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Sunday, April 20, 2008

The Growth of Government, With Some Consequences

By Randall Hoven

The Taxpayer Frog In the IRS Pot

You know the story.  Put a frog in hot water and he’ll jump out, but put him in cooler water and slowly raise the heat and he’ll stay in even as he boils to death.  Are we frogs starting to boil in government stew?  In the midst of a Presidential campaign where we seem to be deciding who’s universal health care is more universal and who’s global climate policy is more global, maybe it’s time to check the temperature of the pot we’re in.

The nature of the slow boil is that short-term changes are not detectable.  So let’s look at a longer term to see just how much hotter it’s become.  Let’s look at the last century and compare its beginning with its end and to current time.

Federal spending.  In 1900 federal spending was $0.5B.  In 2000 it was $1,789B .  Those amounts translated to 2.5% of GDP in 1900 and 21% in 2000.  Government spending at all levels in the U.S. was 36.5% of GDP in 2006. That 2.5% of GDP that could sustain the entire federal government in 1900 is not even enough to cover the Medicare program today.

The Medicare program, by the way, did not exist in 1900; it was established in 1965.

Federal taxes.  A federal income tax did not exist in 1900; it was unconstitutional, and would remain that way until the 16th Amendment was ratified in 1913.  The first 1040 form included one page of instructions, and appeared to apply to both individuals and businesses.  Today’s 1040 instructions for individuals runs 155 pages, with no guarantee that you won’t have to fill out other forms and consult other instructions.

Federal regulation.  There were few enough federal regulations in 1900 that the government did not do anything special to keep track of them.  That changed in the middle of the New Deal.  The Federal Register, the master list of federal regulations, came into existence in 1936.  In that year it had 2,620 pages of regulations.  The next year it had 3,450.  In the year 2000, it had 83,294 pages.

[...]

Federal Bureaucracy.  The following sampling of government agencies did not exist in 1900.  (The years given are when the agency was established.  When a range is given, it includes the related pre-cursor agencies.)

* FDA, Food and Drug Administration (1906-1930)
* FBI, Federal Bureau of Investigation (1908-1935)
* Federal Reserve (1913)
* IRS, Internal Revenue Service (1913)
* FTC, Federal Trade Commission (1914)
* BATF, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (1920-1972)
* FCC, Federal Communications Commission (1934)
* SEC, Security and Exchange Commission (1934)
* Social Security (1935)
* Medicare and Medicaid (1965)
* EPA, Environmental Protection Agency (1970)
* OSHA, Occupational, Safety and Health Administration (1971)
* DEA, Drug Enforcement Administration (1973)
* FEMA, Federal Emergency Management Administration (1979)

[...]

Property.  Owning property used to mean something; it meant you could do pretty much what you wanted with it and on it.  Now it’s not even yours if the government at any level decides it could be put to better use by someone else (again, over the dissent of Justice Clarence Thomas).  Don’t let your kids build a tree house; you need a building permit for that and no city would ever approve such a thing.  I wouldn’t even say I own my house; I rent it from the county for about $450 per month in property taxes, on a house assessed right around the U.S. median.

Personal.  The above examples might seem too abstract or impersonal.  Even the high overall tax rate (over one third of every dollar) can seem removed from our personal life either because we never see the money (due to withholding, which started in World War II) or the tax is relatively hidden (e.g., gas tax is paid at the pump).  Here are just a few examples of a more personal nature, none of which would have been conceivable in 1900.

An eighth-grade honor student was strip-searched by school officials for the suspicion of having Ibuprofen, a common over-the-counter drug for pain .  No Ibuprofen was found on her, by the way.  On the other hand, behavior modifying drugs such as Ritalin can be forced on students over the objection of parents.  The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has already ruled that “parents have no due process or privacy right to override the determinations of public schools.”

A one-year-old girl was decapitated by an airbag in a low-speed parking-lot collision that would have involved little or no injury were it not for the airbag.  The government now mandates airbags in all cars despite the data showing airbags “kill more children than they save”.  The government’s answer is to recommend that children be put in the back seat.

[...]

Assessing the Heat.  The last century wasn’t all bad, of course.  Life expectancy for men, for example, went from 46 to 74. But even there, the biggest jump occurred in the first half of that century: from 46 in 1900 to 66 in 1950—all before Medicare, Medicaid, OSHA, and the Department of Health and Human Services.  (Personally, I attribute much of that extra life expectancy to engineers who got clean water to us and dirty water away from us.)

[...]

At the beginning of last century, communism was considered so bad by our liberal and Democratic President Woodrow Wilson and the Democratic Congress at time that they passed the Espionage and Sedition Acts and authorized Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer to conduct the “Palmer raids” to fight it - the original “Red Scare”.  I would say that was equivalent to frogs jumping out of the water because they felt the heat immediately.

But the heat has been turned up slowly so that today communism is not even feared.  In fact it is taught in our best universities by communists. By the end of the 20th century, a third of the voting age population in the U.S. thought the phrase “to each according to his needs, from each according to his abilities” was in the U.S. Constitution, and another third were not sure.  (The phrase came from Karl Marx, author of The Communist Manifesto.) The Communist Party USA openly advocates to “defeat McCain and strengthen Democratic majorities in Congress” and to elect either Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton in 2008.

The CPUSA itself says electing more Democrats helps the Communist cause. And we frogs think it’s comfortable in here.

Nothing like consulting the numbers.

Comments

Avatar for Lestat

Nothing like consulting the numbers.

There is no statistical analysis in this article.  His entire argument is that things were better in 1900.  I think alot of people would disagree.

Lestat on April 21, 2008 at 05:56 am

His entire argument is that things were better in 1900.  I think alot of people would disagree.

Wrong!  His entire argument is that we have way too much government, that it is way too expensive, way too inefficient, way too intrusive, and way too much an impediment to our personal liberty rather than an aid and facilitator.


“Poverty of goods is easily cured; poverty of the mind is irreparable.”

Bat One on April 21, 2008 at 06:46 am

Lestat: What part of this didn’t you understand?

Federal spending.  In 1900 federal spending was $0.5B.  In 2000 it was $1,789B .  Those amounts translated to 2.5% of GDP in 1900 and 21% in 2000. Government spending at all levels in the U.S. was 36.5% of GDP in 2006. That 2.5% of GDP that could sustain the entire federal government in 1900 is not even enough to cover the Medicare program today.


Media uncovers more Palin stories in one weekend than Obama stories in two years. Still no bias detected

Obama: more experienced than Bristol Palin

robert108 on April 21, 2008 at 08:00 am
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