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Much of what we "know" is by analogy to something else. That is why so
much of what is said and written is couched in those terms. But that is
also dangerous, because any analogy, however helpful, is misleading if
pushed too far or used in the wrong context. As a result, analogies can be
abused to mislead as well as inform. And abuse often predominates in
public discourse, where sound bites can pass for serious thought.
One such major political abuse is justifying (or criticizing) government
policies on the basis of their supposed "paternalism." There are crucial
differences between parental decision making "for your own good" as a
child and government policies "for your own good" as an adult. The analogy
just doesn't hold up.
Does the government care as much for you as your parents? Documented
examples are hard to find. But if not, the likelihood that "paternalistic"
policies are really intended to benefit you are substantially smaller.
That explains why, so often, paternalism has provided cover for special
interest legislation (e.g., "unfair competition" laws so vague they make
it open season for costly lawsuits about anything and "consumer
protection" regulations that are really barriers to exclude potential
competitors). Further, for government policies to be justified in this
regard would require that people care more about American children as a
whole when voting than they do about their own children when they raise
them.
Does the government know as much about you as your parents? There may be
some situations where the government "knows better" for us than we do. But
if so, the solution is to provide people the information, then let them
decide for themselves, not to coerce them against their will.
Further, how often does the government know all the important details of
individual character and circumstance that are important to solving
problems as well as those directly involved? "One size fits all"
government programs make it all but impossible to make productive use of
such knowledge.
Government programs tend to be highly bureaucratic and inflexible (and all
but impossible to end, even when any usefulness is long past), while
parents can learn from experience and tailor choices to changing
circumstances. Moreover, if the government knows so much, why does it
create so many programs that operate at cross purposes (such as crop price
supports, which reduce food affordability, and food stamps, intended to
make food more affordable for the poor)?
Does the government use its own resources? Parents use their own resources
in child-rearing—resources earned through voluntary, mutually beneficial
market arrangements with others. But government, with no resources of its
own, takes them involuntarily from others. In the process, those people
are harmed, left with fewer resources to address the issues they find most
important (far fewer, with the average American family spending more on
government than food, shelter and clothing combined).
Does the government seek to build character or develop appropriate
behavior as much as parents? Rather than teaching lessons to prepare
people for making responsible and sensible choices for themselves, the
government more often subsidizes the results of poor choices, making them
more common.
And as more poor choices are made, they, in turn, become excuses to
further reduce people's liberties to protect them from themselves (e.g.,
mandating motorcycle helmets because accident victims might impose health
care costs on others, but which do so only because the government has
already socialized most of those costs).
Justifying government policies on the basis of paternalism is just one of
many analogies used to mislead people about their true nature and effects.
Politicians and bureaucrats do not care as much or know as much about
those affected as parents; they aren't as concerned with training people
to make better decisions for themselves; and they take the resources from
others against their will, which parents cannot. And the inevitable
distortions and mistakes government policies create are then used as
excuses for further government encroachment on our shrinking freedoms.
That is far from a recipe for truly useful policy.
Given that many Americans are now taxed more heavily than medieval serfs,
serfdom might be a much better analogy for paternalism's effects (as
Friedrich Hayek suggested long ago in The Road to Serfdom ). Of
course, we don't hear that from those who seek to "sell" such policies to
the public. But recognizing the parallels to serfdom can provide a useful
antidote to the paternalism analogies now used to rationalize government
programs. As Thomas Jefferson said, "If we can prevent the government from
wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of
them, they must become happy."
Gary M. Galles is a professor of economics at
Pepperdine University. Send him MAIL.
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Stolyarov's novel, Eden against the Colossus, here.
Read Mr. Stolyarov's comprehensive treatise,
A Rational Cosmology, explicating such terms as the universe,
matter, space, time, sound, light, life, consciousness, and volition,
here.
Read
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Consent, a futuristic intellectual drama on the sanctity of
human life, here. |