By Charles H. Smith
If you make it increasingly costly and risky to open a
small enterprise, then no wonder unemployment remains high.
You hear a lot about Kafkaesque stifling bureaucracy
in Greece and other struggling European nations, but America's Status Quo is
trying its best to destroy small enterprise with taxes and crushing
bureaucracy. I am self-employed, and have been for most of my life. When I did
take a paid position, it was in other small enterprises or local non-profit
organizations.
I mention this because there is an unbridgeable divide
in any discussion of small business between those who have no experience in
entrepreneural enterprise (i.e. they've worked for the government, NGOs/non-profits
or Corporate America their entire careers) and those who have.
There are all sorts of similar chasms that cannot be
crossed and which quickly reveal a surreal disconnect from actual lived
reality: for example, the difference between actually playing football--yes,
with pads, a muddy field and guys trying to slam you to the ground--and being
an armchair quarterback who's never been hit even once, never caught a pass or
ever struggled to bring down a faster, bigger player. (And yes, I did play
football in high school as a poor dumb skinny kid who mostly warmed the bench
for good reason, but I lettered.)
At the extreme of this disconnect, we have armchair generals screaming for war who have no experience of combat or war as it is actually experienced.
You get the point: it's very easy for well-paid
pundits who have never started a single real enterprise or met a single payroll
to pontificate about "opportunity" and small business as the engine
of growth, blah blah blah. It's also easy for those with no actual experience
to reach all sorts of absurd conclusions about how easy it is to turn a small
business into great wealth. (No, Bain Capital or other Wall Street outposts of
financialization are not "small business.")
In real life, it's only easy to run a small business
into the ground, especially when there's a thousand tons of junk fees, taxes
and useless bureaucratic requirements on your back. Lest you think this an
exaggeration, consider that it took two years and $200,000 to open an ice
cream parlor in a vacant retail space:
"Ms. Pries said it took two years to open the ice cream parlor, due largely to the city’s morass of permits, procedures and approvals required to start a small business. While waiting for permission to operate, she still had to pay rent and other costs, going deeper into debt each passing month without knowing for sure if she would ever be allowed to open.
“It’s just a huge risk,” she said, noting that the financing came from family and friends, not a bank. “At several points you wonder if you should just walk away and take the loss.”
Ms. Pries said she had to endure months of runaround
and pay a lawyer to determine whether her location (a former grocery, vacant
for years) was eligible to become a restaurant. There were permit fees of
$20,000; a demand that she create a detailed map of all existing area
businesses (the city didn’t have one); and an $11,000 charge just to turn on
the water."
There is nothing mysterious about the cause of this
Kafkaesque Status Quo: each city, county, state and Federal fiefdom must
justify its existence and payroll, and everyone in each fiefdom will fight with
every fiber of their being to protect their turf. Politically, it's a fight to
the death to trim even the thinnest slice of bureaucracy, and so little if any
ever gets trimmed.
Nobody will care until the city, county and state's
revenues collapse as people opt out of supporting the bloated dead-weight of the
Status Quo with their own sweat and blood.
The only way to survive is to not have a
"real" business, i.e. you write code in your living room or parents'
basement, or you do enough business in the informal sector (cash) to support
your high-cost formal business.
Taxes and bureaucracy are not just urban phenomena, as
this insightful report from Eric in Texas shows. Eric draws a critically
important causal line between the stifling of small enterprise and high
structural unemployment: if you make it so costly, risky and burdensome to
start a business and hire people, then no wonder unemployment is high and will
stay high.
One of your recent posts made me think of how
difficult reinventing communities and coming up with creative solutions for the
problems of unemployment and displaced people in our society is. I think it has
to do mainly with the way in which lower middle class / middle class people are
overburdened with taxation. As you stated in your post, the amount of taxation
is staggering. Especially for the self-employed, like myself.
My wife and I pay much the same percentage taxes as
you listed in your post. I live in a rural area of Texas and from time to time
small acreage properties go up for sale around our home. If we wanted to buy
some adjacent acreage for the purpose of inviting a few of our friends, who are
teetering on the edge of unemployment and facing the prospect of real poverty,
to live next to us and help each other grow food, take care of livestock and
find creative self-employment opportunities in our area together, the resultant
burden of taxation would prevent it.
For example, as I see it, my wife and I would now be
paying property taxes on two properties, one would not have the homestead
exemption. Any "improvement" on the new property, e.g. a small house
built for our friends, would only increase the property taxes. We would also
have to consider, if we planned to live together in this way long term with the
major contribution of our "unemployed" friends being their labor and
time invested in our communal living experiment, what kinds of taxes we might
be subject to in the future based on the way we are using each others time and
energy to achieve solutions for food production, child rearing, shelter, etc. I
don't know if we would be subjected to any taxation in doing these things only
assuming we might be.
To attempt to sum up my reaction to your post, I will
make a list of what I think would impede a lower middle class person who has
some discretionary income and could provide a small house and small acreage for
the benefit of a few friends on the brink of poverty, with the view to the
arrangement being ultimately beneficial to all involved.
1. Increased property taxes
2. The possibility of providing mandatory health
insurance through "Obama care"
3. Taxes and or restrictions on what produce we can
sell through farmer's markets or through the Internet, e.g. the recent
crackdown on raw milk sells, and "cottage foods" like goat cheese,
homemade pies, homemade canned goods, etc. In other words, if our whole way of
life is to produce locally grown food for ourselves and our extended
"family" and this is threatened through excessive regulation and or
taxation, I wonder if it's really realistic to pursue.
4. In Texas taxes are rising, even in this recession
school taxes, property taxes, fees, etc. are all going up.
5. Federal taxes look like they are poised to
increase.
If I didn't have to worry about taking on the burden
of all these forms of taxation, property taxes being the most onerous to me, I
might be able to use what capital I have to invest in a communal living
arrangement that I would hope to be of benefit to my family and some of our
friends.
It's the idea, ultimately, that I want to reinvent my
community (for me that means bringing friends in close relationship in mutual
work for mutual benefit) and provide opportunities to contribute. But if that
means having to tangle with bureaucrats over how much more I now owe because of
my desire to do these things, I think I will be doing better to try to take
care of myself, my wife, and our children, and leave the rest of my loved ones
to prayer and occasional modest charity.
In short, if we were not taxed every time we tried to
do something, we just might damn well do something!
Let's focus on getting rid of property taxes, and
other forms of ridiculous taxation so that we can free up our energy and time
to do the very things you advocated so well in your post.
I realize the benefit to myself and so many of some
forms of government assistance, for example food stamps, child tax credit,
energy efficiency rebates.... I think good government programs could be
sustained if we did things like close our military bases around the world,
brought the troops back to the states, and made education and real estate much
less expensive, and allowed people to grow and market local foods without
encumberance.
You wrote:
Here is the ugly truth about the Savior State, welfare state, social welfare state, or whatever you choose to call the Central State: The Savior State displaces and destroys community and social capital. By making individuals dependent on the Central State for free money, free food, free housing, etc., then the State has taken over the natural function of community.
In my opinion, it is also that the Savior State displaces and destroys even the potential for ( my main point) community and social capital. By placing oppressive, punitive, discouraging, and unreasonable forms of taxation on individuals who may otherwise extend resources of capital towards helping their neighbors, friends, and even family. In this way, then, the State has decided to oppress and retard the development of communities.
Well said, Eric, thank you. Before you jump in to
"correct" this view of small enterprise in America, first list how
many enterprises you have started, owned or run, and how many people were/are
on your payroll.
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