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Government against blacks | John Stossel | Columnists | Washington Examiner

Government against blacks | John Stossel | Columnists | Washington Examiner.

The other day, I went to Times Square to ask people what government should do to help poor people. Most everyone agreed on the answer: “more social programs and a higher minimum wage.”

It’s intuitive to think that way. I used to think that, too. When President Johnson declared a “war on poverty,” he said “compassionate government” was the road to prosperity for poor people. That made sense to me. At Princeton, I was taught that government’s central planners had the solution to poverty.

But then I watched them work. Government spent trillions of dollars on poverty programs, and the poverty level stayed stuck at about 12 percent of the population. It’s stayed there for about 40 years.

Now I understand that that government poverty programs encourage people to stay dependent. There’s money in it. They policymakers would have known this 25 years ago had they read “The State Against Blacks.” The author, an economist, said poverty programs destroy the natural mechanisms that have always enabled poor people to lift themselves out of poverty.

That author is Walter Williams of George Mason University. Williams, who is black, says “there’s a huge segment of the black population for whom upward mobility is elusive, and it’s because of the welfare state — [AZ2]because of government.”

Williams elaborates in a new book, “Race and Economics.” A chief culprit, he insists, is the minimum wage.

“Let’s not look at the intentions behind minimum wage,” he said. “We have to ask, what are the effects? Put yourself in the place of an employer who must pay $7.25 no matter whom you hire. Will that employer hire a person who can only add $3 or $4 of value per hour?”

He will not. And so fewer young people get hired and “get their feet on the bottom rung of the economic ladder.” This hurts all young people, but black teens most, he says, because “many of them get a fraudulent education in the public school system. So a law that discriminates against low-skill people has a doubly negative effect on black teenagers. The unemployment rate among black teens today is unprecedented in U.S. history. In the ’40s, black teenage unemployment was less than white teenage unemployment.”

And yet a Pew survey says 83 percent of Americans support raising the minimum wage.

“People have the misguided notion that the minimum wage is an antipoverty tool.”

Economists understand the truth. A survey of the American Economic Association found that 90 percent of economists say the minimum wage increases unemployment.

Williams says the minimum wage law has also been a tool of racism. In his book “South Africa’s War Against Capitalism,” he studied that country’s labor markets during apartheid:

“White racist unions in South Africa that would never have a black as a member were the major supporters of minimum wage laws. Their stated purpose was to protect white workers from having to compete with low-skill, low-wage black workers. In the United States we found some of the same reasoning for support of a super minimum-wage law,” the Davis-Bacon Act, which forces taxpayers to pay union-like wages for government-funded construction projects.

Williams says other programs designed to help the poor — like welfare payments — have wrecked the lives of millions of black people. He likens the welfare state to a “drug pusher” that keeps people dependent and in poverty.

“The welfare state has done to black Americans what slavery (and Jim Crow and racism) could not have done … break up the black family. Today, just slightly over 30 percent of black kids live in two-parent families. Historically, from the 1870s on … 75-90 percent of black kids lived in two-parent families.”

Why does the welfare state create illegitimacy?

“(Without welfare,) people would decide, ‘I’m going to go out and get a job, I’m going to live more responsibly.'” And that would include getting married before having children, something the welfare system discourages.

I believe the creators of the welfare state had good intentions, but good intentions aren’t good enough. Even if deficit spending were not bankrupting America — which it is — America should end these programs

Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/2011/06/government-against-blacks#ixzz1O4pmo8WP

GOP seeks to trim stimulus, cut deficit – Washington Times

GOP seeks to trim stimulus, cut deficit – Washington Times.

Economy improves with billions unspent

With the economy showing signs of recovery, fiscally conservative economists and Republican lawmakers are suggesting that the large unspent portion of the nearly $800 billion stimulus fund should be redirected to slash this year’s nearly $2 trillion annual deficit.

Democratic lawmakers, Obama administration officials and many economists doubt the wisdom of truncating the stimulus program so soon after it began. But Republican congressmen and economists who were not thrilled with the stimulus effort are increasingly calling for it to be foreshortened as a return to economic growth appears closer at hand.

Administration accounting shows that relatively little of the stimulus funds that would directly create jobs have been spent. The White House says $112 billion from the stimulus account has been spent or obligated. In addition, much if not most of the economic recovery expenditures have been spent to pay for state assistance, unemployment and Medicaid benefits, and other safety net programs that would create few if any new jobs.

Nevertheless, there are increasing reports that key sectors of the economy are beginning to show modest signs of recovery.

TWT RELATED STORY:
Obama looks to ‘accelerate’ stimulus

Construction spending is up slightly for the second straight month, factory orders rose 0.7 percent in April, existing home sales were up three months in a row, and banks have begun raising capital again and showing signs of growth. These and other economic signals have sparked a rally on Wall Street that has raised stock values by more than 30 percent since March.

No one suggests the economy is out of the woods. The unemployment rate, always the last economic figure to show improvement in the aftermath of recessions, continues to climb, rising from 8.9 percent in April to 9.4 percent in May — though the figure of 345,000 jobs lost last month was sharply below economic forecasts and marked the fourth straight month that the pace of layoffs has slowed.

That is one of the reasons why top economists such as Ben S. Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve, see the pace of the nation’s economic contraction slowing and entering a recovery stage later this year. A survey of 45 economists by the National Association for Business Economics (NABE) Outlook reported late last month that the end of the recession is near.

“The good news is the NABE panel expects economic growth to turn positive in the second half of this year, with the pace of job losses narrowing sharply over the remainder of this year and employment turning up in early 2010,” NABE President Chris Varvares said. Nearly three out of four of the panel’s economists said they expected the recession would end by the third quarter.

But some economists think President Obama’s stimulus plan has had little if anything to do with the economy’s new signs of life, that a lot of the heavy lifting in the recovery is a result of actions taken by the Federal Reserve, and that once the recession ends, the remaining funds, estimated to be in the hundreds of billions of dollars next year, should be returned to the U.S. Treasury.

Recession Puts a Major Strain On Social Security Trust Fund – washingtonpost.com

By Lori Montgomery

Washington Post Staff Writer

Tuesday, March 31, 2009; Page A04

The U.S. recession is wreaking havoc on yet another front: the Social Security trust fund.

Recession Puts a Major Strain On Social Security Trust Fund

Trust Fund Projections

With unemployment rising, the payroll tax revenue that finances Social Security benefits for nearly 51 million retirees and other recipients is falling, according to a report from the Congressional Budget Office. As a result, the trust fund’s annual surplus is forecast to all but vanish next year — nearly a decade ahead of schedule — and deprive the government of billions of dollars it had been counting on to help balance the nation’s books.

While the new numbers will not affect payments to current Social Security recipients, experts say, the disappearing surplus could have considerable implications for the government’s already grim financial situation…

Click on the link below to read more…..

via Recession Puts a Major Strain On Social Security Trust Fund – washingtonpost.com.