
the beginning. I was working on the earmark issue before it became
national news. The enthusiasm for the "Porkbusters" coalition
in no way approaches the popularity and dedication of the Ron Paul
Revolution, a movement dedicated to the wholesale dismantling of
large swaths of the federal government. Barry Goldwater was right.
Moderation isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. True free market supporters
should stop bickering over the way less than two percent of the
budget is allocated and start focusing on scraping whole departments,
gutting the military industrial complex, and privatizing entitlements.
December
31, 2007
Eric
Phillips [send him mail]
is leaving DC soon.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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