
Big Government Responds to Big Power
The tax code presents a useful example of how big government inevitably favors the more powerful. Higher tax rates needed to finance bigger government are almost always accompanied by loopholes that the wealthy and their lobbyists are most able to exploit. Consider for instance the tax increases implemented under former Illinois Governor Pat Quinn. A $2 billion tax increase the largest in Illinois history was the Democratic legislatures remedy for a severe budget deficit. But as soon as the tax increase went into effect for all Illinois businesses the largest and most influential corporations started cashing in their special tax breaks. The small and medium-sized business that couldnt afford lobbyists however were stuck paying the higher tax rates. So the one percent of politically connected businesses prospered at the expense of the 99 percent. In its political dialogue the Left denounces big business so as to curry favor with the average person. But in practice the Left often rewards and strengthens big business. The Dodd-Frank bill is a classic example. By conferring special benefits on the too big to fail" institutions and by imposing huge regulatory costs that small companies are unable to afford thus giving big corporations a competitive edge the bill puts big government in partnership with big business. Liberals do not just regulate business they subsidize it or at least the favored businesses. Obamacares individual mandate forcing people to buy a product from a private industry for instance is a big boon to insurers just as Dodd-Franks too big to fail" is a boon to the big banks receiving the governments seal of approval that enables them to get favorable treatment from creditors because they will be seen as protected by the government. It also puts the U.S. taxpayer in the role of bailing out the biggest financial institutions no matter how risky their behavior. Large institutions can pursue abnormally high returns with less concern for the risks that accompany such investments since they know the government might ultimately assume that risk. Similarly the Affordable Care Act promises open-ended subsidization of insurer losses from policies sold on the laws federal and state exchanges. Thus insurers can take more risk and cut their premiums to gain market share because they know the federal government will subsidize any large losses they incur. Consequently the Affordable Care Act (ACA") forces taxpayers to subsidize large insurance companies. Excessive regulation is often the most effective form of crony capitalism. After passage of Dodd-Frank JP Morgan Chairman Jamie Dimon said that regulation was good for his bank because it builds a bigger moat" against competition. Although the regulation would burden JP Morgan it would be a much greater burden for smaller banks with less capacity to bear those increased regulatory costs. Maneuvering through costly government rules may be feasible for large companies but the high compliance costs make it difficult for smaller business to keep operating or to even get started. And just as high compliance costs are more easily shouldered by large firms the biggest corporations are the ones best positioned to exploit loopholes and wield the most influence in an ever-growing regulatory state. The Cato Institute estimates that the government hands out $1.25 billion per year in corporate welfare with some of the biggest beneficiaries being companies like Boeing Xerox IBM Dow Chemical and General Electric. The Overseas Private Investment Corporation is a federal agency that subsidizes U.S. companies with taxpayer-backed financing when they set up business overseas. But this financing often goes to politically favored activities and firms. Likewise the Export-Import Bank distributes more than 90 percent of its $14.5 billion in loan guarantees to a dozen large corporations. And while Obamacare was advertised as being a help to the ordinary citizen it caters to the big interests that promoted it. According to the House Oversight and Governmental Reform Committee White House aide Valerie Jarrett assured health insurers that they would get nearly 100 percent of what they sought under Obamacare. Indeed it was the big insurance companies and big hospital chains that lobbied heavily for the ACA.The Economic Distortions of Big Government
Not only does increased government spending not produce the kind of economic benefits boasted about but it can often have a negative effect. As the economist authors of An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of States demonstrate the states with the fastest economic growth are the ones that tax and regulate the least. Government involvement often depresses the kind of economic growth needed far more by the poor and working class than by the rich who already have their wealth. During the escalating government involvement of the Obama era the Americans most in need of economic advancement have suffered the most. Households headed by single women saw their incomes fall by roughly 7 percent. Young people under the age of 25 experienced a decline of almost 10 percent. Black heads of households had their income fall by almost 11 percent. The incomes of workers with a high school diploma or less fell by approximately 8 percent. This is a dramatic reversal of the progress these groups experienced during the expansions of the 1980s and 1990s. To spur economic growth despite the growth-suppressing policies of the Obama administration the Federal Reserve conducted upon its Quantitative Easing program involving an unprecedented purchase of government bonds on the open market so as to keep interest rates near zero. Not only did this bond-buying program not produce vibrant economic growth but it hurt many average Americans particularly senior citizens. Because interest rates went to near-zero and because senior citizens depend on interest from savings to fund their retirement households headed by seniors 75 and older lost on average $2700 in annual income over the past seven years. However the program was a bonanza for Wall Street fueling a stock market rise that ballooned the wealth of rich investors. The QE program also benefitted the big banks which enjoyed lowered loan costs huge gains on the values of their securities holdings and fat commissions from brokering most of the Feds QE transactions. Consequently during the Obama era Wall Street has had its most profitable years ever. And the biggest banks have become a virtual cartel with just .2 percent of them now controlling more than 70 percent of U.S. bank assets.An Example of Well-Intentioned Policies With Damaging Consequences
Housing policies exemplify how big government actions although advertised with the best intentions can harm those who are most vulnerable. Real estate development restrictions for instance work to the disadvantage of the poor. By decreasing the supply of affordable housing these restrictions allow slumlords to jack up rents even on their dilapidated properties. Not surprisingly housing shortages are most acute in liberal cities. UCLA economist Matthew Kahn found that the higher a citys liberal vote share the fewer housing permits it issues. There may be a host of reasons why a city enacts such development restrictions but the unquestioned result is that they are detrimental to the poor. In communities controlled by the elite the adoption of these restrictions have made the construction of new housing all but impossible for anyone except the affluent. Federal government housing policies were a significant cause of the 2008 financial crisis. It is unquestioned that a bursting of the mortgage bubble fueled by subprime mortgages led to the financial crisis. The question is: who was responsible for generating those unsustainable mortgages? By 2008 more than three-quarters of all subprime mortgages in the U.S. were held by Fannie Mae Freddie Mac and government agencies. This was because Congress had pushed Fannie and Freddie to increase their lending to low-income borrowers with subpar credit ratings. The goal was to expand home ownership among low-income groups but the government did this by abandoning traditional underwriting requirements and pushing people into homes and mortgages they couldnt afford. It was government that led the charge into subprime lending and wound up holding the vast majority of the high-risk loans which ultimately went into default setting off the financial crisis that ended up hurting the poor in two ways. First it took away the homes they had been lured into but could not afford; and second by leading to the Great Recession it took away their jobs and income. As Democrat Barney Frank admitted in 2010: It was a great mistake to push lower-income people into housing they couldnt afford and couldnt really handle once they had it."Conclusion
Ever since the New Deal era and particularly since the Great Society era a bigger and more active government has been billed as a necessary aid to the common person. The underlying assumption is that only the public sector can offer real opportunity as well as a real antidote to the oppressive centers of big power in society. As this essay argues however such an automatic assumption is not only unfounded but is often contradicted by the evidence.