Carbon Taxes Go Global: How the EU's Climate Tariffs Are Sparking an Economic Revolution
Swagoto Chatterjee·6 min
The government should not prod the private sector into providing social benefits such as health care or paid leave. If the government thinks these programs have merit, they should be done under their auspices using taxes. Any benefits given by a company to their employees should be through bargaining between employer and employee. If a benefit is given, such as health care, it is currently deductible to the company yet not taxable for the employee, that is the use of the tax system to pervert the market.
Any law that infringes on the market to further government social policy hurts the dynamism of our economy. If, as citizens, we believe that health care should be provided to all, it is the government’s responsibility to do so. Legislation to mandate or even encourage the private sector to provide a social benefit is an unfair burden that saps economic vitality.
Going back 75 years, the government during WWII had frozen wages, which was another market perversion in the name of patriotism. By allowing employers to deduct the cost while employees did not pay a tax on the benefit, a two-tier system was established. If you work for a large company, you have some form of health care paid for. If you are self-employed or work for a smaller company, you will pay for that benefit yourself. The employee of the large company receives a non-taxable benefit that is subsidized by his/her fellow Americans.
Health care is a glaring example, but governments on all levels require a business to supplant good economic practice to provide a social benefit. Another example is the perversion of the residential real estate market in New York. Having been a manager and owner in that city for nearly 50 years, I have seen the devastation that rent controls had on the city in the 70s, 80s and 90s. It was a huge reason that many New York City neighborhoods became unlivable.
For about 20 years, the real estate market was going through a renaissance through deregulation of vacant units. Now with re-imposition of stringent controls, in a matter of weeks, the market has lost value. Apartments will remain vacant and some more marginal neighborhoods will once again become blighted as time passes. If there were (and in some cases this is true) citizens that cannot afford housing, then government should have taken up the burden and not one sector of the market.
A free market economy does not mean that social programs do not exist. It means that they are a responsibility of the government to be paid for by taxation. If we paid higher taxes to have a social safety net, it does not mean we are socialistic. Subsidies to favored businesses and industries are socialistic. The imposition of regulation on markets for an outcome to benefit one group of citizens over the other is socialistic.
We should ask no more of the free market than to produce profits for the benefit of its participants. The job of corporations is to make money within an ethical and legal framework. It is not to provide to the general public anything but a good product at a fair price. We need to stop perverting the system for political gain.Real-time institutional flow data and trading signals for serious investors.
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