Paying Higher Taxes Can be Very Profitable

(originally posted in 2010)

Chevy Chase, MD, is an affluent suburb of Washington DC. Median household income is over $200K, and a significant percentage of households have incomes that are much, much higher. Stores located in Chevy Chase include Tiffany & Co, Ralph Lauren, Christian Dior, Versace, Jimmy Choo, Nieman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue, and Saks-Jandel.

PowerLine observed that during the 2008 election season, yards in Chevy Chase were thick with Obama signs–and wondered how these people were now feeling (in October 2009) about the prospect of sharp tax increases for people in their income brackets.

The PowerLine guys are very astute, but I think they were missing a key point on this one. There are substantial groups of people who stood to benefit financially from the policies of the Obama/Pelosi/Reid triumvirate, and these benefits can greatly outweigh the costs of any additional taxes that these policies require them to pay. Many of the residents of Chevy Chase–a very high percentage of whom get their income directly or indirectly from government activities–fall into this category.

 

Consider, for starters, direct employment by the government. Most Americans still probably think of government work as low-paid, but this is much less true than it used to be. According to (a link that doesn’t work anymore), 19% of civil servants now make $100K or more. A significant number of federal employees are now making more than $170,000. And, of course, the more the role of government is expanded, the more such jobs will be created, and the better will be the prospects for further pay increases.

If one member of a couple is a federal employee making $100K and the other is making $150K, that would be sufficient to allow them to live in Chevy Chase and occasionally partake of the shopping and restaurants. But to make the serious money required to really enjoy the Chevy Chase lifestyle, it’s best to look beyond direct government employment and pursue careers which indirectly but closely benefit from government activity…which are part of the “extended government,” to coin a phrase.

Lobbying, for example. And 2009 was a very, very good year for lobbyists. Which was practically inevitable. The more the government micromanages the economy, the more having friends in Washington becomes a key success factor–maybe the key success factor–for every business in the country.

The great expansion of government’s role is also very good, and for the same reasons, for lawyers whose practice is focused on regulation. Ditto for executives of trade associations, which typically exist largely to represent the common interests of the industry in governmental forums.

Trial lawyers, of course, benefit from Obama/Pelosi/Reid and their unwillingness to do anything to rein in the more predatory excesses of that industry.

Much of the federal government’s thinking, as well as day-to-day operations, is now outsourced to various consulting firms and “policy” nonprofits. Executives of these firms, including the “nonprofit” ones, often make far more money than even the highest-paid direct government employees. And higher government spending means more contracts and more opportunities for promotions and raises.

One of the best ways to make serious money in government-related work is to become an executive with one of those not-exactly-public-not-exactly-private institutions like Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae–whose headquarters is, conveniently, just a few miles south from Chevy Chase. (I am picking on Chevy Chase, of course, only for exemplary purposes: the phenomenon I’m discussing is a national one, although it is most obviously visible in the DC area.)

There are other groups of people who may not be quite as affluent as some of those mentioned above, but who also stand to benefit directly from Obamaism. K-12 school administrators, for example, can look forward to increased funding flowing to their schools–always the key element of the “progressive” solution to educational problems–and, surely, some of it will stick to them. At the same time, the Democratic worldview makes it unlikely that any serious performance standards will be put in place, thereby helping to ensure their employment security.

Now, I have no problem at all with people making large amounts of money…in fact, I’m all for it…as long as they are making money based on voluntary exchange and they are actually helping to produce the wealth from which they are being paid.

There are certainly some government employees, and employees of the “extended government,” who are in fact wealth-producers. An air traffic controller is as much a productive part of the air transportation system as is a private-sector airline pilot. A real research scientist at NIH or CDC is as much a part of the productive healthcare research system as is a researcher at Pfizer or Medtronic. (I use the “real research scientist” qualifier because these agencies seem to be devoting an increasing portion of their resources to nanny-state scolding.)

But the productive elements of government surely represent a declining percentage of the total government and extended-government employment. Many of the individuals making $100-$170K in government probably couldn’t learn to control air traffic or develop new drugs if their lives depended on it…rather, their skill is in manipulating language, in constructing verbal formulations along the approved patterns, and their activity is primarily about the transferring and absorption of wealth. Lawyers, lobbyists, and trade associations that exist to protect companies and industries from government overreach may sometimes be beneficial in that they keep economically-disastrous things from happening; OTOH, their activities also often distort economic activities in favor of the entities that are paying them, in ways that reduce the efficiency of the overall system.

The danger is that we are entering an era in which the best way to gain wealth–indeed, the only reliable way to gain wealth–is to use the power of government to take it from others and redistribute it in your direction. The belief that Obama/Pelosi/Reid redistributionism is exclusively or even primarily about helping those with low incomes is incorrect. It is indeed class warfare, but of a horizontal rather than a vertical nature.

Once again I quote Benjamin Franklin:

There are two passions which have a powerful influence in the affairs of men. These are ambition and avarice—the love of power and the love of money. Separately, each of these has great force in prompting men to action; but, when united in view of the same object, they have, in many minds, the most violent effects.

…and Irving Kristol:

Now, the pursuit of power is a zerosum game: you acquire power only by taking it away from someone else. The pursuit of money, however, is not a zero-sum game, which is why it is a much more innocent human activity. It is possible to make a lot of money without inflicting economic injury on anyone. Making money may be more sordid than appropriating power—at least it has traditionally been thought to be so—but, as Adam Smith and others pointed out, it is also a far more civil activity.

By tightly coupling the pursuit of money to the pursuit of political influence and power, Obama/Pelosi/Reid are doing great harm to the spirit of America as well as to its economy.  (And, I’ll note in 2018, it wasn’t just Obama/Pelosi/Reid…while the coupling of money to political influence and power is endemic across the political spectrum, it is practically the raison dêtre of today’s Democratic Party.)

4 thoughts on “Paying Higher Taxes Can be Very Profitable”

  1. The only practical curb to this run away train is to strip the government of power, right down to its bare essentials. I don’t see this happening as the result of a gradual political process based on the concentration of complimentary special interests in support of government power growth versus the wide spread and defused costs to those funding and being incrementally adversely affected by this process.

    This situation is greatly facilitated by the economic illiteracy of most and their focus on just two short term goals, personal peace (don’t bother me, especially to think deeply) and affluence (give me stuff, especially if I don’t have to actually do anything hard to get it because I deserve it). Add to that the progressive ideology instilled by the culture and our government dominated educational system (if something is not good enough, makes you sad or is failing to get better fast enough for your tastes, the government can make it better), accumulation of government power is pretty much the default (knee-jerk) option to every real or imagined crisis.

    So, given the largely irrelevant provisions in our constitutions intended to limit government power and keep it local so as to be better accountable and transparent, this train is going to eventually come off the tracks in a big way. When it does, what will the default option likely be especially given our goals and progressive paradigm of the younger generations?

    Death6

  2. Seven of the ten most wealthy counties are around DC. That is from memory, so I may have missed a trick there. So in one sense this is a nationwide problem, yet perhaps that is not quite so. The wealthiest towns are not around DC. so the 0.1% do not live there, but the 1% does. And they live there together, without much contact with others. I leave my town several times a week. I live on the edge of one county, and seldom leave the block of two counties. This is true of most of us.

    I do see Charles Murray’s worry about the separation of the wealthy and powerful away from not only the poor, but from all other classes. This was not always so.

  3. According to (a link that doesn’t work anymore), 19% of civil servants now make $100K or more. A significant number of federal employees are now making more than $170,000. And, of course, the more the role of government is expanded, the more such jobs will be created, and the better will be the prospects for further pay increases.

    A childhood friend of my brother has been working for the feds for decades. I looked up his salary: $162k. Not to mention pension and benefits. He was a 3.0/B student in high school- at a time when A’s weren’t handed out like candy – who went on to State U. Bright, but far from brilliant. I doubt he would be making that salary in the private sector.

    There are substantial groups of people who stood to benefit financially from the policies of the Obama/Pelosi/Reid triumvirate, and these benefits can greatly outweigh the costs of any additional taxes that these policies require them to pay.

    Hillary’s vote in Connecticut was about 4% less than what Obama got in 2012. The towns that went the other way and gave more of their vote to Hillary than to Obama tended to be the richer towns. The two towns that had the biggest Hilary versus Obama margins- about 18% more for Hillary- were New Caanan and Darien, which were also the towns with the highest per capita income in the state. Those NY commuter towns had done pretty well under President Goldman Sachs,and wanted to keep the gravy train going.

  4. Art V Cos One Topic: Amend Art I Section 8 Clause to: “To borrow money on the credit of the United States with the approval of 3/4 State Legislatures;”

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