You Didn't Build That? Oh, Mr. Obama, You Can't Be Serious | Jim Powell | Cato Institute: Commentary: "
Politicians scold citizens for consuming too much sugar, but the government provides subsidies for producing high fructose corn syrup that's widely used in sodas, cookies and other sweets.
Taxes are higher because government subsidizes some farmers to grow crops and subsidizes other farmers not to grow crops.
Government subsidizes home ownership and restricts the number of homes that can be built.
Politicians criticize business executives who take on too much debt, but government encourages debt by providing tax deductions for interest (no deductions for equity capital), and of course the government itself is deeper in debt than anybody else.
Politicians complain that companies invest so much money overseas, but the government imposes a 35 percent tax on earnings brought back to the United States.
Politicians bemoan our dependence on foreign oil, while restricting oil drilling on public lands and offshore.
Businesses can be prosecuted for (1) "predatory price cutting" if they charge too little, (2) "price gouging" if they charge too much or (3) "price fixing" if they charge the same as their competitors.
By providing billions of dollars of federal aid for attending college, government subsidizes demand, which has had the effect of making college more expensive and more difficult to pay for than it otherwise would be for everybody who doesn't get federal aid.
Politicians promote the virtues of small, high-mileage cars, and they enforce laws that make it hard to produce such cars profitably in the United States.
There are laws that make it harder for employers to hire people and laws that provide income for the unemployed.
The government shuts off water in California, intensifying a drought and leading to higher unemployment, all to save small fish, while proposing thousands of square miles of windmills that kill birds.
Politicians encourage more couples to get married, but there have been higher taxes on married people than on single people, providing incentives not to get married.
Politicians say they want more doctors, while enforcing laws that limit the number of students who can enter medical schools.
Government promotes health care inflation by channeling hundreds of billions of dollars a year into the health care sector, enabling people to bid up health care prices — and then the government tries to limit health care price increases with health care rationing, such as excluding more treatments from coverage.
Government provides subsidies for growing tobacco and enforces prohibitions on smoking."
"In 1978, when it was estimated that people spent almost a billion hours a year filling out federal forms, Congress passed the Government Paperwork Elimination Act" " It has been estimated that people now spend more than 10 billion hours a year filling out some 8,000 different federal forms."
"In 1985, it was estimated to cost $2.6 billion" ... "The project ended up costing $14.6 billion"
"The airport was supposed to cost $1.5 billion, but the tab turned out to be $5.3 billion."
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