Archives: January, 2009

New on YouTube: Daniel J. Mitchell on ABC’s 20/20

Ever wonder why CEOs of major companies make so much money? And when the company goes bust, why does the CEO leave with millions? In this Cato Weekly Video, John Stossel interviews senior fellow Daniel J. Mitchell and others to find out.

“A contract is a contract, and one of the differences between a civilized country and a banana republic is that the rule of law is enforced,” says Mitchell.

Subscribe to Cato’s YouTube channel.

Coordinated Care Versus Government

With such a diversity of health care options, some say that health care lacks coordination and integration. But does that failure to coordinate care indicate a failure of markets or government?

In today’s Cato Daily Podcast, adjunct scholar Arnold Kling, who recently co-authored the Briefing Paper, “Does the Doctor Need a Boss?,” discusses why a private overseer would be more beneficial to patients and doctors than a government bureaucracy.

“My view as a market person is that we really don’t know what the best health care system is yet,” says Kling. “…Let’s allow some trial and error experimentation by the market and let the market determine what the best system is.”

Kling is the co-editor of EconLog, a weblog devoted to economic issues and author of several books, including Crisis of Abundance: Rethinking How We Pay for Health Care.

Let’s Just Have A Big Bonfire of Cash Instead

Can you think of a better use for taxpayer money than spending it on the most inefficient and least productive segment of our economy?

Well then it’s a good thing that the Economic Stagnation and Ruinous Debt Plan (aka “The American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan”), includes a hefty dose of dedicated funding for the government school monopoly (aka “public schools”).

Around $142 Billion, or around 17% of the “stimulus” is planned for Big Ed, and, surprise, school choice programs don’t make the cut for funding.

Dan Lips has a great overview of this small chunk of folly off the enormous folly-block presently tumbling its way through Congress.

Republicans Seek Lasting Damage in the Stimulus

Though the stimulus package racing through the house is unlikely to work, some Republicans are going a step further and seeking to ensure that it does lasting damage to our economy - and to the freedom of our society.

Amendments to the stimulus bill in committee last week include one to reauthorize “E-Verify,” the budding national identification and government background check system. Another would mandate the use of E-Verify by any business receiving stimulus money.

The growth of E-Verify would raise costs on business and make it harder for many law-abiding Americans to get work, draining energy from the economy at precisely the wrong time - not that there’s ever a good time.

I wrote about electronic employment verification programs like E-Verify in a paper called “Franz Kafka’s Solution to Illegal Immigration.”

Earmark Ban Only Treats a Symptom, Not the Problem

The Associated Press is reporting on the unsurprising attempt by special interests and their political benefactors to get around President Obama’s ban on earmarks in the massive “stimulus” bill taking shape in Congress.

They’re [lobbyists and lawmakers] just working around it — and perhaps inadvertently making the process more secretive. The projects run the gamut: a Metrolink station that needs building in Placentia, Calif.; a stretch of beach in Sandy Hook, N.J., that could really use some more sand; a water park in Miami. There are thousands of projects like those that once would have been gotten money upfront but now are left to scramble for dollars at the back end of the process as “ready to go” jobs eligible for the stimulus plan. The result, as The Associated Press learned in interviews with more than a dozen lawmakers, lobbyists and state and local officials, is a shadowy lobbying effort that may make it difficult to discern how hundreds of billions in federal money will be parceled out.

As distasteful and corrupting as congressional earmarking of taxpayer money is, earmarking is only a symptom of the problem – not the problem as some well-intentioned lawmakers imply.  The real problem is that few, if any, limitations remain on what our federal masters can spend our money on.  For example, it matters little if a water park in Miami is funded through a Senator’s explicit wishes in an appropriations bill or if it receives the money via one of the executive branch’s numerous “economic development” granting programs.  Thus, lawmakers upset with earmarking should devote more effort to killing the programs that allow for such expenditures to occur in the first place.  (For a perfect example of lawmaker inconsistency on this subject, see here.)

More from the AP story:

Instead, the money will be doled out according to arcane formulas spelled out in the bill and in some cases based on the decisions of Obama administration officials, governors and state and local agencies that will choose the projects. “Somebody’s going to earmark it somewhere,” said Howard Marlowe, a consultant for a coalition working to preserve beaches. Lobbyists are hard at work figuring out ways to grab a share of the money for their clients, but the new rules mean they’re doing so indirectly — and sometimes in ways that are impossible to track.

Tinkering with allocation formulas is a time-honored tradition in Congress.  HUD’s Community Development Block Grant program (CDBG), which would get an extra $1 billion in the current House version of the “stimulus,” offers a good example.  According to Cato’s Chris Edwards:

The Northeast-Midwest Institute represents a group of 18 states stretching from Vermont to Minnesota…Interestingly, this institute both lobbies for federal aid to its member states and receives federal aid itself. Audits show that the institute receives about $800,000 annually from 12 different federal grant programs. The Northeast-Midwest Institute’s website boasts about its lobbying prowess…The CDBG program…illustrates how technical the battles over aid can be. One item in the formula that distributes CDBG funding to the states is “housing built before 1940.” How did this obscure item get into the CDBG formula? The Northeast-Midwest Institute got a member of Congress to insert it into legislation in 1977 in order to tilt aid toward older cities.

The CDBG program formula has been stretched to the point that even relatively wealthy communities can get in on the fun.  And, just as has been the case with earmarked money, the result is often corruption.  For instance, a 2007 HUD Inspector General report found that the City of Chicopee, Massachusetts had spent $1.1 million in CDBG money on projects in an affluent neighborhood that just happened to contain the home of the city’s mayor.  In 2005, the mayor was arrested on extortion charges related to campaign contributions received from a developer the mayor tried to assist in obtaining CDBG-funded projects.

The Real Sprawl Problem: Government

Should we really give another trillion dollars to a government that doesn’t know how big it already is?

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack… learned that his new workplace contains a post office, fitness centers, cafeterias and 6,900 employees. But he remained uncertain about exactly how many employees he supervises nationwide.

“I asked how many employees work at USDA, and nobody really knows,” he said.

De-Emphasis 101

Greg Pierce of the Washington TimesInside Politics column recently investigated whether the Obama administration was dropping the overwrought phrase “war on terror.”

De-emphasizing the war metaphor would be a significant change. But if it is a deliberate change, the White House does not want to acknowledge it.

You see, trumpeting de-emphasis doesn’t generally work…