There should be a
separation of business and government. When, like now, that separation doesn’t
exist, bad things can and will happen. It is no secret that government run
programs often fall victim to the worst in economic practices. We do not have
to look far to see many recent examples of government bolstering bad
businesses. With that in mind, two interesting articles came across my newsfeed
this week and both are related in effect and cause. The two also show a failure
in economic practices, and both deserve to be answered with some sort of
rational economic thinking.
The first article I
read showed that Amtrak, the mass transit rail program created by Congress in
1970, has been running huge deficits every year, supported by taxpayer
subsidies. These subsidies have allowed a failing business to continue to
operate on bad principles and creates a form of corporate welfare; all paid for
out of taxpayers’ pockets. Altogether, taxpayers foot an average $1 Billion
dollars annually into this program and it is only getting worse. One thing is
for certain, if the business was made to live on its own revenue, like private
business, it would either find a way to rid itself of detrimental wasteful
lines or it would have gone out of business long ago.
The other was about
the United States Postal Service and their quarterly loss of $2 BILLION. I am
sure most of us can remember the price of stamps and services when we were
younger, and I am sure we all remember almost every single time they were
raised. But what makes this different than just rising with the rate of
inflation, set and attempted to be managed by the Federal Reserve, is the
annual rise in prices and services is met with an increasing deficit and an
increasing annual subsidy from the taxpayer’s pocket.
Simple economics
suggests that whenever a business receives bailouts or subsidies from government
it is at the expense of not only the taxpayers but also at the expense of the
market economy. As anyone should be able to see, the use of government
subsidies coming from the pockets and paychecks of the American Taxpayer
bolsters bad businesses and deepens a negative effect on sound economic
principles.
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