How
To Fix the Jobs Problem
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: The
Misesian Vision
All this talk
of unemployment is preposterous. Think of it. We live in a world
with lots of imperfections, things that need to be done. It has
always been so and always will be so. That means that there is work
to be done, and therefore, always jobs. The problem of unemployment
is a problem of disconnect between those who would work and those
who would hire.
What is the
disconnect? It comes down to affordability. Businesses right now
can't afford to hire new workers. They keep letting them go. Therefore,
unemployment is high, in the double-digits, approaching 17% or more.
Among black men, it is 25%. Among youth, it is 30% or higher. And
the problem is spreading and will continue to spread so long as
there are barriers to deal-making between hirers and workers.
Again, it is
not a lack of work to be done. It is too expensive to pay for the
work to be done. So ask yourself, what are those things that prevent
deals from being made?
Let me list
a few barriers:
- The high
minimum wage that knocks out the first several rungs from the
bottom of the ladder;
- The high
payroll tax that robs employees and employers of resources;
- The laws
that threaten firms with lawsuits should the employee be fired;
- The laws
that established myriad conditions for hiring beyond the market-based
condition that matters: can he or she get the job done?;
- The unemployment
subsidy in the form of phony insurance that pays people not to
work;
- The high
cost of business start-ups in the form of taxes and mandates;
- The mandated
benefits that employers are forced to cough up for every new employee
under certain conditions;
- The withholding
tax that prevents employers and employees from making their own
deals;
- The age
restrictions that treat everyone under the age of 16 as useless;
- The social
security and income taxes that together devour nearly half of
contract income;
- The labor
union laws that permit thugs to loot a firm and keep out workers
who would love a chance to offer their wares for less.
Now, that's
just a few of the interventions. But if they were eliminated today,
and it would only take one act of Congress to do so, the unemployment
rate would collapse very quickly. Everyone who wanted a job would
get one.
Depending on
the credibility of the new approach, businesses would begin hiring
immediately. It would be a spectacular thing to behold. However,
the new approach would have to be certain and not something to be
reversed in a couple of months. No one wants to invest in employees
only to have their investment taken away. So there could be no expiration
date on the new laissez-faire approach.
What is the
objection to this approach? I seriously doubt that many people would
dispute that it would work to end unemployment. But many people
say, oh, this won't do at all. It is not just jobs we want. It is
good-paying jobs!
If that's the
case, you have to understand what is being claimed here. People
are saying that it is better that people be unemployed rather than
being exploited at low wages. If so, it all comes down to your definition
of exploitation. If $10 per hour is exploitation, we should be creating
even more unemployment by raising the minimum wage. We could dis-employ
all but a few by raising the minimum wage to $1,000 per hour.
In a market-based
labor contract, there is no exploitation. People come to agreement
based on their own perceptions of mutual benefit. A person who believes
it is better to work for $1 an hour rather than sit at home doing
nothing is free to make that contract. In fact, a person who works
for a negative wage – who pays for an internship, for example –
is free to make that deal too.
I propose to
you, then, a definition of exploitation that comes from the writings
of William H. Hutt: violence or threat of violence implied in the
negotiation of anything affecting the life of a worker or employer.
In that sense, the present system is exploitation. Workers are robbed
of wages. Employers are robbed of profits. Poor people and young
people especially are robbed of opportunity.
Read any account
of economic history from the late Middle Ages through the 19th century
and try to find any evidence of the existence of unemployment. You
won't find it. Why is that? Because long-term unemployment is a
fixture of the modern world created by the interventionist state.
"We" tried to cure it and "we" ended up doing the opposite.
So it is hard
for me to take seriously all the political plans for ramping up
intervention in the name of curing unemployment. There is no involuntary
unemployment in a free market, because there is always work to be
done in this world. It is all a matter of making the deal.
All that stands
between the present awful reality and 0% unemployment is a class
of social managers unwilling to admit error. How much higher does
the rate need to get before we admit the error of our ways?
Books
by Lew Rockwell
January
29, 2010
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail], former publications editor to Ludwig von Mises and congressional
chief of staff to Ron Paul, is founder and chairman of the Mises
Institute, executor for the estate of Murray N. Rothbard, and
editor of LewRockwell.com.
See his
books.
Copyright
© 2010 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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