Showing posts with label rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rights. Show all posts

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Paul Krugman: Defining Pandering

Pandering is generally defined as catering to and indulging the worst character traits in others:
pan·der    (păn dәr)
intr.v. pan·deredpan·der·ingpan·ders
1. To act as a go-between or liaison in sexual intrigues; function as a procurer.
2. To cater to the lower tastes and desires of others or exploit their weaknesses.

For an instructive example, see Paul Krugman's 'New York Times' blog post on January 29, 2014, where he attempts to make it seem like teachers are somehow being exploited by hedge fund managers --

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/01/29/hedgies-versus-teachers/
https://web.archive.org/web/20181118222834/https://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/01/29/hedgies-versus-teachers/?_r=0

Hedgies Versus Teachers

 
So one thing I learned last night is that the right has a new meme: inequality is the fault of the government — you see, it’s all those overpaid government workers.

I made the mistake of replying on the substance, which is that once you correct for education, government workers are paid about the same as their private-sector counterparts; basically, government workers are school teachers, which means that they need college degrees.

But there is a better answer, and a teachable moment here, which gets at the real nature of inequality in America. It’s not about overpaid teachers.

Let’s start by looking at the real winners in soaring inequality — the people who not only make incredible amounts of money, but get to pay very low taxes (and if you suggest closing their loopholes, you’re just like Hitler.)  According to Forbes, in 2012 the top 40 hedge fund managers and traders took home a combined $16.7 trillion billion.

Now look at those supposedly overpaid government employees. According to the BLS, the median high school teacher earns $55,050 per year.

So, those 40 hedge fund guys made as much as 300,000, that’s three hundred thousand, school teachers — almost a third of all high school teachers in America.

OK, teachers get benefits, so their total compensation cost is higher than their wage, so maybe it’s only 200,000.

But you should keep numbers like these in mind whenever anyone tries to shift attention from the one percent (and the .001 percent) to Americans who aren’t even upper-middle class.


It is fascinating how many misleading or false statements Krugman can pack into such a short blog post.

He starts out by writing that he made 'the mistake of relying on substance' (actually, he's not one for substance), in that government workers — mainly school teachers — are supposedly paid the same as those in the private-sector when you correct for differences in education.

This is false.  Teachers work fewer hours, mainly due to their shortened work year, so on an hourly basis teachers earn an above average salary among those with similar levels of education — and this is ignoring public-sector benefits, which are widely known to be superior to those in the private-sector.  Krugman mentions teacher benefits as part of their total compensation, but makes no mention of them as critical to doing a fair salary comparison.

Notice that in the private-sector, pension plans are almost nonexistent — most people working in the private-sector would love to get a teacher's pension --

http://www.ebri.org/publications/benfaq/index.cfm?fa=retfaq14
https://web.archive.org/web/20180225054140/https://www.ebri.org/publications/benfaq/index.cfm?fa=retfaq14
Private Sector Retirement Plan Participation, 1979 - 2011


Here's a comparison of teacher's salaries by Nick Gillespie at the reason.com blog from back in 2011 —
     http://reason.com/blog/2011/08/02/is-matt-damon-right-that-teach
...
More to the point, Bureau of Labor Statistics and other surveys that take into account the reported number of hours worked in a year consistently show that on a per-hour basis, teacher income (again, not including fringe benefits, which are typically far more robust than those offered other workers, including college-educated professionals) is extremely strong.
...

And regarding wealthy hedge fund managers paying low taxes, it is easy to look up the relevant statistics at irs.gov, to see which income levels pay the bulk of the income tax collected by the U.S. Treasury — it certainly is not people with the high school teacher salary that Krugman mentioned --

http://www.irs.gov/uac/SOI-Tax-Stats-Individual-Income-Tax-Rates-and-Tax-Shares
http://www.irs.gov/file_source/pub/irs-soi/11in01etr.xls  (requires Excel viewer)
IRS Income Tax Shares, 2001 - 2011


The figures in the table above are not tax rates — they represent the portion of the actual revenue collected by the U.S. Treasury for those income groups, so those figures show the net result of all tax payments, after all the tax games that everyone plays.

Notice that the bottom 50% make almost no contribution to the revenue collected by the U.S. Treasury via the income tax — less than 5% of the total revenue collected each year from 2001 to 2011, and less than 3% in 2009, 2010, and 2011.

Here is a table from taxfoundation.org that summarizes the data from the 2011 IRS spread sheet section shown above, and includes the income levels that bound each group --

http://taxfoundation.org/article/summary-latest-federal-income-tax-data
https://web.archive.org/web/20171124150933/https://taxfoundation.org/summary-latest-federal-income-tax-data
Tax Foundation IRS Tax Share Summary, 2011


Using the high school teacher salary given by Krugman ($55,050), we see that teachers are among the 25% of taxpayers between the top 25-50% income level, since $55,050 is between the upper and lower 25-50% split points of $70,492 and $34,823, and that this group paid 11.5% of the total income taxes collected by the U.S. Treasury in 2011 — notice that the 5% of taxpayers in the top 5-10% group paid a slightly larger share of the total income taxes collected in 2011 (11.8% vs. 11.5%, or +0.3%), even though that group of taxpayers is one-fifth the size.   This means that on average, each individual in the 5-10% group paid 5 times as much in income taxes as each individual in the 25-50% group, since the 25-50% group is 5 times larger, and yet in total that group paid slightly less in income taxes.

That is, each taxpayer in the 5-10% group paid on average: $122,696M Tax / 6.829285M Returns = $17,966 per taxpayer, whereas each taxpayer in the 25-50% group paid on average: $119,844M Tax / 34.146428M Returns = $3,509 per taxpayer.

And pay attention to the upper split point of the 5-10% group — it is $167,728 — this is in no way the kind of income that justifies the term 'independently wealthy', and the increased tax burden jumps dramatically from there.

Each taxpayer in the top 1% (those with incomes above $388,905) in 2011 paid on average:
          $365,518M Tax / 1.365857M Returns = $267,610 per taxpayer.
This is over 76 times more than what those in the 20-50% group each had to pay (e.g. the average teacher).

These individuals that pay 76 times more in taxes on average are those that Krugman claims 'get to pay very low taxes'.

Of course, such extreme differences are obviously unfair.   No one can give a convincing defense of this blatantly biased scheme, never mind how many times people repeat the asinine, bizarre, and unsubstantiated claim that the current system is unfair to the middle class, as Krugman wrote in his blog post above.   This is just our old friend 'Director's Law' again.   In short, the only reason such a tax scheme is possible is because there are so many more people in the middle class, and so they are the largest voting bloc (including the teachers), which politicians (and corrupt economists like Krugman) must pander to in order to retain power or influence.   This is a demonstration of why democracy is an invalid form of government — without legal restrictions, majorities are free to violate the rights of any minority — like voting themselves a free lunch at the expense of a minority, and destroying the financial solvency of any democratic country that does not constrain the majority with a proper constitution.   The U.S. has been marching down this path for many decades, as have been many other democratic countries (notice the large debts of the advanced democratic countries like the U.K., France, Germany, etc.).

Many people will point out that the bottom 50% still pay payroll taxes, but the payroll deductions that are not returned via a tax refund or the 'Earned Income Tax Credit', like Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes, are transfer payments that do not pay the operating costs of government.  Those payroll taxes are used to pay retirement benefits, that a current working taxpayer is expecting to receive themselves in their retirement years, so it makes no sense to treat those payroll taxes as contributing to the tax burden required to pay for the operations of government.  In short, transfer payments do not fund government — they fund individual beneficiaries.

And notice that the figures in that IRS table above, show that as of 2011 the top 1% pay more in taxes than the bottom 90% (the top 1% paid 35.06% of the revenue collected in 2011, whereas the bottom 90% paid only 31.74% (100% - 68.26%)).

Not only do the top 1% pay more than the bottom 90% — they have for some time --

http://taxfoundation.org/blog/top-1-percent-pays-more-taxes-bottom-90-percent
https://web.archive.org/web/20170901155457/https://taxfoundation.org/top-1-percent-pays-more-taxes-bottom-90-percent
Tax Foundation Tax Share Top 1% vs. Bottom 90%



Given that Krugman is a professional economist, it is hard to believe that he isn't aware of these numbers.

So when Krugman writes that teachers are paid on a par with their private-sector counterparts, or that 'hedgies' pay very low taxes, is he lying, or merely ignorant?  I have given him the benefit of the doubt by describing him as pandering — at least that leaves open the possibility (however slim) that he is honestly just trying to entertain ignorant readers.

But the more important point is that the overall appeal of Krugman's blog post (and much of what Krugman writes or says) will be to those who believe that they should be able to limit the success of others — that there is, as Krugman put it, 'soaring inequality', and that alone justifies making some successful people less successful.

Notice that Krugman gives no practical reason for objecting to inequality (I'm sure he would if pressed, or has elsewhere), but he doesn't have to give a practical reason — he can incite people just by mentioning inequality.   To many people, just the thought that some others are more successful is a call to action, regardless of how any individual's particular success was actually achieved.

The supposed concern for income inequality is a kind of red-herring fallacy, to justify a desire to restrict freedom.  It cannot mean anything else, since it is impossible to reduce inequality without restricting freedom, and violating individual rights.

The proper concern should be with rule of law, and lawful transfers between individuals — not inequality.  Strict protections of individual autonomy give rise to inequality, since no two individuals have the same talents, intelligence, interests, or ambitions — it is inevitable that individual outcomes will be unequal in the absence of coercion.  Inequality is an indicator of individuals having the freedom to pursue their goals without interference.

Not only is equality not a value to strive for, it is inherently unfair, and so immoral, because it requires forcing the more successful down to the level of others who are less successful.  You cannot raise the unsuccessful to the level of the successful, because you cannot give them talent or ambition — the only way to reduce inequality is to reduce the success of the more able.   That is, no one benefits from enforced equality, other than the government employees salaried to apply the force (and even they will suffer in the long run — see Cuba and North Korea for two obvious examples).

Attacking hedge fund managers is an old saw with Krugman.  They make such a convenient target for anyone who wants to appeal to those who respond emotionally to discussions of inequality, and fancy themselves as a fighter for so-called 'social-justice'.

In a previous post, I wrote about a talk Krugman gave back in 2007, where he made it sound like hedge fund managers do not deserve to make more than teachers, since they have similar education levels.  This is such obvious nonsense, it is surprising that people take this kind of talk seriously (see my previous post for details).

Another crude obfuscation in all this, is the notion that somehow by default, one person's wealth contributed to another person's poverty.  Krugman plays on this with his irrelevant comment that 40 hedge fund managers made enough to pay the salaries of hundreds of thousands of teachers.  So did many pop stars — what difference does that make, unless they stole that money from someone?  The proper response to Krugman's comment is: 'So what — whom did they harm?'

Of course, many people will denigrate the source of the wealth of the wealthy people that they despise.  But a pop star who can sell out a stadium, or a hedge fund manager who can make billions of dollars profitably investing client money, is certainly not stealing, regardless of how much some may resent their wealth.

I noticed these two comments to Krugman's blog post — it's nice to know that everyone isn't fooled by his nonsense --

Dan Nile

   Los Angeles 30 January 2014

The wealthiest ZIP codes in the country are now clustered around Washington DC.

If one excludes local government and K-12 teachers, and includes state, federal, and college professors, the numbers tell a different story. The private sector is not dominated by hedge fund managers. Most of them would like to have the health care and retire-at-55 pension plans that many government workers enjoy.

J

   Texas 30 January 2014

Nice to see Paul continuing to perpetuate the myth of the tax-free rich guy. Paul knows that every decile in the income distribution pays more tax than the decile preceeding it, AND ALSO pays more tax as a percentage of its income than the decile preceeding it. That's why Paul makes the statement but doesn't provide any tangible support. And before people start whining "what about capital gains?" Most "hedgies" as Paul likes to refer to them generate short-term capital gains which are taxed at the same rates as plain ole ordinary income.


Saturday, June 7, 2014

When I Advocate Hurting Others, It's OK ...

But not when they advocate hurting me ...

The 2014 issue with Brendan Eich highlights the contradiction in the positions of those who favor a large intrusive government, but then object to some intrusive policy, and those who support it, when they view that policy as hurting a group of people to which they belong, or are sympathetic to.

Brendan Eich stepped down as the CEO of Mozilla after just a couple of weeks when it was discovered that he was one among many contributors supporting California's Proposition 8 (ban of same-sex marriage), back in 2008 —
  http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9247281/Mozilla_employees_call_for_CEO_s_resignation
  https://archive.is/qou57

Many comments critical of Eich were made in the media, and a number of Mozilla employees used Twitter to voice their disagreement with the appointment of Eich as CEO of Mozilla.

Consider this quote dated March 27, 2014 from Paula Le Dieu, who was then a senior Director at Mozilla --

http://archiville.org/2014/03/27/mozilla-and-i/
https://archive.is/wGB0F
I am an employee of the Mozilla Foundation.  My colleagues at the Foundation and the broader community we support are an extraordinary group of people aligned around a mission for an open and inclusive web.  We work tirelessly to create the conditions for everyone to thrive in an age defined by the web.  My colleagues spend their lives actively and vocally advocating for open, inclusive societies through the web.

I can’t walk away from these people nor the cause I share with them nor the potential for Mozilla to once again be known as the champion to all but neither can I continue to earn my living from Mozilla while it is seen to exclude and alienate anyone.  So as of today, I am on unpaid leave.  Hardly a brave act but one that I can take that doesn’t break my heart at the thought of permanently severing my connection to an organisation that I hope will very soon find its way back to the core values that I hold so dear.  I will continue to work next to my colleagues for an open, inclusive web, continue to help Mozilla through these difficult days but I will do so as a volunteer for as long as I can.


Note this sentence from the quote above —
    '... but neither can I continue to earn my living from Mozilla while it is seen to exclude and alienate anyone.'

How many people besides Paula Le Dieu can't tell that the actions of a particular individual don't define an organization that individual may belong to. If the Mozilla organization doesn't want to be seen to exclude anyone, then the organization shouldn't exclude anyone (they might start with not excluding Brendan Eich).

But notice the long list of extremely popular government policies that are specifically designed to hurt some number of people, with the intent that there will be a net benefit to the population.

It rings pretty hollow for people to attack someone for supposedly 'excluding and alienating' others (a common refrain), while at the same time ignoring, or supporting, so much of popular policy that has the same effect.

Right or wrong, California's Proposition 8 is just another example of the widely accepted notion that government can penalize one group of people, as long as there is some vague pretext of helping someone.

When Religious believers express their opposition to same-sex marriage, they often speak in terms of preventing a cultural norm that supports society through family formation, from being turned into something that will encourage a lifestyle that undermines that value.  Right or wrong, their stated goal is most often phrased to prevent harm, not discriminate.

And just to name a few other examples that follow this same line of thinking, consider Social Security, Medicare, progressive income taxes, drug prohibitions, etc. — all of these policies hurt some group of people.

Would anyone really try to argue that progressive income taxes help everyone, for example?

Certainly some would make the claim that wealthy people receive more benefit from government than those less well off, and so the wealthy should pay a higher tax rate, and not just a higher total amount — but if it's true that the wealthy receive a greater benefit from government, this unfairness should be eliminated, not simply adjusted for in a sloppy way with a tax penalty.

And would anyone really try to argue that Social Security helps everyone, for example?

Notice that Social Security already hurts a majority of people, in that the majority of current recipients would be better off had their contributions simply been put in bank CDs —
   http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/05/03/part1/GarrettRhine.pdf

And even if Social Security didn't perform badly, it would still hurt the people that could better manage their savings without the intrusion of a forced government Ponzi scheme.

And here's an issue that really drives the point home, that the vast majority support the principle that a majority can restrict the freedoms of all of society, if there's some supposed benefit, even if some people are certainly harmed — the ban on organ sales.

The fundamental principle underlying the popular support for a ban on an organ market is perfectly consistent with what appears to be the position of opponents of gay marriage (and maybe Brendan Eich's).

The particulars of the two issues are completely different, but the underlying principle is the same — many argue that since they cannot see any obvious benefit to an open market for organs (or whatever), that it is appropriate to have government enforce a complete prohibition on that activity, denying every individual the right to make the choice, however well informed they may be.

So, the position many advocate, actively hurts those people that are capable of using an organ market effectively — especially those in desperate need of a transplant.

Without knowing those who take these kinds of positions, it's impossible to question their motives — one must assume they're convinced that any benefits from the freedoms or rights they are attempting to eliminate would be overwhelmed by negative consequences, and that they are not trying to discriminate against those who would benefit — but that's exactly the argument religious conservatives often make in opposition to gay marriage.   They claim many more people would be harmed by gay marriage than would be helped.

So the point here isn't to attempt to give some kind of defense of Brendan Eich (or any other opponent of gay marriage), but to point out that it's hypocritical to support a government ban on one activity based on a supposed net negative result, while at the same time criticizing others for doing so.

To put it simply, if you support government action that violates the rights of others by initiating force against them (for whatever reason), expect government to do the same to you, and accept it without complaint.

Regarding marriage, the fairest course of action would be to simply eliminate all laws that make a distinction regarding marriage.  It's primarily a religious tradition, and so the government shouldn't be regulating it.

From that point of view, supporting a ban on same-sex marriage may actually be the best course, because it helps to limit the number of people taking advantage of a law that by definition is intended to make a distinction that 'excludes and alienates', as Paula Le Dieu put it.  Of course, that's the whole point — those who want to be in a same-sex marriage are not upset because current laws 'exclude and alienate', they're upset because the law 'excludes and alienates' them.   Obviously, if the law didn't provide some special privilege, no one would care.

And note that the popular support for a total prohibition of organ sales, when compared with other popular policies, is an especially dramatic example of public hypocrisy regarding the harm caused by various government policies, since the limited supply of organ donors actually KILLS people.  One certainly can't make even a remotely similar claim about prohibiting same-sex marriage.

It really is laughingly ridiculous that people would attack someone based on the notion that a policy they advocate 'excludes' some group of people.  'Excludes' people?  You have got to be kidding — of course, the intent is to hurt some number of people, with the hope that there will be a net benefit to the population — all popular social welfare policies (especially those supported by so-called progressives) share this feature.

If you can't (or won't) argue from a strict concept of individual rights — that individuals have a right to exist free from coercion — then you do not have a consistent basis for attacking any policy, and you certainly can't attack a policy because it violates someone's rights, when violating rights is central to your vision of what government should be doing.

Violating individual rights, however irrational, is perfectly consistent with the modern day view of democracy — which in popular usage is just a euphemism for majority rule.  The founders of the United States knew that a pure democracy is in no way consistent with freedom — as evidenced by one of the main features of the U.S. Constitution: its identification of general principles that cannot legitimately be subject to a vote, and to establish branches of government that would be difficult for a majority to capture, and that would check each other to make change difficult (which also makes the often heard complaints about grid-lock in government especially ridiculous).


Regarding organ donations, here is an interesting piece from Virginia Postrel, who donated one of her kidneys to a friend —
   http://vpostrel.com/articles/here-s-looking-at-you-kidney

She also makes some good points here regarding the harm done by not allowing payments to organ donors —
   http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2009/07/with-functioning-kidneys-for-all/307587/