"Okay, someone has to take responsibility for educating the Washington Post’s columnists. Mr. Samuelson is making the case that the rich don’t have excessive power in the United States, because if they did, they would pay lower taxes ( HOW MUCH LOWER? ).
While many rich people are in fact working quite hard to lower their tax burden (with considerable success), most of their benefits from government actually come on the before tax side of the equation. This should be especially obvious now, when the government is backing up trillions of dollars of questionable debt incurred by the wizards of Wall Street ( THEY PAID FOR IT ).
This is the story whereby Henry Paulson (in his Goldman Sachs days), Robert Rubin and other Wall Street luminaries made hundreds of millions of dollars trading on a free government insurance policy known as “too big to fail.” These brave wizards of finance were able to get others to risk money with their banks because their investors rightly believed that the government would step in if the banks messed up too badly.( THIS IS MY MAIN POINT. THIS IS THE MAIN CAUSE OF OUR CURRENT SITUATION )
The financial shenanigans, that made so many of our richest people rich, would not have been possible without this free insurance policy from the government ( THIS IS ABSOLUTELY TRUE ). Anyone doubting this should ask how many people would have invested with Goldman Sachs and Citigroup if they were told that there was an ironclad commitment from the government to let these institutions fail if they got into trouble? ( EXCELLENT POINT. I AGREE COMPLETELY )
Of course even wealthy people outside of the financial sector generally can trace their fortune to the hand of government. Bill Gates is one of the richest people in the world because the government gives him a monopoly on Windows. It will arrest anyone who sells the product without his permission. The patent protection that makes the pharmaceutical companies hugely profitable is also a gift from the government. ( WE DO NEED A GOVERNMENT )
Copyrights and patents do serve a useful purpose beyond just making some people very rich, but where is the analysis that shows that these government granted monopolies are the most efficient mechanisms for supporting creative work and innovation? In fact, such analysis does not exist. ( I AGREE )
There are many other ways in which the government structures the market to redistribute income upward ( I WOULD ARGUE THAT THIS IS FUNDAMENTAL TO OUR SYSTEM ). Read my non-copyright protected book, The Conservative Nanny State: How the Wealthy Use the Government to Stay Rich and Get Richer to get more of the picture.
The basic story is that the government’s tax and spending policy is just a small part of the distributional picture. Samuelson is wasting his readers’ time when he implies that they are the whole story.( I TOTALLY AGREE WITH THIS COLUMN. IT STATES SOME OF THE ASSUMPTIONS AND CONTEXT OF OUR CURRENT ARRANGEMENT )
--Dean Baker
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