More
Government Equals Fewer Jobs
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: The
Precarious State of Our Union
With todays
unexpected decline in December payrolls, the cry for more job-related
stimulus will grow even louder. But the sad truth is that any new
stimulus or jobs bills will ultimately swell the ranks of the unemployed,
thereby raising calls for an even bigger federal effort. If we are
not careful, government regulations, subsidies, and spending, all
designed to fight unemployment, could push the labor market into
a death spiral.
Regulation
acts like a tax on job creation. By subjecting employers to all
sorts of extra expenses when they hire people, regulations increase
the cost of employment far beyond the wages employers actually pay
their workers. In fact, some regulations are specifically tied to
the number of workers employed. This provides some employers with
a strong incentive to stay small and not hire.
The minimum
wage law, which is really just a very visible workplace regulation,
actually makes it illegal for employers to hire certain individuals
and destroys
entire categories of jobs. For instance, faced with high labor
costs, some restaurants will avoid hiring dishwashers by switching
to plastic utensils and paper plates. On a larger scale, factories
may decide to switch to robotic assembly lines if human labor gets
too expensive.
Other types
of regulations, such as those that prohibit discrimination, create
incentives for employers not to hire individuals that fall within
the protected class. This is the result of potential litigation
costs that may result from wrongful termination lawsuits. In other
words, the more expensive government makes it to fire workers, the
less likely they are to hire them in the first place.
Subsidies produce
the opposite effect of regulation, but sometimes the results can
be just as harmful. Government subsidies divert resources towards
politically favored activities, resulting in more jobs in areas
such as health care and education, but fewer jobs in other sectors
such as manufacturing. The net effect of this transfer is to diminish
the productive capacity and efficiency of the economy, which lowers
real economic growth and diminishes employment opportunities.
Although not
as visible as regulations and subsidies, government spending also
plays a large role in job destruction. The more money government
spends, the more resources it drains from the private sector. The
fiscal 2011 budget proposed by President Obama contains $3.8 trillion
in federal spending. Think of government as a cancer feeding off
the private sector. The larger it grows, the more jobs it kills.
Unfortunately, most politicians follow the misguided advice of economist
John Maynard Keynes, who advocated government spending as a means
of job creation. In reality, government spending merely results
in government jobs replacing more efficient private sector jobs.
Some economists
point to taxes as the primary job killer, and argue that lower taxes
will boost employment. While I have sympathy for this view, it misses
the larger issue that the burden of government is not what it taxes
but what it spends. The proposed fiscal 2011 federal budget contains
only 2.4 trillion of taxes. The remaining 1.4 trillion
of spending is borrowed (incredibly, for every dollar the government
collects in taxes, it now spends almost $1.60). I would argue that
a dollar borrowed kills more jobs than a dollar taxed. Therefore,
cutting taxes and borrowing the shortfall kills more jobs then it
creates. This is true because jobs require capital and government
borrowing more directly crowds out private capital investment than
taxes do.
In the end,
I fully expect the government to directly provide make-work jobs
to the armies of the unemployed. This will accelerate the pace of
private sector job destruction and make our economy even less productive
than it is today. This means that while the government may be able
to provide people with jobs, the wages they pay will provide little
in the way of purchasing power. In the end, we will become a nation
of government employees, with plenty of work but little to show
for it.
February
6, 2010
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.
Copyright
© 2010 Euro Pacific Capital
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