BEST OF JIM COOK
December 13, 2005
WE’RE FROM THE GOVERNMENT
AND WE’RE HERE TO HELP YOU
After Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans,
government incompetence at every level was plain to see. There seemed to
be no end to government bungling. Despite this show of ineptitude,
people are now clamoring for the government to rebuild New Orleans and
save the city. Already $60 billion in aid has been authorized. An
excellent article by Richard Ebeling sums up what’s coming in the
Southern city. "Another Disaster in the Making: Government
Reconstruction of New Orleans."
Mr. Ebeling explains, "Invariably, the twisted hand
of politics will be at work in determining how and for what those
mountains of tax dollars will be spent…..The land of Huey Long will once
again show that ‘friendship’ and ‘good old boy’ connections can sure
mean a lot.
"At the same time, ideological and racial pandering
undoubtedly will have its place at the broad table of government
spending. Reconstruction proposals will abound with references to
environmental awareness and minority-group sensitivity in deciding
where, what, and how to rebuild."
Mr. Ebeling continues, "Neither politicians and
bureaucrats nor their consulting ‘experts’ have the knowledge, wisdom,
or ability to direct the affairs of men better than can be done through
the free interplay of market processes….. If the future of New Orleans
were left to the free market, it would be both the returning residents
and all the other citizens of the country who would decide, through
their work, saving, and investment choices, what shape any new city
should take.
Mr. Ebeling argues, "These individual decisions would
set to work the creative and industrious energies of tens of thousands
of people across the land, who would be motivated to act with as much
wisdom and judgment as they could muster, since each person would be
investing in his own financial future."
He quotes Simon Newcomb, an early American economist,
that individual judgments "will be sure to take into account a great
many small but necessary details which those who have nothing at stake
might easily overlook.’ Why? Because ‘nothing sharpens the faculties and
dispels prejudice as effectively as self-interest, and no one will judge
so well of an enterprise as he whose financial interests are staked upon
it."
Mr. Ebeling adds, "Politicians and bureaucrats are
spending other people’s money collected through the tax system. Their
interests diverge from those of the taxpayers who are plundered to
finance such a vast ‘public works’ project as the reconstruction of New
Orleans. The waste and corruption that follow are part of the
inescapable ‘costs’ of the business of redistributive politics…..How
much better to apply the knowledge and abilities of so many through
their free choices rather than to limit the possibilities to the handful
of political puppet masters in Washington, D.C., and Baton Rouge!"
Richard M. Ebeling is president of The Foundation For
Economic Education. His economic arguments are well taken. If we added
up the taxes paid in a lifetime by the thirty to forty thousand people
who read this letter, it would be a small fraction of what the
government will throw at New Orleans. They will waste more in Louisiana
than all of us will ever pay in taxes. How much better if we could
voluntarily assist through private charity and investment. New Orleans
may never recover unless private resources are fully employed above and
beyond the dubious results of government planning. If the city does
recover fully, it will be despite the government’s help.