The Associate Press recently reported that half of all new college graduates are either unemployed or underemployed. These fresh faced Bachelor degree holders are finding themselves opting for waiting tables and serving coffee just to pay off a trillion dollars in student loans. They are coming to grips with a lie perpetuated by university professors, faculty unions, and politicians that deluded them into thinking college by itself was the golden ticket to success.
Meanwhile, the rest of America is still muddling through years of high unemployment. The jobs connected to Alan Greenspan’s housing bubble are gone and will likely never return. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke met the financial crisis with an unprecedented amount of monetary base expansion which has failed to significantly affect the unemployment rate. President Obama and his allies in Congress threw $800 billion at the economy to no avail and have been running federal deficits to the tune of over $1 trillion for three years now. This orgy of money printing and spending has done little for the residents of Main Street but has done wonders for Wall Street and other politically connected interests.
Last fall’s Occupy campaign was representative of a growing distrust of the American economic system. Although many occupiers were mislead into believing capitalism is the culprit behind the sluggish economy, the protest’s focus on income inequality was not wholly inaccurate. Of course the inequality in income that is a byproduct of an unhampered market economy is not something to demonize. As Ludwig von Mises wrote in Economic Freedom and Interventionism:
Inequality of wealth and incomes is an
essential feature of the market economy. It is the implement that makes
the consumers supreme in giving them the power to force all those
engaged in production to comply with their orders. It forces all those
engaged in production to the utmost exertion in the service of the
consumers. It makes competition work. He who best serves the consumers
profits most and accumulates riches.
As Leviathan’s grasp over all economic life continues to grow, it only makes sense that greater amounts of wealth funnel into the area which surrounds the various bureaucracies and decision making bodies that make up the state. This past October Bloomberg News reported that Washington D.C. now tops Silicon Valley as the richest metropolitan area in the country. In a recent Time Magazine article entitled “Bubble on the Potomac,” author Andrew Ferguson documents the lifestyles of those within or well-connected to the federal government apparatus.
Even as the nation struggles, the capital
has prospered, making it a magnet for young hipsters but leaving its
residents with only a tentative understanding of how the rest of the
country lives.
Every week brings fresh evidence of
continuing prosperity: a new restaurant, a new nightclub, another
restored 19th century townhouse in a previously dodgy neighborhood
selling for $1 million or more. Start-ups are hiring through
Craigslist, and just opened lobbying firms have no trouble collaring
clients.
Other big cities, of course, have made it
through the recession in one piece. But few eased through the crash as
lightly as D.C., much less prospered so widely on the rebound. The local
unemployment rate, at 5.5%, stands well below the national figure of
8.2%. The region’s foreclosure rates have always been significantly
lower than those elsewhere, and now housing prices in D.C. and across
the river in the Virginia suburbs of Arlington and Alexandria are close
to their precrash peaks.
Though lobbying for privilege has become a staple industry amongst the D.C. area, it isn’t the sector experiencing the biggest growth in employment. Ferguson explains:
Why the boom? The size of the
nonmilitary, nonpostal federal workforce has stayed relatively stable
since the 1960s. What has changed is not the government payroll but the
number of government contractors. It’s estimated that, thanks to massive
outsourcing over the past 20 years by the Clinton and Bush
administrations, there are two government contractors for every worker
directly employed by the government. Federal contracting is the region’s
great growth industry. A government contractor can even hire
contractors for help in getting more government contracts. You could
call those guys government-contract contractors.
Which means government hasn’t shrunk; it’s just changed clothes (and pretty nice clothes they are).
With all the money culminating in the Washington area, the city and its surrounding suburbs are indeed a world apart from the rest of the country. As the Time article shows, while regulatory uncertainty and the threat of increased taxation continue to stifle entrepreneurial capital investment, D.C. residents often help themselves to $150 meals, a taxpayer subsidized metro system, and a variety of bars serving over-priced drinks. Armed with “fistfuls of disposable income,” they live in paradise compared to recession-wrecked America.
This disconnect in lifestyle is understandable when considering the anatomy of the state. As Murray Rothbard defines it,
Social power is man’s power over nature,
his cooperative transformation of nature’s resources and insight into
nature’s laws, for the benefit of all participating individuals. Social
power is the power over nature, the living standards achieved by men in
mutual exchange. State power, as we have seen, is the coercive and
parasitic seizure of this production– a draining of the fruits of
society for the benefit of nonproductive (actually antiproductive)
rulers. While social power is over nature, State power is power over man.
To drive this point home, it must be emphasized that those on the payroll of the state don’t actually pay taxes. As Rothbard points out, the notion that they do is “a mere accounting fiction.” Claiming a government employee pays taxes is the equivalent of claiming they pay their own salary.
In the end, the people of Washington have little desire to have their lavish way of life fall by the wayside. Their goal is to keep the nation’s focus on the government’s operations. This guarantees more power, prestige, and authority for a city overrun by men and women who take pride in their lawful ability to wage war abroad and at home. As long as the federal government remains an overarching factor in everyday life, it will attract a great deal of wealthy interests looking to the game the system in their favor.
The D.C. mindset is fixated on the idea that such a state of affairs can last forever. Yet much of the younger crowd that resides in the nation’s capital still doesn’t see the writing on the wall. Ferguson ends the article explaining why:
The optimism of über-Washingtonians so
far survives the unspoken worry about a coming age of austerity, in
which government spending cuts would end the high life that
Washingtonians have come to expect. They are right to be optimistic. The
two most plausible deficit-reduction proposals—one by President Obama,
the other by the Republican-controlled House Budget Committee—each calls
for the government in 2021 to spend a trillion dollars more than it
spends today.
For a country that is forced into subsidizing the profligate living habits of the state and its partners in crime, the only justifiable outcome is for the latter to suffer.
For every government employee or contractor relieved of service in Washington D.C. and elsewhere, one or more taxpayers will be relieved of the burden of paying their salary. When such an event happens en masse, it will truly be a time of celebration for America as a whole.

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