By David Harsanyi
Tuesday, April 24, 2018
Sen. Bernie Sanders is set to announce a plan that
guarantees every American “who wants or needs one” a lifetime government job
paying at least $15 an hour, with health insurance and other perks. This new
progressive workforce will then build glorious “projects throughout the United
States” that are “aimed at addressing priorities such as infrastructure, care
giving, the environment, education and other goals.”
It would be one thing if the nation’s leading socialist —
and perhaps the most popular Democrat in the country — were the only one
interested in creating a state-run workforce to “compete” with the private
sector. A number of other allegedly moderate Democrats and prospective
presidential candidates, including Kirsten Gillibrand and Cory Booker, favor a
universal job guarantee, as well. It’s rapidly becoming a mainstream idea.
One imagines that a quixotic proposal like this polls
quite well. I mean, who doesn’t want
everyone to have a job? You don’t possess a skill-set that enables you to find
productive work? You don’t want to learn a new trade? You don’t want to attain
a better education? You have no interest in moving to an area where your work
might be in demand? You don’t want to start your career with a lower wage even
if the long-term prospects of doing so might be worthwhile? Don’t worry. The
government’s got an incentive-destroying job opportunity just for you.
And if you’ve been fired for a poor work ethic or for
stealing or for making women uncomfortable with your creepy behavior, fear not,
Bernie’s got your back. In the rare event that a state worker does misbehave,
he or she will be summoned to the “Division of Progress Investigation” (a relic
of our 1930s stab at socialism) to “take disciplinary action if needed.” If the
DPI runs anything like major public schools systems do, you can imagine this
will be a study in meritocracy.
“Job guarantee advocates,” according to The Washington
Post, make the absurd claim that Bernie’s plan would drive up wages by
significantly increasing competition for workers, “ensuring that corporations
have to offer more generous salaries and benefits if they want to keep their
employees from working for the government.”
Corporations are concerned with profit. If the minimum
wage kills jobs, why should we believe businesses (especially smaller ones)
would compete with government-funded projects that can print money and create
salaries (and benefits) that are wholly untethered from the real cost of labor?
Businesses will simply hire fewer Americans — especially those Americans first
getting into the labor force.
Of course, it’s more likely that our state-run workforce
will be deployed for ideological and political priorities rather than economic
ones. If history is any indicator, it will be used to prop up politically
useful projects and keep failing industries afloat, undermining creative
destruction, innovation, and long-term growth.
You do have to wonder what would happen when local
communities that share President Trump’s “priorities” demand to utilize this
state labor? What if they want to build sections of a wall on the southern
border rather than make solar panels, or whatever progressive priority Sanders
has in mind? We’d be hearing about rise of fascism in no time.
Then, there is the mission creep. No doubt, the DC
bureaucracy that emerges to run this project will be both nimble and competent.
But why only $15? Who can live on $15 an hour? Well, not a lot of people.
Surely these hard-working public servants who keep the infrastructure from
crumbling around us deserve a genuine living wage. How about better pensions?
As this workforce grows, it won’t possess any special ability other than being
able to corral huge numbers of people to demand more.
Most of all, making government responsible for every
American’s job prospects would change the dynamics of governance, forever. Not
only would politicians be expected to help create the economic conditions that
make growth possible, but now they will face another unrealistic expectation.
Unemployment will no longer be a function of economic conditions, but rather
heartless politicians who fail to create jobs for voters.
This is exactly what left-leaning economists who obsess
about inequality and push zero-sum fantasies about wealth and growth want. It’s
why they wanted the federal government to control the structure of the
health-care system, and it’s why they want to create a “public” job option.
Most of them openly argue the universal job program would let them control
wages and benefits in the private sector.
Democrats have yet to tell us how they plan to fund this
massive workforce idea that doesn’t generate any profit. I have a strong
suspicion it will have something to do with the nefariously wealthy not paying
their fair share. I’m not sure, however, that even the Koch Brothers could
afford to bankroll this idea. But it’s not really meant to pass. Not yet.
Republicans would never go for it, after all. Democrats see this as a promising
campaign issue. In the meantime, they continue to normalize destructive
socialistic ideas in political discourse.
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