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With attention turning to the next big economic stimulus package, questions
are still swirling about our economic troubles. How did we get here? How
do we get out? As usual, Washington has all the wrong answers. According
to many politicians, we got here by not spending enough, not consuming enough,
and not regulating enough. Now government, like some mythical white knight,
is going to ride in to save the day by blanketing the economy with dollars,
hiring an army of new bureaucrats, creating make-work jobs, and sending everyone
some form of a bailout check. The debate seems to focus on whether this
will cost enough to save the economy, or if this is just a "down payment" with
much more government spending to come. Talk like that would be comical,
if the results weren't going to be so tragic.
The results will be worsening economic woes until we learn our lesson. But
instead Congress is behaving like drug addicts who must hit rock bottom before
they are ready to face reality. They are playing foolish games with the economy
now because they are thinking only of political expedience. This talk
of job creation is a perfect example.
Contrary to the belief of many, the goal of the economy is not job creation. Jobs
can be a sign of a healthy economy, as a high energy level can be a sign of
a healthy body. But just as unhealthy substances can artificially give
the addict that burst of energy that has nothing to do with health, artificially
created jobs just exacerbate our problems. The goal of a healthy economy
is productivity. Jobs are a positive outcome of that. A "job" could
be to dig a hole one day, and fill it back up the next, or perhaps the equivalent
at a desk. This does no one any good. But the value in that paycheck
ultimately has to come from taxing someone productive. Some think this
round-robin type of economic model is supposed to get us somewhere.
Politicians and bureaucrats have already done their fair share to ensure that
jobs in the private sector are prohibitively complicated and expensive to create. They
are now shocked that the economy is shedding jobs, and want to simply create
hundreds of thousands of jobs to make up for the job losses, through another
so-called economic stimulus package. The private sector must be permitted to
do that, but instead they are massively burdened with taxes and webs of red
tape and regulation. Washington's bandaids will only prolong this
agony. The Austrian school of economics teaches that only a free market
economy, unencumbered by onerous government controls, creates long-term prosperity. Politicians,
however, tend to be notoriously short-sighted.
I am left with these questions - who is going to be left standing, to
tax in the private sector, to pay for all these public sector make-work jobs? Is
Washington really to be considered some sort of savior for creating unproductive
jobs in place of the productive jobs they eliminated?
We are at an economic dead-end and those in power are in denial. The
truth is our economic problems are due to loose monetary policy, central economic
planning, and the parasitic expenses of government. Unless we assess
these problems honestly, we unfortunately have a long way to go until, like
the junkie, we hit rock bottom.
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Dr. Ron Paul
Project Freedom
Congressman Ron Paul of Texas enjoys a national reputation
as the premier advocate for liberty in politics today. Dr. Paul is the leading
spokesman in Washington for limited constitutional government, low taxes, free
markets, and a return to sound monetary policies based on commodity-backed
currency. He is known among both his colleagues in Congress and his constituents
for his consistent voting record in the House of Representatives: Dr. Paul
never votes for legislation unless the proposed measure is expressly authorized
by the Constitution. In the words of former Treasury Secretary William Simon,
Dr. Paul is the "one exception to the Gang of 535" on Capitol Hill.
Copyright © 2006-2009 Dr. Ron Paul
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