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March 27, 2012
Barstool Economics - A Viral Conservative Fable
By Richmond Shreve
Viral stories on the internet purport to give a simple lesson in economics to liberal intellectuals who favor progressive taxation. This one's entertaining, but misleading. Use it to calibrate your BS meter.
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There is a story by and anonymous author that is circulating among my conservative friends. It is one of many that poke fun at the notion that the rich should pay more of their income for the common good than the poor. It purports to illustrate the injustice of the progressive tax.The metaphor fails because it ignores basic elements of what makes our American version of capitalism work:
1. The American capitalist ideal is not equal income nor equal wealth, nor is it "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need.' The American Dream is equality of economic opportunity . Income inequality, regardless of economic system produces opportunity inequality. (click here) The American ideal is to provide the foundation of opportunity: education and discretionary income at all levels. The wider the divide between rich and poor, the less such opportunity exists.
2. Our economic prosperity depends on complementary elements that form a system. Since we are a consumer economy, we need a large base of people with disposable discretionary income. We need them in bad times and good times. The consumer economy also requires an educated literate workforce. We also need a wage structure that elevates unskilled and stoop labor to more than a marginal survival subsistence living. In other words the rich entrepreneur takes the financial risks and creates the jobs that produce the goods, the "poor" man (woman) sells his talent and time and buys what the economy produces and the system thrives. Things go wrong when the opportunity gap widens, and when the rich man shifts his risk to the poor man. (click here)
3. A progressive tax structure helps ensure that those who have a finite number of hours to sell prosper, and those who leverage that labor to acquire wealth have the infrastructure and social system that protects and nurtures that wealth. It is a cycle, if properly balanced all prosper, with the incentive that some become rich because of their entrepreneurship.
The barroom economics fable isn't such a system. The characters are not part of an economic cycle; they are assigned their ability to pay as a given. It's not even a capitalist system (each gets all he wants to drink irrespective of ability to pay.) Also, in today's America, the group would never actually pay the full tab, the daily deficit would increase the amount they owe the bar tender until he refuses to serve them. The arrival of the 20% discount just gives rise to a questioning of the fairness of income gap and results in a brawl. Sounds more like the collapse of a fascist system to me.Richmond Shreve is a retired business executive whose careers began in electronics (USN) and broadcasting in the 1960s. Over the years he has maintained a hobby interest in amateur radio, and the audio-visual arts while working in sales and marketing. For the last thirty years he was co-owner and CEO of the Middlebrook Crossroads business park (Edmar Corporation) in Bridgewater, NJ. He holds a lifetime FCC Second Class Commercial license, and an amateur radio General Class license (W2EMU). In 2012 Richmond retired from instructing sports car owners in high performance driving techniques at major tracks including NJ Motorsports Park, Watkins Glen, and Summit Point. He is the author and publisher of the Instructor Candidate Manual used by BMWCCA and other car clubs to train their on-track instructors.
Prior to moving to Newtown,PA, he volunteered as chief engineer of WCFA the Cape May, NJ community radio station as well as working as a gaffer on the Cape May Film Festival technical crew, a driver/engineer in the Cape May Point Volunteer Fire Company, served as its Treasurer and as Treasurer of its Firemen's Relief Association. He edited and printed the Cape May Point Taxpayer's Association Newsletter.
As a computer power user, graphic artist, photographer, and website designer he helps nonprofits build and maintain web sites. He is a fromer Vestry member of the Episcopal Church of the Advent.
Richmond is a citizen journalist and former Senior Editor at OpEdNews.com, a progressive news and opinion site on the internet.
Richmond lives with his wife Marguerite Chandler in Newtown, PA wher he continues to write essays ad short fiction. They travel extensively with their fifth wheel RV.
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Books:
Lost River Anthology (Amazon.com)
Instructor Candidate Manual (LuLu.com)