THE LIBERTARIAN
They
Can Never Meet the 'Demand' for Free Sandwiches
by
Vin Suprynowicz
There’s
been much piteous mewling of late about an ongoing "teacher
shortage" in the government schools.
Additionally,
the collectivists moan we’re not doing enough to "meet the
demand" for new youth propaganda camps, or for "homeless
facilities," either.
These
statements are nearly devoid of discernible meaning. However, it
is apparently no longer safe to merely ignore them, since some guy
who earned a doctorate in education by writing a slim report on
the benefits of air conditioning (many know him as Nevada Gov. Kenny
Guinn) now actually proposes to squeeze more money from the productive
classes in order to meet these "needs" and "demands."
What’s
going on here is that words which have real use in analyzing a private
economy are being borrowed and inappropriately applied to collectivist
looting schemes.
What
is the "demand" for Jaguar motor cars in the Vegas Valley?
Bob Kane tells me they move about 350 new cars per year out of Gaudin
Jaguar-Porsche. And "No, we don’t have much trouble meeting
demand; there’s no waiting list."
So
only 350 people in a valley of millions would like a new Jaguar?
Not quite. They start at $30,000, see, and can cost as much as $85,000
if you want one of the fancy convertibles.
Still
a good buy for all that British hand fitting and finishing, in my
book. But clearly a lot of folks decide to spend less on a car – or
to invest in something more suitable for hauling hay bales through
the mesquite – leaving local Jaguar "supply and demand"
pretty much in balance.
But
let us suppose that some politician took it into his head that it
was a travesty for so many of his worthy constituents to do without
Jaguars, instead hauling around their precious children – our nation’s
future! in flimsy Japanese sheet-metal jalopies.
Emergency
legislation would be enacted, requiring Mr. Kane and company to
give out free Jaguars to anyone who wants one. When both the dealership
and eventually the parent company went belly-up trying to meet this
"demand," the government would simply nationalize Jaguar
U.S.A. and put government bureaucrats in charge of handing out the
free cars.
What
would Jaguar "demand" look like, then? To meet this "demand,"
quality would quickly be cut – the new government managers would start
welding Jaguar hood ornaments onto any sheet-metal contraption they
could manage to throw together.
"You
dare complain about the quality of your new, government-issued
‘Jaguar?’ Don’t you understand the problems we face?" the superintendent
of the County Jaguar Distribution District would whine. "We
can’t get enough quality raw material; we’re having to train non-English-speaking
workers straight out of the celery fields ... Besides, if you don’t
like it, you can always go spend your own money on a private-sector
car."
"Gee,
not many of those old for-profit dealers left around any more, now
that you guys are giving away stuff for free."
"Aha.
Not much ‘demand’ for what they offer, is there?"
Government
can similarly never meet the "demand" for free food and
beds for the shiftless winos we’re now instructed to call "the
homeless." Spot 12 hungry hoboes downtown this week and set
up a table to give away 12 free sandwiches for lunch. Tomorrow 50
people will line up for your free sandwiches, and by next week 500,
including courthouse secretaries in high heels. Start applying a
"means test" to limit your expenditures and you’ll only
end up servicing a new class of skilled government form-filler-outers,
while the 12 hoboes you started out trying to help will end up washing
down Ring Dings with Old English 800 back under the overpass – with
no fixed address and no writing skills, they can neither fill out
nor satisfy the requirements of your new "free food" forms,
see.
It’s
the same with the "demand" for free welfare schooling.
No
one seems to know what it really costs to run a child through 12
years of government day care, any more, what with the expenditures
scattered around in so many budgets.
Let’s
conservatively call it $6,000. Want to eliminate the "teacher
shortage" overnight? Just start billing the parents that $6,000.
(Heck, make it $6,700, admitting 10 percent of each class on full
scholarships for poor kids who can do best on competitive entrance
exams.)
Competing
private schools charging less for more would spring up like mushrooms,
rescuing an entire generation from the clutches of the current "reproductive
organs of the welfare state."
With
a new emphasis on "getting what you pay for," they’d probably
pay higher salaries for the best teachers , driving up average teacher
pay while attracting many new recruits from among folks who actually
majored in something other than "Education" – while two
thirds of the unemployables currently holding down such jobs could
be fitted for new uniforms at Wendy’s. (Remember, de Tocqueville
found this "the most literate nation on earth" in the
1830s -- 20 years before Horace Mann & Co. opened the first
tax-funded "public school" on the Prussian model, in Massachusetts.)
The
union seeks to increase average teacher pay while solving the current
"teacher shortage"? Be careful what you wish for.
August
8, 2001
Vin
Suprynowicz [send him mail] is
assistant editorial page editor of the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Subscribe to his monthly newsletter by sending $72 to Privacy Alert,
561 Keystone Ave., Suite 684, Reno, NV 89503 or dialing 775-348-8591.
His book, Send
in the Waco Killers: Essays on the Freedom Movement, 1993-1998,
is available at 1-800-244-2224.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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