A Plan for Fixing Welfare

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A Plan for Fixing Welfare

By: John A. Baden, Ph.D.
Posted on April 05, 2006 FREE Insights Topics:

Charles Murray is a courageous, tough-love analyst of social policy. His new book by AEI Press, In Our Hands, is the most radical I’ve read. Ever.

Charles has worked to counter poverty since in the Peace Corps four decades ago. With a Harvard B.A. and MIT Ph.D. in political science, he is one of America’s best policy analysts. He has learned that governments, even in a nation as rich as ours, cannot institutionalize compassion.

America spends more than a trillion dollars per year on welfare. Yet, approximately one in seven of our citizens are mired in poverty -- although we define it generously indeed. This sorry condition remains roughly constant, independent of funds appropriated. Murray claims only government can be so wasteful, with such manifestly perverse results, for so long, and he’s right. Political bureaucracies become insensitive to their designated beneficiaries and are grossly inefficient. (Consider Katrina.)

Murray understands the relentless nature of demographic forces. America’s actuarial debt would require staggering tax increases to meet today’s promises made by politicians. According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, Medicare, Medicaid, and other “non-discretionary” charges would require at least a doubling of taxes by 2040. “Economic growth is essential, but we will not be able to simply grow our way out of the problem. The numbers speak loudly: our projected fiscal gap is simply too great.... Tough choices are inevitable, and the sooner we act the better.”

Why are we in this mess? The answer is simple and straightforward. Politicians have strong incentives to promise current benefits while postponing and ignoring future costs. In effect, they impose burdens upon and give unsustainable promises to our children and grandchildren. And the poor among us suffer now.

But here’s an iron law: Things that can’t go on won’t. Our current system of transfer payments can’t and won’t. We will either have a major reform such as Murray suggests or the imposition of a European-style stealth tax such as the “value added tax” or VAT.

He proposes we scrap all governmental welfare and pass a constitutional amendment to prohibit all new welfare schemes. We then give all citizens over 21 and not incarcerated $10,000 per year for life. The sum would be deposited in a bank account with $3,000 allocated to health insurance and an additional sum to retirement accounts. This goes to every citizen, though the wealthy are taxed on the benefit for they surely won’t need it. Under extremely conservative assumptions about return on investments, his plan will cost taxpayers less than our current arrangements by 2011 and save half a trillion dollars per year by 2020.

Murray understands the problem of the underclass: “The fact that no able-bodied person needs to live in poverty doesn’t mean that no one will live in poverty. Some people behave in ways that ensure they will live in squalor, will not have enough money to buy food, or will be evicted for not paying rent.... The Plan ends involuntary poverty.” His concern is with the deserving poor, not miscreants.

Charles has an extraordinary ability to probe the subtle workings of incentives. Consider the problem of unmarried males who avoid responsibility for their children. With DNA testing, fatherhood can be determined. Under his plan the state pays child support and deducts the amount from the father’s $10,000 Plan income. If fathers are under 21, the sum accumulates. Incentives are clear.

Why not double taxes? Bruce Bartlett advocated a VAT in National Review and at Cato where he proclaimed: “[T]he VAT lends itself to dealing with our long-term budget problem because it can be raised a little bit at a time.” However, as President Reagan noted in 1985, “A value-added tax actually gives a government a chance to blindfold the people and grow in stature and size.” That is precisely why politicians find it so attractive.

Charles Murray offers an alternative, a “thought experiment” that will first be rejected. He is not naïve and knows this plan will initially be dismissed -- and not only by those who want people dependent on politically crafted governmental transfers from productive citizens.

Read the book. It’s radical, practical, and caring toward those most in need of support.

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