By Thomas Sowell
Tuesday, June 07, 2016
Among the many disturbing signs of our times are
conservatives and libertarians of high intelligence and high principles who are
advocating government programs that relieve people of the necessity of working
to provide their own livelihoods.
Generations ago, both religious people and socialists
were agreed on the proposition that “he who does not work, neither shall he
eat.” Both would come to the aid of those unable to work. But the idea that
people who simply choose not to work should be supported by money taken from
those who are working was rejected across the ideological spectrum.
How we got to the present situation is a long story, but
the painful fact is that we are here now. Among the leading minds of our times,
including Charles Murray today and the late and great Milton Friedman earlier,
there have been proposals for ways of subsidizing the poor without the
suffocating distortions of the government’s welfare-state bureaucracy.
Professor Friedman’s plan for a negative income tax to
help the poor has already been put into practice. But, contrary to his
intention to have this replace the welfare-state bureaucracy, it has been
simply tacked on to all the many other government programs, instead of
replacing them.
It is not inevitable that the same thing will happen to
Charles Murray’s plan, but I would bet the rent money that there would be the
same end result.
Just what specific problem is so dire as to cause some
conservatives and libertarians to propose that the government come to the
rescue by giving every adult money to live on without working?
Poverty? “Poverty” today means whatever government
statisticians in Washington say it means — no more and no less. Most Americans
living below the official poverty line today have central air-conditioning,
cable television for multiple TV sets, own at least one motor vehicle, and have
many other amenities that most of the human race never had for most of its
existence.
Most Americans did not have central air-conditioning or
cable television as recently as the 1980s. A scholar who spent years studying
Latin America has called the poverty line in America the upper middle class in
Mexico.
Low-income neighborhoods suffer far more from social
degeneration, including high rates of crime and violence, than from material
deprivation.
Welfare-state guarantees of not having to work, however
the particular policies are applied, are not a solution. Relieving people of
personal responsibility for their own lives, however it is done, is a major
part of the problem.
Before there can be a welfare state in a democratic
country, there must first be a welfare-state vision that becomes sufficiently
pervasive to allow a welfare state to be created. That vision, in which people
are “entitled” to what others have produced, is at the heart of the social
degeneration that can be traced back to the 1960s.
Teenage pregnancies, venereal diseases, dependency on
government, and murder rates were all going down during the much disdained
1950s. All reversed and shot up as the welfare state, and the social vision
behind the welfare state, took over in the 1960s.
That vision featured non-judgmental rewards and
non-judgmental leniency toward counterproductive behavior, whether crime or
irresponsible sex and its consequences. But relieving people from the
responsibilities and challenges of life is doing them no favor. Nor is it a
favor to society at large.
American society has become more polarized under the
welfare-state vision. Nor is it hard to see why. If we are all “entitled” to
benefits, just by being present, why are some entitled to so little while
others have so much?
In an entitlement context, all sorts of “gaps” and
“disparities” automatically become “inequities,” and a reason for lashing out at
others, instead of improving yourself. Only in a society in which rewards are
based on contributions is there any reasonable reply to the question as to why
Bill Gates has so much and others so little.
The track record of divorcing personal rewards from
personal contributions hardly justifies more of the same, even when it is in a
more sophisticated form. Sophisticated social disaster is still disaster — and
we already have too much of that.
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