Obama
and the Post Office
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: Obama
and the Economy
Writing in
The
State and Revolution in 1917, Vladimir Lenin summed up the
economic aim of socialism as follows: "To organize the whole economy
on the lines of the postal service...."
Incredible,
isn't it? After centuries of treatises and miles of paper and tubs
of ink, this is the great historical turning point: government employees
carrying sacks of paper mail from house to house, and operating
at an economic loss.
It's fascinating
how it all comes down to the post office, again and again in the
history of public policy. And so it is in our time, with Obama's
admission/gaffe/slip concerning the post office and its analogy
to what he wants to do with health care.
Here is a transcript
of his spontaneous talk at a high school. A student raised a question
about the government's provision of health services and its impact
on private services.
"How can a
private company compete against the government? My answer is that
if the private insurance companies are providing a good bargain,
and if the public option has to be self-sustaining, meaning that
taxpayers aren't subsidizing it, but it has to run on charging premiums
and providing good services, and a good network of doctors, just
like private insurers do, then I think private insurers should be
able to compete.
"They do it
all the time. If you think about it, UPS and Fed-Ex are doing just
fine. It's the Post Office that's always having problems.... there
is nothing inevitable about this somehow destroying the private
marketplace. As long as it is not set up where the government is
being subsidized by the taxpayers so that even if they are providing
a good deal, we keep having to pony up more and more money."
Now, these
comments are nothing short of incredible. The Post Office has been
on the loser list for many decades. Most
recently, it has been included on the GAO's high-risk list,
increasing its debt to $10.2 billion and incurring a cash shortfall
of $1 billion.
Note that the
post office is not being shut down for this mess. On the contrary,
it is being subsidized not only with tax dollars but, most importantly,
with laws. Title 18 (I.83.1696)
says that "Whoever establishes any private express for the conveyance
of letters or packets" can be fined and jailed. Moreover, the law
(39.I.6.606)
says that any letter delivered by unlawful means can be seized and
stolen by the government. It is immune from antitrust
action and criminal liability. You can read the whole Post
Office Gosplan here.
If the Post
Office were really a market institution, it would go belly-up in
about half an hour. So, no, there is no competition here. Only the
government is permitted to deliver first-class letters. How do UPS
and Fed-Ex get away with it? They slip through a hole in the law
by delivering packages, not mail. And it wasn't easy to survive
even then. Just as in the 19th century when the federal government
waged war on Lysander Spooner's American Letter Mail Company and
on Wells Fargo (and Benjamin
Tucker defended "private enterprise in the letter-carrying business"),
the government has been hounding private services in our time, whether
through wicked labor union bullying or by restricting their services
as much as possible.
The freedom
of UPS and Fed-Ex to operate at all is hard won. But the government
has succeeded in destroying the private marketplace in the one area
that government monopolizes by law. It took the innovation of digital
messaging to finally horn in on that area. And this has worked in
a big way, with a massive collapse in the number of people choosing
government mails over digital alternatives.
Therefore Obama
is right in a strange way: private enterprise has triumphed and
government service is terrible. Everyone knows this. It is utterly
preposterous that a government mail service exists at all. There
is no theory of economics that supports it. There is not now nor
has there ever been any economic reason for government postal service.
It should be immediately abolished and private enterprise should
take over. Even on the basis of Obama's thin and strange statements,
you might argue this conclusion.
But perhaps
Obama meant to suggest that the reason the Post Office is so bad
is because it has to compete with private enterprise. If he meant
that, he lives in a socialist fantasy land, and we have a very dangerous
man on our hands. In the real world, no living person could possibly
believe that mail service would be improved by getting rid of the
efficient producers and granting a totalitarian monopoly to a single
government-backed provider.
How can a private
company compete against the government? Simply because government
is so terrible at what it does that even a private company that
is beaten down and attacked and competed against with all the tax
dollars in the world will do better than the government. It is true
in mail and it is true in health care. But what they will not be
able to do is thrive to the point of universal service, especially
when there are laws that prohibit direct service-by-service competition.
Another point
that needs to be addressed is Obama's claim that the government
service will operate just like the private service, with self-sustaining
financing. But here is the question that socialists have never been
able to answer. If the goal is to get government to operate like
a private service, what is the value added by having it provided
by the government in the first place? The only reason for a government
service is precisely to provide financial support for an operation
that is otherwise unsustainable, else there would be no point in
the government's involvement at all.
And
let us set aside the amazing and preposterous claim that if the
government service doesn't work according to market principles,
it will be shut down. Never in the entire history of government
has that been true. No matter how bad, no matter how financially
egregious, no matter how much the people suffer, the propensity
is for government services to last forever and ever, precisely because
they are protected from market-based tests of profit and loss.
The right path
to health-care reform is the market path (no subsidies, no monopolies
such as drug patents, no licensure, no anything) that tends toward
universal distribution at very low prices and relentless improvement
in service. The wrong path is to make health care run the same way
as the post office. Obama seems to favor the latter path, even though
he admits that it is the least well-performing one. This is surely
the definition of fanaticism. If the mobs aren't angry, they should
be.
Books
by Lew Rockwell
August
13, 2009
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and chairman of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author, most recently, of The
Left, The Right, and The State.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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