Robert Samuelson’s latest op-ed
is “The real GE scandal.” His point in brief is that the problem is
not so much GE’s gaming the tax system to pay little or no federal
income tax despite a $5 billion profit from US operations, in as
much as it is the tax system which encourages and even engineers
such gaming (though
it seems GE is in fact paying taxes for 2010).
True, but the deeper problem here because the subject happens to
be GE is GE’s simultaneous use of the federal government to create
laws governing those of us, the individual taxpayers, less able to
mold and game the tax code and therefore who pay more for the
federal government — and those policies.
Oh, and given GE receives much of its revenue from these
policies we are also those who pay for GE’s employees, whose income
taxes GE seeks to wrap itself in, in defense of its own
near-free-riding.
The scandal is Members of Congress paying disproportionate heed
to rent-seekers like GE, with its enormous lobby shop working into
place policies A though Z, to take from us and give to them what
they cannot obtain through innovation or market competition. And
Team Obama, stop heeding GE’s CEO placed at the president’s ear to
further advocate such goodies for said near-free-rider.
Listen instead to those of us who are underwriting the
government, and this series of policies like GE’s pet windmill
mandate. That scheme, soon to move to the floor of the Senate,
became a priority thanks GE’s fire-sale purchase of Enron wind,
apparently picking up Enron’s lobbying plan as part of the
deal.
The ‘clean energy economy’ plans, as much or more than any of
GE’s schemes, are nominally designed and imposed to lower the
temperature, create (implicitly, net) jobs, reduce resource
consumption and lower pollution levels — not one of which things
they would actually accomplish, much of which the American
Tradition Institute argues in federal court in
this lawsuit filed yesterday.
Big Business loves Big Goverment. They just want someone else to
pay for it. That someone else would be you.
So, hey, my government: stop listening to free-riding Paul
explain how to best rob Peter.
Do the right thing, instead. Like with windmill mandates, any
business line whose promoter insists requires federal schemes in
order to prosper or even exist should be dealt with by allowing it
to not prosper or not exist as the merits dictate. That’s how the
rest of us fare when what we’re selling people don’t want to
buy.
Until Washington grasps this, we will never fix the economic
hole we are in directly thanks to Washington, and such reckless
economic stewardship.