There's a natural human impulse to help people who need a hand. In the
political world, that often translates to an impulse to have government
help people who need a hand. Who wants to argue with that?
But experience tells us that it's not always easy to help. Individuals'
good intentions go awry. Government programs sometimes produce
unintended consequences that make things worse for the intended
beneficiaries.
Consider what could be called the three H's: health care, housing and higher education.
Over the last generation and more, government has stepped in to help
ordinary individuals and those with special problems on all three
issues. The results have been, well, not as good as intended.
Take health care. Just about every health care expert from right to left
believes that government's first real foray into the field has been
counterproductive.
That was the decision, made during World War II, when defense
contractors were looking desperately for workers but were barred from
raising wages, that the cost of health insurance policies would be
deductible for employers and not taxable to employees.
Seven decades later, that's still the law. People whose employers
provide health insurance effectively pay less for it than people whose
employers don't.
And those with employer-provided health insurance tend to be insulated
from knowledge of the costs of treatment. That's one of the things
pushing health care costs up more rapidly than inflation.
In contrast, prices of health care procedures not covered by insurance
-- Lasik eye surgery, cosmetic surgery -- have been falling because of
technological advance and free-market competition.
Government's efforts to help people -- military contractors and their employees -- created a mess.
Then there's housing. For more than two decades, government policies
have tried to make it easier for modest-income people, especially racial
minorities, to get mortgages to buy houses. Both the Clinton and Bush
administrations pushed this hard.
They were aided and abetted by the government-sponsored entities Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac, whose willingness to buy up such mortgages and sell
them to investors pushed literally trillions of dollars into the
housing market.
But this housing bubble burst when prices unexpectedly dropped and
Fannie's and Freddie's mortgage-backed securities suddenly became
unsaleable. This was the proximate cause of the financial crisis of 2008
that sent the economy into recession and created the new normal of slow
growth.
Meanwhile, thousands of new homeowners, a large proportion of them
Hispanic and black, faced foreclosure and eviction. Government's efforts
to help people -- especially minorities with subpar credit -- created a
mess.
Finally the third H, higher education. Going back three decades,
government has subsidized college loans in a way that has pumped money
into the nation's colleges and universities. The argument was that
college degrees enabled people to make better livings and that
government should help everyone who wanted one
But as government pumped more and more money in, institutions have been
raising tuitions and fees faster than inflation for three decades. That
leaves college unaffordable for almost every family without
government-encouraged loans.
The result has been administrative bloat -- colleges and universities
have had more administrators than teachers since 2005 -- and students
with college loan debt that can't be discharged in bankruptcy.
Many students leave school without degrees but with plenty of debt. Many
who do earn degrees do so in subjects that, in our sluggish new normal
economy, don't lead to jobs after graduation.
But the debts remain and can build up for a lifetime. Government's
efforts to help people -- young people seeking a college education --
have produced a mess.
Not all policies attempting to help people produce such re
sults. The
G.I. Bill of Rights providing higher education benefits and housing
loans after World War II worked because it rewarded not only past
service but also strenuous effort.
The original FHA home mortgage program worked well because it limited loans to those with good credit ratings.
But policies trying to extend the benefits of health insurance, housing
and higher education that tended to sever the connection between effort
and reward have backfired and hurt many of the intended beneficiaries.
Government policymakers failed to anticipate the responses of third
parties attempting to game the system and grab some of the money
government was making available.
The impulse to help those in need is one of mankind's better traits. But
the impulse to have government help them is often self-defeating.
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/political_commentary/commentary_by_michael_barone/when_government_offers_to_help_it_often_makes_a_mess
Obama is no kings don’t like to be constrained. But all government should be.Obama is Pathological Liar, He is an Ideological Liar because the true objectives of his fundamental transformation of the United States are incompatible with American democracy and tradition Obama devotion to the Machiavellian dictum of "the ends justify the means" and lying as an instrument of government policy have been the tools of political extremists throughout history.
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