By John Samples on 6.9.05 @ 12:07AM
We have seen the future and it doesn't work -- it just pays entitlement taxes.
"I never think of the future. It comes soon enough."
"What? Who said that?" Colin said, giving me a puzzled look. We
had been drinking lattes and chatting about his plan to get a
masters degree in computer science. He had expected me to say
something worthwhile about his plan. I had disrupted his
expectations. Colin is my son. My job is to disrupt his
expectations.
"Albert Einstein. I think it's some sort of joke about
relativity or about the fate of the universe or something. But
never mind, that's too hard to understand. Your plans reminded me
of the quote."
"How?" Colin was still puzzled and thus interested.
"Like the man says, never think of the future. That's where
you're going wrong. You're thinking of the future just like
everyone says you are supposed to. That's what makes you a sucker.
In particular, you're falling for the human capital argument, the
idea that you should improve your skills through education or what
the economists unimaginatively call 'training.' Since the returns
to education are really high, you get richer and everyone gets
richer."
"Yeah. That's the idea. I mean it worked for you, even you. What
could be wrong with it?"
I paused. Even me? About once an hour Colin forces you to
recalculate his costs and benefits to determine whether he's a plus
or minus.
"The future has to be like the past. Over the past three decades
the returns to education have been astronomical. Spend more on
education, get more income after taxes. But your working life will
be over the next five decades at least. That future doesn't have to
be like that past. In fact, the signs are you should do what
Einstein says."
"I don't get it."
"Look at this way. It doesn't matter whether education increases
your productivity unless you get to keep enough of the added wealth
to justify the high cost of a degree. Even with the tax rates we
have, the added education made sense for my generation, but it
probably won't for your generation."
"Why not?"
"You've got debts to pay. Other people's debts. There's $11
trillion or so for Social Security that's not provided for now.
You'll have a sizable chunk of that, and it's not the scary part.
Medicare has a $60 or $70 trillion shortfall, somewhere in there.
$16 trillion for the prescription drug benefit alone. As it is. Not
as it will grow to be."
"So?"
"So, someone's got to pay for those programs. The generation
that will receive the Social Security that you have to pay
for."
"You mean your generation, old man," Colin laughed.
"Right, my generation. We have paid for the benefits of earlier
generations, benefits that were huge compared to that generation's
taxes. So we expect you to do the same for us. But here's the
beauty and the horror of it. The benefits I get, and the debt you
pay, is not fixed. It can be anything depending on what Congress
passes into law.
"So my generation votes benefits for itself that must be paid
for in the future, by future people, people that don't exist now,
or people like you that do exist now but not in the way they will
exist in the future. People that don't exist can't vote. Future
people who can't vote pay for benefits for current people who can.
Got it?"
"I suppose."
"But there's a problem. Everything depends on you being a
sucker. You must get more education and become more productive to
pay the debts of my generation. The added money from your added
education and work will be taxed away one way or another to pay for
Medicare and Social Security. The debts are just too large.
"So everything depends on you getting more education and
becoming more productive despite the fact doing so will be a losing
proposition over your life. To make it work, you have to never
think about the future. You need to be a sucker or the entitlement
state will break down. But you'll get the final laugh."
"I don't see much that could be amusing here," he remarked.
"Well, consider this, my boy: You're not a sucker. Neither are
the other people like you, the people who will produce the most
wealth in the future. You all will realize that it doesn't make
much sense to invest in yourselves or in the businesses of other
people when the returns go down the entitlement sinkholes. So you
won't make the investments, and the economy will turn sluggish and
sooner rather than later we will become a dying economy, like
France or Germany. It might even happen before the current
generation dies out.
"We might live to experience and to see the disaster brought by
our demands for entitlements. We have to hope you don't think about
the future and that the future doesn't come too soon. We have to be
the opposite of Einstein, which is good reason for you to follow
his advice."
"I think that's ironic, not amusing," Colin said.
"Or tragic. Say, are you paying for these lattes?"
topics:
Taxes, Education, Business, Entitlements, Social Security, Law, Medicare