by Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr.
Socialists want
socialism for everyone else, but capitalism for themselves, while capitalists
want capitalism for everyone else, but socialism for themselves.
Neither Ted
Kennedy nor Jane Fonda practices a vow of poverty, nor are they taking any
homeless into their mansions, while too many big companies try to short-circuit
the market with government privileges. And one way they do it is through the
regulatory agencies that acne Washington, DC.
If I may make a
public confession: I used to work for the US Congress. I've since gone
straight, of course, but the experience had its value, much as the future
criminologist might benefit from serving with the James Gang.
For one thing,
being on Capitol Hill showed me that, unlike the republic of the Founding
Fathers' vision, our DC Leviathan exists only to extract money and power from
the people for itself and the special interests.
Ludwig von Mises
called this an inevitable "caste conflict." There can be no natural
class conflict in society, Mises showed, since the free market harmonizes all
economic interests, but in a system of government-granted privileges, there
must be a struggle between those who live off the government and the rest of
us. It is a disguised struggle, of course, since truth threatens the loot.
When I worked on Capitol Hill, Jimmy Carter was bleating about the energy crisis and promising to punish big oil with a "windfall profits tax." But I saw that the lobbyists pushing for the tax were from the big oil companies.
And, after a
moment's thought, it was easy to realize why. There was no windfall-profits tax
in Saudi Arabia, but it did fall heavily on Oklahoma. And as intended, the tax
aided the big companies that imported oil by punishing their competitors,
smaller, independent firms.
In the ensuing
restructuring of the industry, also brought about by the price and allocation
regulations of the Department of Energy, the big firms bought up domestic
capacity at fire-sale prices, and then the Reagan administration repealed the
tax and the regulations. Meanwhile, the big companies received contracts from
the Department of Energy to produce money-losing "alternative fuels."
In every
administration, the tools of inflation, borrowing, taxation, and regulation are
used to transfer wealth from the people to the government and its cronies.
At times, one or
another of these tools becomes politically dangerous, so the government alters
the mix. That's why the Reagan administration switched from taxes and inflation
to borrowing, and it's why the Bush administration, with the deficit a
liability, calls for more taxes, inflation, and regulation.
A tremendous
amount is at stake in the re-regulation of the economy advocated by the Bush
administration. Just one clause in the Federal Register can mean billions for a
favored firm or industry, and disaster for its competitors, which is why
lobbyists cluster around the Capitol like flies around a garbage can.
While claiming
to need more money for — among other vital projects — a trip to Mars supervised
by Dan Quayle, the president is boosting the budget of every regulatory agency
in Washington.
Here are just
some of those agencies, and the way they function: Founded by Richard Nixon,
the Occupational Safety and Health Administration is an anti-entrepreneur
agency. Not only does OSHA target small- and medium-sized businesses, its
regulatory cases are easily handled by Exxon's squad of lawyers, while they can
bankrupt a small firm.
Also founded by
Nixon, the Consumer Product Safety Commission issues regulations drawn up in
open consultation with big business — regulations that often conform exactly to
what those firms are already doing. Small businesses, on the other hand, must
spend heavily to comply.
Another Nixon
creation is the Environmental Protection Agency, whose budget is larded with
the influence of politically connected businesses, and whose regulations
buttress established industries and discriminate against entrepreneurs — by,
for example, legalizing pollution for existing companies but making new firms
spend heavily.
The Department
of Housing and Urban Development was founded by Lyndon B. Johnson, but its
roots stretch back to the housing policy of the New Deal, whose explicit
purpose was to subsidize builders of rental and single-family housing. Since
LBJ's Great Society, HUD has subsidized builders of public-housing projects,
and of subsidized private housing. How can anyone be surprised that fat cats
use HUD to line their pockets? That was its purpose.
The Securities
and Exchange Commission was established by Franklin D. Roosevelt, with its
legislation written by corporate lawyers to cartelize the market for big Wall
Street firms. Over the years, the SEC has stopped many new stock issues by
smaller companies, who might grow and compete with the industrial and
commercial giants aligned with the big Wall Street firms. And right now, it is
lessening competition in the futures and commodities markets.
The Interstate
Commerce Commission was created in 1887 to stop "cut-throat"
competition among railroads (i.e., competitive pricing) and to enforce high
prices. Later amendments extended its power to trucking and other forms of
transportation, where it also prevented competition. During the Carter
administration, much of the ICC's power was trimmed, but some of this was
undone in the Reagan administration.
The Federal
Communications Commission was established by Herbert Hoover to prevent private
property in radio frequencies, and to place ownership in the hands of the
government. The FCC set up the network system, whose licenses went to
politically connected businessmen, and delayed technological breakthroughs that
might have threatened the networks. There was some deregulation during the
Reagan administration — although it was the development of cable TV that did
the most good, by circumventing the networks.
The Department
of Agriculture runs America's farming on behalf of producers, keeping prices
high, profits up, imports out, and new products off the shelves. We can't know
what food prices would be in the absence of the appropriately initialed DOA,
only that food would be much cheaper. Now, for the first time since the farm
program was established by Herbert Hoover, as a copy of the Federal Food
Administration he ran during World War I, we are seeing widespread criticism of
farm welfare.
The Federal
Trade Commission — as shown by the fascist-deco statue in front of its
headquarters — claims to "tame" the "wild horse of the
market" on behalf of the public. Since its founding in 1914, however, it
has restrained the market to the benefit of established firms. That's why the
chief lobbyists for the FTC were all from big business.
When
then-Congressman Steve Symms (R-ID) tried to partially deregulate the Food and
Drug Administration in the 1970s to allow more new drugs, he was stopped by the
big drug companies and their trade association. Why? Because the FDA exists to
protect them.
OSHA, CPSC, EPA,
HUD, SEC, ICC, FCC, DOA, FTC, FDA — I could go on and on, through the entire
alphabet from Hell. I have only scratched the villainous surface. But according
to the average history or economics text, these agencies emerged in response to
public demand. There is never a hint of the regulatory-industrial complex.
We're told that the public is being served. And it is: on a platter.
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