| The welfare state is a fraud.
What kind of fraud is it? Thanks to Charles Ponzi, we have a name
for it, and a model by which to understand it. Mr. Ponzi was a cut
above the usual run of grifters, most of whom grab your money and
run, never to be heard of again.
Ponzi paid dividends. He promised huge returns, and he
delivered.
This was a stroke of criminal genius. It attracted new suckers in
droves and flocks, and when his scheme started to fall apart his
suckers rallied to support him, muttering dark words about
the “unscrupulous bankers” who were blackening his reputation. This
kept the scam alive far longer than most others, and dramatically
increased the loot.
At least $8 million of the $15 million he took in was never
accounted for. In other words he skinned Bostonians for at least 8
million (1920!) dollars!
In a world where most crime is sordid and cheap, Charles Ponzi is
rightly legendary. He made it sordid and very, very expensive! He
can be one of the great teachers of mankind, if only we will learn
from him.
The root of his success was a longer-term view than most
criminals can muster: he applied sound business principles to a
criminal scheme. He had a regular place of business, kept his
promises and re-invested for growth.
These principles worked as well for Charles Ponzi as for the most
honest man in the world. He rapidly gained wealth and reputation,
and his “investors” profited along with him. Everybody was happy.
His early investors had fat returns, and his later investors could
see an impressive track record to justify their hopes of fat
returns.
What went wrong? Nothing “went wrong:” it was all a fraud,
from first to last. It was based on no profitable enterprise; there
was no wealth to back his promises. The only source for the
dividends Ponzi paid out was his ability to find new
suckers.
A Ponzi scheme is pure re-distribution: money comes from
later suckers to earlier suckers with the operator skimming as much
as he can without queering the deal.
A Ponzi scheme is “an investment swindle in which high profits
are promised from fictitious sources and early investors are paid
off with funds raised from later ones.”1.
A welfare state is a political swindle in which endless
handouts are promised from fictitious sources, and early taxpayers
are paid off with funds raised from later ones.
Fictitious sources? Sure. “Tax the rich” is a fictitious source;
the rich have nowhere near enough wealth to redeem the welfare
state’s promises. “The greater efficiency of state enterprise” was a
popular fictitious source for decades—now it is just a joke.
The ultimate fictitious source in the minds of most of the
welfare state’s suckers is “the government.” But the government
produces nothing; government is not a source of wealth.
Whatever it has it gets from private citizens. If they stop paying
taxes,2. or go broke, the
government is out of luck! Government is a fictitious source of
wealth.
This is why the collapse of the Soviet Union threw welfare
statists into shocked paralysis. Despite their fervent denials,
statists took Communism’s survival as proof that government could
provide wealth. The collapse of Communism—its economic
collapse—destroyed their secret hope that absolute power would make
government an inexhaustible source of wealth.
That the welfare state’s later taxpayers pay for the handouts of
earlier taxpayers is clear to all. It is notorious as “mortgaging
our children’s future.” Friends of the welfare state call it a
“contract between generations.” Recognize it as a defining
characteristic of a Ponzi scheme.
The welfare state is a Ponzi state.
Consider the Canada Pension Plan (or Social Security in the US).
It started cheaply; everyone paid, only a few collected. Those who
collected were pleased, and the rest paid for it, hoping to collect
also.
Now many are collecting, and many more hope to collect. But
without yet another generation of suckers to pay for it, they’ll be
left holding an empty bag!
“But,” they might sputter, “I’ve been paying into this for years.
It’s mine! Where’s my money?” Ask Mr. Ponzi!
The government spent it long ago—and spent borrowed
billions besides! There’s nothing to back the promises but
the hope that others are willing to be skinned in their turn! In a
galling theft of the language of financial responsibility, this is
called “pay as you go.” It’s pure Ponzi. The trust funds for these
schemes contain nothing but government IOUs!
Investors hold other government IOUs. The handout-hopers will
stand in line behind investors. To default on debts to
investors is to invoke financial apocalypse, instant and prolonged
ruin.
Default shuts off government access to loans, and throws all
debts into doubt. Capital dries up, even for legitimate businesses.
Why invest in a country which is in crisis? Just wait till they sort
it out.
If push comes to shove, the government will let old folks (and
sick folks, and kids, and the unemployed) go hang! The alternative
would ruin everyone.
A Ponzi scheme needs a continuously growing supply of
suckers. If the supply stops growing, or grows too slowly, the
scheme’s promises are defaulted. Then it fails because the supply of
new suckers dries up.
A Ponzi state fails when taxpayers see that its promises
are worthless, that all it offers is high taxes with no hope of
big handouts. A Ponzi state, too, can run out of suckers.
Polls report that 4 of 5 young people have abandoned all hope of
collecting Canada Pension. They see that their CPP “contribution” is
no provision for their future: it is just another damned tax!3.
Men are buying “income replacement insurance” to dodge the ban on
private medical insurance. They are buying “waiting list insurance”
so they can afford treatment in the US when Medicare threatens to
ration their lives away.
Ponzi state promises are worthless.
Taxpayers know it.
The Ponzi state is dead!
1.
American Heritage Dictionary, Third Edition, 1992.
2.
It’s happening! See
Quackgrass Press #13: Tax heroes
3.
My father was perceptive enough to point this out to me decades ago,
before CPP became law.
$
You needn’t despair at the delay in
burying the Ponzi state—you can become a Quackgrass
activist! Copy this article! Keep the original for future copies.
Paper meetings with it! Paper your office! Leave a stack on your
business counter! If you expect hostility, use stealth and
cunning—it’ll drive your opponents wild!
Be ingenious! Have fun! |