martes, 12 de mayo de 2015

Extorting the poor to help the "poor'!!!...Chile: Viraje nuevamente hacia la libertad económica?...A genderless, hopeless society!...The decline of America's foreign relations!

Extorting Low-Income Individuals to Help "the Poor"

  • minority
MAY 11, 2015
Many policies are supposedly justified because they would “take from the rich and give to the poor.” While that fits with the view that theft “for a good purpose” makes one a philanthropist, from the perspective of self-ownership, it is an assertion that the majority’s might makes their coercion right.
However, advocates of redistribution often ignore the fact that their policies redistribute wealth from many low-income individuals in the name of helping an abstract group known as “the poor.” At the same time, it is also assumed that many poverty relief efforts impose costs on wealthier groups, but in fact, much of the cost is borne by the low-income households themselves.
Even if low-income households did gain current income as a group when measured in statistical studies, onlyindividuals bear actual benefits or costs, and many of those individuals who bear the costs of such programs are low-income.

Wage Controls

Those who support minimum wages assume the poor will gain income as a group. However, as labor economist Mark Wilson put it, “evidence from a large number of academic studies suggests that minimum wage increases don’t reduce poverty levels.”
And how do low-income individuals fare under minimum wage laws? They are often harmed. Some lose jobs and others lose hours. For those who keep their jobs and hours, on-the-job training and fringe benefits will fall, or required effort will rise, to offset hiked wages. And higher current wages are often less valuable than what is given up, particularly on-the-job training, that enables people to learn, and therefore earn, their way out of poverty. That is why labor force participation rates fall and quit rates rise when the minimum wage rises. This is the opposite of what would happen if all workers who kept their jobs benefited.
In addition, higher minimum wages also force the least skilled to compete with more skilled labor at mandated higher wages. They will suffer from its undermining of their one big competitive advantage — a lower price. Those with the fewest skills, least education and job experience face the greatest employment losses. The effect is magnified by the fact that employers pay far more than the minimum wage to those workers, through added costs for the employer half of Social Security taxes, unemployment insurance taxes, worker’s compensation premiums, etc.
With the minimum wage, some of those low-income workers lucky enough to already have job experience and a work history will keep their jobs. Many others will simply find themselves to be unemployable.

Rent Control

Supporters of rent control often assume they are Robin Hood-like policies that transfer money from “wealthy” landlords to beleaguered renters. In fact, the poor are among the greatest losers from rent control.
Rent control takes a large portion of the value of residential rental properties from landlords to coercively transfer wealth to current tenants (which is why those who live in strict rent controlled units almost never leave).
But that does not mean most of the poor benefit. Since landlords are unable to capture the value of their buildings, existing housing deteriorates in quantity and quality, and new construction of affected rental units becomes paralyzed. The result is a progressive reduction in the supply of rental housing.
In the end, rent control does little for the poor beyond a few lucky individuals. Those who were “there first” capture virtually all the gains, and the rest are left with a smaller and more dilapidated housing supply.
What do poor people seeking rental housing find after strict rent control is imposed? Mainly, they find “no vacancy” signs. Lowered rents increase the amount of housing renters would like, but reduces the housing available. That reduction in housing availability directly harms the numerous low-income individuals, even if policy makers are able to produce reports showing that some low-income households have benefited — at the expense of other low-income households.
Meanwhile, those with higher incomes, better connections, etc., can better maneuver around the restrictions (e.g., through under the table payments, condo conversions, etc.). The consequence is that those of limited means may populate the rhetoric of rent control, but far less of the housing available under it. Rent controlled areas are instead often increasingly populated by higher income tenants with few children.

Good Intentions Are Not Enough

Labor and housing market interventions do not exhaust the range of counterproductive government “social welfare” policies for the poor. But they illustrate an important, undiscussed form of redistribution. Attention is focused on Robin-Hood redistribution, supported with Swiss-cheese arguments for why it is acceptable to impose the costs on particular individuals who in no way caused the problem at hand, so long as the poor gainin the aggregate. But those policies also greatly harm many members of the groups whose welfare is supposedly being advanced. And harming large numbers of individuals who are poor cannot be justified by simply claiming that the intent is to help the poor.
Note: The views expressed on Mises.org are not necessarily those of the Mises Institute.
Image source: iStockphoto

 Wayuu Bags

Chile: Cambio de gabinete, ¿cambio de ideas?

Michelle BacheletChile vive nuevamente otra etapa en su historia política.  El anuncio de Michelle Bachelet la semana pasada de “haber pedido la renuncia a todos sus ministros y anunciar quiénes se quedarán en 72 horas”, en un programa de entrevistas dirigido por el mítico Don Francisco de Sábado Gigante, sorprendió a muchos al tiempo que confirmó sospechas y rumores de fracturas internas.
Es así como hemos presenciado más patentemente, el ocaso de un proyecto avasallador, destructivo y lleno de soberbia llamado “Nueva Mayoría“, una coalición de partidos de centro, centroizquierda e izquierda, liderada por un grupo de “estudiantes” egresados o congelados, con declarada ideología comunista y que hoy ocupan escaño en el parlamento. Anclados en caducas ideas estatistas, son ejemplos patentes de la “Fatal Arrogancia” que tantas veces describió Friedrich von Hayek. Esa actitud de pretender mantener un monopolio de la moral y creer saber lo que deben hacer las personas con su vidas.  La sustitución de la libertad por más intervencionismo, el establecimiento de una cultura de innumerables “derechos” sociales y la intervención constante en la economía son típicos del pensamiento único.
Atrás quedó la antigua Concertación, que buscaba acuerdos y respetaba la institucionalidad republicana, que gobernaba sin la necesidad de amenazar con “refundarlo todo”, aquélla que manteniendo sus diferencias con la oposición comprendía que el “Chile de todos” estaba compuesto por todas las diferencias, sin pretender pasar “retroexcavadoras” o imponer una mayoría parlamentaria circunstancial sin importar las voces disidentes ante la autoimpuesta tarea de refundarlo todo.
Bachelet, al parecer, finalmente ha comprendido que lo que debía reformar primero, antes que los tributos, antes que la educación, antes que la política laboral, era su propio gobierno que, a pesar de las apariencias, ya se encontraba dividido e inmerso en una dura pugna interna que buscaba imponer sí o sí la respectiva visión de “agenda del programa”.  Todo parece indicar que Michelle Bachelet asumió “el timón del buque”, aunque físicamente afectada, claramente ya no desprende alegría, confianza o la simpatía que a muchos les llamaba la atención y que instaba la adhesión de otros.
Los que quieren imponer el moribundo proyecto intervencionista no se rendirán fácilmente, pues, no es tan sólo la aspiración a mantenerse en la administración del poder, sino también, modificar el escenario para una nueva forma de país sin importar una crítica o análisis respecto a las consecuencias ni cómo afectará el consenso. Quedan en el tintero varias reformas anunciadas y ver de qué manera el anunciado “proceso constituyente” se desarrollará con los nuevos ministros y el nuevo escenario de los partidos de gobierno.
Es el momento de analizar bien el renovado gabinete. Obviando la frivolidad de cómo se hizo el anuncio, quizá Bachelet retome las ideas correctas, basadas en la libertad y el individuo. Para la oposición también es momento de olvidar la arrogancia y generar espacios para que todos los habitantes de Chile puedan crecer en progreso, libertad y paz.
Puede que Bachelet entendiera, bastante tarde, que las ideas basadas en discursos pretéritos y violentos poca cabida tienen en una sociedad en paz y libertad, que hace 40 años empezó su senda al desarrollo. ¿Dejará Bachelet de lado las ideas estatistas y abrazará la libertad económica que tan buen resultado nos ha dado? El futuro promisor de Chile depende de ello.

 

A more genderless, hopeless, meaningless society

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May 7, 2015 (TheRadianceFoundation.org) -- We’re peculiar creatures. We want meaning but leave meaning wanting. We exist by design but deny design exists. We demand love but demand that Love stay silent.
Contradiction courses through our veins. We bleed inconsistency, yet even with multiple wounds we simply slap on band-aids to cover our soul’s lacerations.
And we wonder why healing is elusive. So instead, from this condition of brokenness, we create more brokenness. Language becomes our victim. We change it to bandage our fractured state. Love becomes “tolerance.” Discernment becomes “judgment.” And conviction becomes “hate.”
Our culture is obsessed with a savior—self—that cannot save. As more and more bow at the altar of Narcissism, our meaning, our design, and our understanding of Love go up in flames.
Meaning is powerful. And where we derive that meaning is crucial. The recent Baltimore riots exemplify how finding meaning in pigmentation only divides us. Martin Luther King Jr. knew that the civil rights battle was first fought on our knees in relentless prayer. He understood that the Gospel gave our lives meaning and a righteous cause to fight for true equality and freedom.
It wasn’t mainstream media that led the charge for civil rights. That institution had to be led by those who understood the unwavering power of Faith, the transformational power of Hope, and the unstoppable ability of Love to break down any division. Just as during the abolition of slavery in this country, men and women of God refused to allow the dehumanization of God’s creation and the oppressive dictates and deception of the State to go unchallenged.
Our right to Life does not belong to Caesar. Love does not belong to Caesar. Marriage does not belong to Caesar. Our sexuality does not belong to Caesar. Our hope does not belong to Caesar.
Mainstream media, in its typical dereliction of journalistic duty, has been celebrating the “heroic transition” of Olympian Bruce Jenner from a man to a man deeply confused. Never mind the incredible irony of LGBTQ advocates rejecting the biological reality of binary gender yet affirming it when one wants to “transition” from a man to a woman or vice versa. Even conservative Rick Santorum has capitulated to the cult of transgenderism, saying of Jenner: “If he says he’s a woman, then he’s a woman.” I can say I’m Asian, and even believe it with all my heart; it doesn’t make me Asian.
Bruce Jenner will never biologically be a woman, yet too many are fine with treating our genitalia like accessories that need to be swapped out to match a different outfit. Santorum apparently doesn’t agree with the former chief psychiatrist-in-chief at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Dr. Paul R. McHugh, who says transgenderism is a “mental disorder” and that “sex-change” is biologically impossible. McHugh also indicates that the suicide rate of “transgendered” people, who’ve gone through the drastic “reassignment surgery” is 20 times higher than non-transgendered people. Where’s the compassion in any of this?
What exactly are we affirming Mr. Santorum, mainstream media, and churches across America? More importantly than ignoring McHugh’s documented medical evidence is ignoring the essence of salvation—becoming a new creation. When we discard the possibility of God transforming any life or any situation, we’ve given the Gospel reassignment surgery.
Last week, as The Radiance Foundation  joined Alliance Defending Freedom, Family Research Council, Heritage Foundation and others at the Supreme Court to rally defenders of natural marriage, there was one person among the crowd who stood out most powerfully to me. It was a young woman holding a bright yellow sign that read: “I was Queer. Then I found Jesus.” I thanked her for her vulnerability and the message that put the whole day into context: no amount of rallying can mask the brokenness many feel in the rejection of our design. People like her (and there are many) are immediately silenced by the monolithic LGBTQ activist movement who cry “hate” to silence debate.
Click "like" if you want to defend true marriage. 
As Christians, we are called to love God with all of our hearts, all of our souls, and all of our minds. When we do this, we dare to let our soul orientation overcome any other identity that denies who and what we were created to be—new creations that glorify God. When we follow this command of Christ’s, loving our neighbors as ourselves is the natural outflow.
Our culture is hurtling into a genderless, hopeless, and meaningless society, but we can stop this self-inflicted destruction. We could reclaim what it means to love and show how that love can restore brokenness. We live in a world in desperate need of redemption. The question is: When will the people of God feel the desperate need to reveal and reflect the Source of that redemption?
VOICE

The Amazing Decline of America’s Special Relationships

The Amazing Decline of America’s Special Relationships
Most Americans have never heard of Edward Miliband. And given this week’s result in the U.K. elections it is very likely they never will. After a crushing defeat he has already resigned as leader of the Labour Party and is poised to return to the Wallace & Gromit animated films from which he seems to have been discovered. His electoral failure and that of his party once again proves the old electoral adage that unappealing leaders and incompetent campaigns often produce bad results.
That’s not to take anything away from David Cameron, whose Conservative Party won a resounding victory that was so surprising that not only has it left Miliband out of a job, but in all likelihood he has taken scores of U.K. pollsters with him. Cameron stunned the pundits to a degree that echoes therecent electoral victory of Bibi Netanyahu in the elections in Israel, the country that along with the U.K. has historically had the greatest claim on having a special relationship with the United States.
Both elections however, suggest on several levels that those special relationships, neither of which has been what it used to be during the past several years, are in for a period of further decline.
In part, the decline in the relationships has been due to historical reasons that have made both countries less important to the United States. The United Kingdom is a shadow of its former self, the sun long ago having defied the old saying and actually having set on the former empire. British school children no longer study maps that show a quarter of the world in red or pink to depict the lands loyal to their monarch. Even Britain’s last great claim on global domination — in the area of TV car shows — suffered adevastating blow this year when “Top Gear,” broadcast in 214 countries with an audience of hundreds of millions, saw its blowhard, politically troglodyte host Jeremy Clarkson unceremoniously booted off the air for behaving like an ass, thus shutting down production.
Perhaps the fact that puts this decline in clearest focus is the steep decline in the size of the British Army. With cuts slated to take it from 102,000 to82,000 regulars and a recent report suggesting that further cuts could reduce it in size to 50,000 within a few years, we face the prospect that in the not too distant future the military that once conquered the world will be roughly the same size as the New York Police Department. (A promise of Cameron and the Tories was that they would stop such cuts from taking place, but whether Britain’s financial health — more on that later — will permit them to honor that pledge is another matter.)
Similarly, whereas a generation ago Israel was seen as central to U.S. Mideast policy, today, while it is still America’s most important and best-supported ally in the region, events have undercut its importance in practical terms. Once it was key to the U.S. Cold War strategy in the region, but the Cold War ended. Once the Middle East was more important to the United States as a source of energy, but that is clearly less true today than at any time since the Second World War. Once the Israel-Palestine conflict was seen as central to all the problems and geopolitical issues of the region; now that is far from being the case. Indeed, that issue, once number one among U.S. regional priorities, might have a hard time making the top ten today. (Coming in after: Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, containing Iran, the Iranian nuclear deal, the spread of extremism, the current crisis in Yemen, the looming crisis in Libya, Egyptian stability, maintaining eroding support among our traditional Arab allies, and a host of other such issues.)
Further, both special relationships are fading in the minds and hearts of Americans as a new generation starts assuming power, one that has few memories of the historical reasons for the founding of Israel or of Britain’s vital partnership with the United States in two world wars.
Part of the deterioration in these two relationships has to do with policy decisions made by the governments that have just won second terms in power.
Part of the deterioration in these two relationships has to do with policy decisions made by the governments that have just won second terms in power. The U.S.-Israel relationship sure doesn’t feel that special when the prime minister of Israel tries to politically body-slam the U.S. president. It is devalued when the prime minister of Israel appears to choose sides in the U.S. political debate, seeming to be willing to save his specialness for his Republican friends. And it is certainly deeply damaged when Israel wages a brutal and unjustifiable campaign against the people of Gaza that violates international norms and offends the sensibilities of all with a hint of conscience, as the Netanyahu government did last year.
Britain has not so much offended as it has simply slinked away from center stage. Perhaps in the wake of British public revulsion at the degree to which Tony Blair was seen to have become George W. Bush’s “poodle,” perhaps due to the degree to which national attention has been drawn to domestic problems, we have seen a reordering of the power landscape of Europe. Britain, once our closest and most important ally, now falls third on that scale behind Germany (more important) and France (more supportive of the United States in recent years). Add in the belligerent, erratic, dangerous Vladimir Putin and a newly aggressive Russia, and Britain is now only the fourth most important power with which the United States regularly deals in Europe.
The fact that Britain’s role in Europe will now be open to question for months to come, thanks to Cameron’s pledge to hold a referendum regarding whether Britain should remain a part of the EU, only makes further deterioration more likely. That is because the doubt the referendum is likely to raise may have deleterious effects on the British economy. It is also because there is a possibility that Britain could choose to leave the EU. This would be economically foolish and would take the country from being an important player in the world’s largest market to being a more marginal independent actor. Further, should Scotland renew the push to breakaway from the United Kingdom, and the election results showed huge stridesmade by the Scottish National Party, it would clearly make a Not-So-Great Britain more likely.
Given the likelihood of President Barack Obama’s Iran nuclear deal being successfully concluded and the U.S. administration’s commitment to ensuring that is the case, the prospect for further bad relations between Netanyahu and the White House is great. This alienation will have multiple effects, many of which have already manifested themselves to some degree. The Israelis will seek to diversify their international alliances, reaching out to India, China, Russia, and others. And the United States will seek to emphasize and cultivate other ties in the region (whether that means with Iran or with GCC partners is unclear…. Both seem unlikely, but at the same time both may expect greater efforts at outreach from Washington even as Israel sees a further chill.)
None of this is improved upon by some of the behavior and policies of the Obama administration. It doesn’t help, for example, to call the Israeli prime minister “chickenshit,” or to get drawn into petulant exchanges with the Israelis more suited to the schoolyard than to statecraft. Matters have not been helped by America’s shying away from playing the leadership role that is expected of the United States nor by the inconsistent nature of Obama’s personal diplomacy with our friends abroad. And frankly, the likelihood of the Obama team spending much real time repairing these problems during their waning days in office is pretty slim.
Will the next U.S. president aggressively seek to reverse the course of these once-crucial but now-declining relationships cited here? Undoubtedly candidates for that job will certainly promise to do so in the months ahead. But the historical factors and current geopolitical trends cited above will make it very hard for anyone to restore these relationships to the special place they occupied in the past. For Cameron and Netanyahu and their new governments, this is a reality they may wish to deny but that they will find it very difficult to reverse.
BEN STANSALL/AFP/Getty Images

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