Incentives matter.
Sometimes that can be explained with wonky discussions of marginal tax rates or welfare traps.
But that may not be the best approach when trying to convince someone with no aptitude for economics. So what’s the best way of introducing such concepts to, say, a Bernie Sanders supporter?
You can point to the economic chaos in places such as Greece and Venezuela and explain that Margaret Thatcher was right when she warned that socialists eventually run out of other people’s money.
But that’s probably not too effective because they’ll simply point to Sweden and Denmark and you’ll have a hard time educating them that those countries became successful when government was small and that they’ve been falling behind ever since big welfare states were imposed.
So perhaps we first need to help them understand very simple notions.
That’s why, when trying to introduce basic concepts, I’ll often share clever images and cartoons.
- The Wizard-of-Id parody about work incentives.
- The philoso-raptor contemplating supply-side economics.
- Lessons about double taxation and harvesting apples.
- Showing looters are the enemy, not rich people.
- The size of the pizza is more important than how it’s sliced.
Here’s a great addition to that collection. It basically shows why redistributionism is doomed to failure because a lot of people inevitably will decide that life is easier when you’re a consumer rather than a producer.
Definitely worth sharing, I hope you’ll agree.
I view this cartoon as being very similar to the second frame of the famous riding-in-the-wagon cartoons I first posted back in 2011.
Which gives me an opportunity to end today’s column with a very serious point. When redistribution programs are first created, politicians generally argue that they make sense because a lot of people will pay very small amounts to help a handful of folks who are genuinely needy.
That sounds compassionate and affordable. And perhaps it is, but there are two reasons why programs that sound reasonable in the beginning eventually morph into modern welfare states.
- Politicians figure out they can buy votes by making the wagon more comfortable and attractive (i.e., public choice economics).
- A growing number of people figure out that it’s better to ride in the wagon rather than pull the wagon (i.e., erosion of social capital).
And when you combine these two factors with changing demographics, it’s easy to understand why the future is so grim for so many countries.
P.S. Here’s the Danish version of why redistributionism fails.
P.P.S. Since “keep half” was a big part of today’s image, I can’t resist sharing again this satirical lesson about fairness for a supporter of Bernie Sanders.
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Reblogged this on Utopia, you are standing in it!.
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For liberals, free stuff means other people pay for it.
Reblogged this on Can You Make Money From Home?.
Zorba —- Don’t forget the sales tax on the car!
In high tax states like California there are marginal tax rate pockets of 55-60% ( at income levels where a host of deductions expire).
If you used turbo tax last month, just add to your income until you are left with, say, $10k more in your pocket. That is your actual marginal tax rate, your incentive to work more, that is, your marginal incentive to contribute to “society”. Many of my friends in California were in the 50-60% range.
It only gets worse in Europe where there are a lot more hidden taxes.
At a macro level, in the US, the average immediate tax people pay on their total vitality is around 37% = the percentage of GDP consumed by government (if it spends it then it collects it — and inanimate objects such as corporations don’t pay tax, people, voters, do). In France this total tax on a citizen’s vitality is loser to 60% with some people paying closer to 75% (no wonder they’re cranky).
All this is just the immediate tax.
The long term tax is nothing else but decline. If the US continues to grow at half the world growth rate ( and all indications are that she will as she converges to her new ideal, Europe, where structural growth rate is one quarter the world average) the US will quickly become a middle income country by around mid-century.
We live in a world where things are moving fast. The worldwide growth rates we experienced in the past three decades have not ever happened before. Everything is moving faster — irreversibly. Ascents and declines that once used to take a century or more will conclude in a few decades going forward — a new era is coming upon us where voter lemmings themselves will get to sleep in the bed they made — not their children.
Don’t get caught in between them. Decline makes people nasty — if you have not already notices the increasing slope of the vicious cycle.
Zorba — YES — In USA we definitely have people paying > 70% marginal tax rate, all in. An interesting exercise is to ask someone how much s/he has to earn in order to buy a car for $10k. That’s the real cost of the car. And most of us won’t know.
Eventually the wagon gets stuck in the mud and nobody is going anywhere – or is going at 1-1.5% growth in a world that is growing along a 4% trendline.
Ah sophisms ! Just gimme.
nedlandp,
Of course the Bernie supporter should share. He is, after all, in the world’s top 5% — placed there by evil capitalism / neo-liberalism.
Keep half is somewhat generous (ignores VAT, punitive excise taxes on gas, cars, energy and a host of other products, real estate taxes, wealth taxes, death taxes etc.)
I would rename the keep half door to keep 30%
I would then introduce a middle door that says “mediocre work, keep half”
Then the third door can say “No or minimal work, free basic stuff”
Reblogged this on Gds44's Blog.
The tax code redistributes income in the short term and wealth over the long term. The trends are well known. Hard work has less important than risk,
It might be worth reminding Bernie’s supporters, or for that matter, economists, too, of first principles. The fundamental principle of America is Freedom. We should not be forcing each other to pay for or do all sorts of things that people do not pay for or do voluntarily. The application of force has many extremely negative economic consequences and those consequences are just one of the reasons why Freedom is — or at least was — America’s foundation.
To a Bernie supporter:
If Bernie’s in charge, it is guaranteed that you will be healthier, not because of single-payer healthcare, but rather because you will be walking everywhere.
You look at the 1% and think they should share, but a lot more people are looking at YOU, thinking that YOU should share.
Right now you’re young and don’t own anything. As you get older, you’ll earn and accumulate things of your own, but not if Bernie’s in charge.
Based on your limited experience with government, do you really think you will benefit or will additional free stuff go to special friends?
It doesn’t matter how taxes are applied, eventually the cost of taxes is paid in the prices of the things you buy. If taxes go up, prices go up. If prices go up, won’t you be hurt more than you benefit from government programs?
Reblogged this on Freedom Is Just Another Word….