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(PHOTO: REUTERS)

The Institute for Supply Management said it’s Non-Manufacturing Report on Business (ROB) index showed services sector growth cooled in August. The ISM said its services index fell to 59 last month from 60.3 in July, which was its highest since August 2005. Analysts were looking for a reading of 58.1 in August, according to a Reuters survey. A reading above 50 indicates expansion in the sector.

“This represents continued growth in the non-manufacturing sector at a slower rate,” said Anthony Nieves, chair of the Institute for Supply Management. “The Non-Manufacturing Business Activity Index decreased to 63.9 percent, which is 1 percentage point lower than the July reading of 64.9 percent, reflecting growth for the 73rd consecutive month at a slower rate.”

The ISM’s index of business activity fell to 63.9 last month from July’s reading of 64.9, while economists were looking for a reading of 61. The new orders index fell to 63.4 from 63.8, while the employment index dropped to 56 from 59.6. The index on prices slipped to 50.8 from 53.7.

The 15 non-manufacturing industries reporting growth in August — listed in order — are: Transportation & Warehousing; Real Estate, Rental & Leasing; Construction; Accommodation & Food Services; Retail Trade; Finance & Insurance; Public Administration; Health Care & Social Assistance; Educational Services; Utilities; Management of Companies & Support Services; Wholesale Trade; Arts, Entertainment & Recreation; Professional, Scientific & Technical Services; and Information. The only industry reporting contraction in August is Mining.

ISM® NON-MANUFACTURING SURVEY RESULTS AT A GLANCE
COMPARISON OF ISM® NON-MANUFACTURING AND ISM® MANUFACTURING SURVEYS*
AUGUST 2015
Non-Manufacturing Manufacturing
Index Series
Index
Aug
Series
Index
Jul
Percent
Point
Change
Direction Rate
of
Change
Trend**
(Months)
Series
Index
Aug
Series
Index
Jul
Percent
Point
Change
NMI®/PMI® 59.0 60.3 -1.3 Growing Slower 67 51.1 52.7 -1.6
Business Activity/Production 63.9 64.9 -1.0 Growing Slower 73 53.6 56.0 -2.4
New Orders 63.4 63.8 -0.4 Growing Slower 73 51.7 56.5 -4.8
Employment 56.0 59.6 -3.6 Growing Slower 18 51.2 52.7 -1.5
Supplier Deliveries 52.5 53.0 -0.5 Slowing Slower 3 50.7 48.9 +1.8
Inventories 54.5 57.0 -2.5 Growing Slower 5 48.5 49.5 -1.0
Prices 50.8 53.7 -2.9 Increasing Slower 6 39.0 44.0 -5.0
Backlog of Orders 56.5 54.0 +2.5 Growing Faster 3 46.5 42.5 +4.0
New Export Orders 52.0 56.5 -4.5 Growing Slower 4 46.5 48.0 -1.5
Imports 51.5 50.5 +1.0 Growing Faster 2 51.5 52.0 -0.5
Inventory Sentiment 69.0 63.5 +5.5 Too High Faster 219 N/A N/A N/A
Customers’ Inventories N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 53.0 44.0 +9.0
Overall Economy Growing Slower 73
Non-Manufacturing Sector Growing Slower 67

* Non-Manufacturing ISM® Report On Business® data is seasonally adjusted for Business Activity, New Orders, Prices and Employment Indexes. Manufacturing ISM® Report On Business® data is seasonally adjusted for New Orders, Production, Employment and Supplier Deliveries.

** Number of months moving in current direction.

The Institute for Supply Management said it's

jobs-san-francisco-unemployment

A discouraged worker sits in an unemployment office in San Francisco. (Photo: Reuters)

The number of Americans filing claims for first-time unemployment benefits rose last week to 282,000 from a downwardly revised 270,000 the week prior. Wall Street expected claims to increase, but only to 275,000 from an initially reported 271,000.

The Labor Department said there were no special factors impacting the the week ended Aug. 29. The four-week moving average of claims–which is widely considered a better gauge as it irons out week-to-week volatility–increased by 3,250 to 275,500 last week.

On Wednesday, payroll processor ADP released the closely-watched National Employment Report, which revealed U.S. private sector job creation in August cooled at 190,000, missing economists’ expectations. Economists surveyed by Reuters expected the report by the payrolls processor to show a gain of 201,000 jobs. The report was released ahead of the U.S. Labor Department’s non-farm payrolls report on Friday, which includes both public and private-sector employment. Economists are forecasting a net increase of 220,000 jobs, roughly in line with gains so far this year. The unemployment rate is expected to tick one-tenth of a percentage point lower to 5.2%.

The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate was 1.7 percent for the week ending August 22, unchanged from the previous week’s unrevised rate. The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending August 22 was 2,257,000, a decrease of 9,000 from the previous week’s revised level. The previous week’s level was revised down by 3,000 from 2,269,000 to 2,266,000. The 4-week moving average was 2,264,250, a decrease of 250 from the previous week’s revised average. The previous week’s average was revised down by 750 from 2,265,250 to 2,264,500.

The number of Americans filing claims for

Hillary-Clinton-Watermark-Silicon-AP

Hillary Rodham Clinton jokes during her keynote address at the Watermark Silicon Valley Conference for Women in Santa Clara, Calif., on Feb. 24, 2015. (Photo: AP)

A former aide to Hillary Clinton who helped set up her private email server has told at least three congressional committees that he will plead the Fifth to avoid testifying against his former boss, Fox News has confirmed. Bryan Pagliano appears to have played a primary role in the installation of Clinton’s “home-brew” server in her Chappaqua, N.Y. home, which has been found to contain at least hundreds of confidential and classified emails.

Pagliano, who also worked on Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign as an IT director, was subpoenaed to testify about the server by the House Select Committee on Benghazi headed up by Chairman Trey Gowdy, R-S.C, and asked to come before the Senate Judiciary Committee and the Senate Homeland Security Committee. Gowdy had also demanded that Pagliano provide documents related to all servers or computer systems controlled or owned by Clinton between 2009 and 2013.

“Mr. Pagliano’s legal counsel told the committee yesterday that he would plead the 5th to any and all questions if he were compelled to testify,” a spokesperson for Judiciary Committee Chairman Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, told Fox late Wednesday.

Pagliano’s attorney Mark MacDougall wrote a letter informing Congress of his client’s decision, cited the ongoing criminal FBI investigation into Clinton’s server.

“While we understand that Mr. Pagliano’s response to this subpoena may be controversial in the current political environment, we hope that the members of the Select Committee will respect our client’s right to invoke the protections of the Constitution,” MacDougall wrote.

Meanwhile, on Thursday Clinton’s former Chief of Staff at the State Department and longtime political ally Cheryl Mills, was scheduled to give a closed-door deposition to the Benghazi committee. The deposition was expected to cover Clinton’s server, the Obama administration’s Libya policy, and the security situation at the U.S. consulate in Benghazi leading up to the Sept. 11, 2012 attack that killed four Americans.

A former aide to Hillary Clinton who

On Hannity Wednesday night, conservative talk radio host and constitutional scholar Mark Levin said the Justice Department and Obama administration are in “full cover-up mode” over Hillary Clinton’s use of a private server, and called for a full investigation into her mishandling of classified material.

The U.S. Attorney hasn’t said a damn thing, there ought to be a grand jury empaneled,” Levin said. “I’m glad the criminal side of the FBI is investigating, it’s not enough. Where’s the U.S. Attorney General? Silent. Not a word. We’ve had special prosecutors appointed on a hell of a lot less than this. Where’s the special prosecutor? Where’s Obama in appointing it? Nowhere. The United State Justice Department under this president is in full cover-up mode. Probably some patriotic civil servant is trying to do something, but this requires a full comprehensive investigation.”

Levin also said such an investigation should require bring in all the evidence, Clinton’s staffers and, even the former secretary of state herself to testify in front of a grand jury.

“This is not an email scandal,” Levin added. “Hillary Clinton through our national security on the table for all of our enemies.”

Mark Levin said on "Hannity" the Justice

Bill O’Reilly Schools Jorge Ramos on Basic Ethics of Journalism

Univision anchor Jorge Ramos appeared on the O’Reilly Factor to advocate against punishment for illegal immigrants Wednesday, and was given the chance to be upfront with viewers. Ramos, who interrupted a press conference with Donald Trump in Dubuque, Iowa to make statements rather than ask a question, continued to say his role is one of a journalist.

“I’m just a reporter,” Ramos said, which was met with basic lesson on ethics in journalism by host Bill O’Reilly.

“You’re not,” O’Reilly said. “You’re an activist.”

Ramos said he though “O’Reilly was the last person to lecture” him when he uses the majority of the time on the O’Reilly Factor to give his opinion, which again, was exactly O’Reilly’s point.”

“I can, I’m a commentator,” O’Reilly fired back. “Why don’t you just become like me–a commentator. You’re not a news man anymore. You’re an advocate now.”

Ramos also repeated the oft-made claim that the number of illegal immigrants pouring accross the border has stabilized at 11 million. That, of course, is false. According to a recent report by the U.S. Census, the number of illegal and legal immigrants surged by 4.1 million from the second quarter of 2011 to the second quarter of 2015, including 1.7 million in just the last year. Much of the increase has been fueled by Mexican immigration.

has been widely reported that net migration from Mexico (the number leaving vs. the number coming) fell to zero, something seems to have changed in the last 18 months. The quarterly data shows an increase of 740,000 from the second quarter of 2014 to the same quarter of this year. The average of estimates of the illegal immigrant population from DHS, the Pew Research Center, and the Center for Migration Studies (CMS), suggests that the illegal population was likely 12.4 million in 2015.

Bill O'Reilly schooled Univision anchor Jorge Ramos

china-navy

June 24, 2014: The Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Navy replenishment ship Qiandaohu (866) (L) sails past the PLA Navy hospital ship, Peace Ark, as it docks at the Joint Base Pearl Harbor Hickam to participate in the multi-national military exercise RIMPAC 2014, in Honolulu, Hawaii. (REUTERS/Hugh Gentry)

The Pentagon confirmed they are tracking five Chinese warships in the Bering Sea off the coast of Alaska during a high profile trip to the region by President Obama. The development marks the first time the Chinese Navy has sailed that far north, according to defense officials, and comes as the communist nation held a very public military parade in Beijing on Thursday morning.

The Chinese warships, which just completed a joint exercise with the Russian navy which ended last week, are holding course in international waters, and include three surface warships, a replenishment ship, and an amphibious assault ship. The Pentagon said they were spotted at the same time that Beijing was hosting the military parade to mark the 70th anniversary of the end of the Second World War.

Bering-Sea-Google-Earth

Bering Sea on Google Earth.

The military parade was a chance for Beijing to flex its muscles on the world stage just days before President Xi Jinping visits Washington to meet with President Obama. The event included 12,000 troops, roughly 200 planes and helicopters, and around 500 troop carriers, tanks, rocket launchers and missiles. The event was also used to make public for the first time the massive Dongfeng 21-D “carrier killer” missile, which is estimated to have a range of up to 1,500 km and potentially travels at the speed of sound, making it nearly impossible to intercept.

President Xi announced he’s cutting the 2 million-strong force by roughly 300,000 in a message that focused more on high-tech naval and air assets than conventional ground troops, requiring fewer but better trained troops in the coming years.

Analysis firm IHS estimated on Wednesday that China’s defense budget would grow to approximately $260 billion in 2020, about doubling what Beijing spent in 2010. Five years ago, China spent an estimated $134 billion on defense, but “across this decade, China is expected to spend almost $2 trillion on defence,” the group’s analysts conclude.

The Pentagon confirmed they are tracking five

travel-image

Generals have marked their operations by putting pins on wall maps of the world. I could do the same for friends and neighbors who have just gotten back from some place and are about to leave for another. They often move in battalions meeting friends or family — who themselves have traveled great distances — in some center of cultural/culinary/scenic excellence.

A few appear to spend fewer nights in their gracious homes than in airport hotels, preparing for a pre-dawn flight out. There may be no place like home, but elsewhere always seems preferable.

Are we to believe that their travels are as fabulous as their Facebook posts suggest? Note the pictures showing them in some sublime Croatian village, never at overcrowded Gate 42B.

The dreaded FOMO — fear of missing out — may contribute to this perpetual need to venture far. Oxford Dictionaries defines FOMO as “anxiety that an exciting or interesting event may currently be happening elsewhere, often aroused by posts seen on a social media website.”

The mania for making bucket lists further inflames this angst. The book “1,000 Places to See Before You Die” is the mother of them all.

When someone asks the author, Patricia Schultz, to cite her favorite trip, she responds, “My next one.”

Given her mile-long list of destinations, one can well believe Schultz’s contention, “It is rare that I return to a place where I have already been.”

How about the quality of time spent traveling? You’ve seen those “36 Hours in Madrid” travel pieces listing four hot restaurants/bars, three markets and two museums in addition to the Prado. The reality is you and a million other tourists racing around the plazas to witness the “relaxed” Iberian culture enjoyed by old Spaniards who themselves never go anywhere.

As for Italy, Schultz raves about the Piazza del Duomo in Parma, adding that one might want to visit the city during the Festival del Prosciutto. That would knock off two items in one day.

These checklists often seem “a commodification of cultural experience,” Rebecca Mead wrote in The New Yorker.

And how deep is the experience? Some of the great sites go almost unseen by tourists using them mainly as picturesque backgrounds for their selfies.

I, too, have fallen into the FOMO trap at times, gulping rather than savoring travel. Why must the most valuable trips involve being far from home and spending a lot of money? I’m trying to fight back, though.

I’ve made peace with the fact that I will never skydive in New Zealand, heli-ski in Zermatt or bungee jump in the Vanuatu archipelago. I wouldn’t mind seeing India’s Golden Temple of Amritsar or Victoria Falls in Zambia/Zimbabwe. But if I die before that happens, then I guess I won’t see them.

“Leisure” and “vacation” used to be more or less used interchangeably. Now they’re very different. Non-working days are often devoted to the labor of earning more badges to place on the ledger of life.

Promoting frenetic travel has become a way to profit off Americans’ sense of inadequacy. Note how few lists include simple, free things, such as observing a year’s worth of full moons — or identifying the trees on your street.

About dying. The greatest regrets of dying people, according to a famous list, focus on personal ties — for example, neglecting old friends. One, importantly, is wishing they hadn’t lived the life others expected of them.

As far as we know, none of the interviewees cited not having rafted the Mangoky River in Madagascar or missing out on the fire dance festival in Bhutan’s Bumthang District. Not that they might not have been interesting.

Why must the most valuable trips involve

Donald-Trump-Arizona

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks to thousands at a political rally at the Phoenix Convention Center on July 11, 2015 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo: Getty)

The tone of the debate over the nation’s immigration laws has taken an ugly turn as some office-seekers offer solutions to problems that don’t exist.

The natural rights of all persons consist of areas of human behavior for which we do not need and will not accept the need for a government permission slip.

We all expect that the government will leave us alone when we think, speak, publish, worship, defend ourselves, enter our homes, choose our mates or travel. The list of natural rights is endless.

We expect this not because we are Americans, but because we are persons and these rights are integral to our nature. We expect this in America because the Constitution was written to restrain the government from interfering with natural rights.

When these first principles are violated to advance a political cause or to quell public fear, those whose rights are violated because of an immutable characteristic of birth, not because of personal culpability, become the victims of ugly public indifference or official government repression. The American history of government treatment of Africans and their offspring and the European history of government treatment of the Jewish people are poignant and terrible examples of this.

Today, the potential victims of public indifference and government repression are Hispanics in America. Hispanics here without documentation are being demonized because of the politics of nativism. Nativism — we are exceptional; we are better people than they are; we were here first — is very dangerous and leads to ugly results.

The Declaration of Independence and the Constitution underscore the truism that all persons have the same natural rights, irrespective of where their mothers were when they delivered them.

The right to travel is a natural right, even though it was not until 1969 that the Supreme Court recognized it as such. The court protects natural rights by imposing a very high bar for the government to meet before it can interfere with them, absent due process.

The high bar is called strict scrutiny. It requires that the government demonstrate an articulated area of jurisdiction and a compelling state interest served by the least restrictive alternative before it can treat a person differently or uniquely because of his or her place of birth. A compelling state interest is one that is necessary to preserve life or the state’s existence, and it must be addressed using the least force and causing the least interference with personal liberty possible.

This test was written so as to give the government wiggle room in a crisis and to make it intentionally difficult — nearly impossible — to write laws that apply only to discrete groups when membership in them is determined by birth.

But the Constitution itself — from which all federal powers derive — does not delegate to the federal government power over immigration, only over naturalization.

Thus, when the government’s motivation for enacting immigration laws is to further genuine compelling foreign policy goals, the laws will be upheld. But when the government’s motivation is nativism or fear or hatred or favoritism, strict scrutiny will operate to defeat those laws.

Shortly after the first federal immigration statute was enacted in the 1880s — the Chinese Exclusion Act — the Supreme Court ruled that aliens, whether here legally or illegally, are persons, and the Constitution protects all persons from governmental deprivation of life, liberty and property without due process.

In the same era, the court held that all babies born here of alien mothers are citizens.

The Fourteenth Amendment requires this, and its language is inclusive: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States…” Though written to protect former slaves, its language is not limited to them.

Some well-intended folks have argued that the language “all persons” doesn’t really mean “all” because it is modified by “and subject to the jurisdiction (of the United States).” But that language refers to the offspring of mothers who, though here, are still subject to a foreign government — like foreign diplomats, agents or military. It does not refer to those fleeing foreign governments. It does not — and cannot — impose an intent requirement upon infants.

My guess is that nearly “all persons” reading this are beneficiaries of this clause because they — you — were born here.

When the history of our times is written, it might relate that the majority repressed the rights of minorities by demonizing them using appeals to group prejudice — by blaming entire ethnic groups for the criminal behavior of some few members of those groups.

That history might reflect that this was done for short-term political gain.

If that happens, it will have changed America far more radically and dangerously than any wave of undocumented immigrants did. And that would be profoundly and perhaps irreparably un-American.

The tone of the debate over the

Mitch-McConnell-AP

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kty., speaks to the press in the halls of the Senate. (PHOTO: AP)

Speaking to a local reporter in Hazard, Kty., Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has capitulated on defunding Planned Parenthood, again refusing to follow through on a promise to Senate Republicans in order to avoid a budget fight with Democrats. The GOP Senate leader once again promised to take further action on fundamental party platform issues and campaign promises if and when a Republican occupies the White House after the next election.

“We just don’t have the votes to get the outcome that we’d like,” McConnell said. “I would remind all of your viewers: The way you make a law in this country, the Congress has to pass it and the president has to sign it. The president has made it very clear he’s not going to sign any bill that includes defunding of Planned Parenthood, so that’s another issue that awaits a new president hopefully with a different point of view about Planned Parenthood.”

Conservatives, who have been pushing an effort to defund the nation’s largest abortion provider following a series of videos exposing PPFA’s lucrative trafficking of baby body parts, are predictably furious. On Tuesday, the pro-life Center for Medical Progress released the ninth video in the Planned Parenthood baby parts scandal, in which Perrin Larton, the Procurement Manager at longtime PPFA partner ABR admits that abortion laws threaten their baby body part cash cow.

“McConnell did it again,” Senate Conservatives Fund President Ken Cuccinelli said in an email to PPD. “This is exactly the opposite of what Senator McConnell said last year when he was campaigning to be Majority Leader. Then, he promised to use the power of the purse to stop liberal policies.”

Cuccinelli said that “McConnell’s betrayal goes beyond this one issue. In the past eight months, he has kicked out all three legs of the Republican stool.”

Indeed, then-Senate Minority Leader McConnell promised voters in his home state and nationwide he would rip ObamaCare out “root and branch.” He further infuriated the fiscal wing of the party when he allowed Senate Democrats to sneak in funding for the Export-Import Bank, much to the surprise of the GOP conference that was ensured it would remain unauthorized. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, a 2016 presidential candidate, took to the Senate floor in July to say McConnell “looked me in the eye and looked 54 Republicans in the eye” and “flat-out lied” moments after he had lined up a vote to reauthorize funding.

“He betrayed national security conservatives when he broke his promise to defund the president’s executive amnesty and gutted the Senate’s ability to stop the Iran deal,” Cuccinelli said. And now he’s betraying social conservatives by refusing to even to try to stop taxpayer funding for Planned Parenthood.”

President Obama’s negotiated nuclear agreement with the regime in Tehran received the 34th vote needed to ensure approval in Congress after retiring Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., announced her support on Wednesday. While GOP congressional leaders in D.C. are quietly and privately breathing a sigh of relief–mainly because they are almost certain to avoid a filibuster fight–many lawmakers and pro-Israel activists on both sides of the aisle are furious over the approval of what many believe should have been subject to treaty ratification. Rather than needing 41 votes to approve the deal, President Obama and supporting Democrats would have needed 67 votes in the Senate to ratify the deal.

Though McConnell claims not to have the votes necessary to even wage a half-hearted fight–not counting Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.V., who opposes funding PPFA–it technically would only take 41 votes in the Senate to block a bill that funds Planned Parenthood. Counting Manchin, conservatives need just 40 Republicans to oppose cloture to defeat the continuing resolution (CR) scheduled for a vote later this month.

“But instead of standing up to the president, McConnell preemptively surrendered,” Cuccinelli added, “again.”

Speaking to a local reporter in Hazard,

Exposing the “Fallacy” of Wealth Redistribution

income-redistribution-sign

A pro-free market and liberty protestor holds a sign reading “My Wealth is Not Available for Redistribution” across from Occupy Wall Street protests.

Like Sisyphus pushing the rock up a hill, I keep trying to convince my leftist friends that growth is the best way to help the poor. I routinely share new evidence and provide real-world data in hopes that they will realize that good results are more important than good intentions.

In a triumph of hope over experience, let’s see once again if we can get the boulder to the top of the hill.

James Piereson of the Manhattan Institute has a superb article in Commentaryabout “The Redistribution Fallacy.” Here are some passages, starting with an observation that American voters are very skeptical about using government coercion to equalize incomes.

Public-opinion polls over the years have consistently shown that voters overwhelmingly reject programs of redistribution in favor of policies designed to promote overall economic growth and job creation. …While voters are worried about inequality, they are far more skeptical of the capacity of governments to do anything about it without making matters worse for everyone. …Leaving aside the morality of redistribution, the progressive case is based upon a significant fallacy. It assumes that the U.S. government is actually capable of redistributing income from the wealthy to the poor. …Whatever one may think of inequality, redistributive fiscal policies are unlikely to do much to reduce it, a point that the voters seem instinctively to understand.

Piereson points out that big changes in tax policy don’t have much impact, presumably because upper-income taxpayers take sensible and easy steps to protect themselves when they’re targeted by government, but they’re willing to earn and report a lot more income when they’re not being persecuted.

…there are perfectly obvious reasons on both the tax and the spending side as to why redistribution does not succeed in the American system—and probably cannot be made to succeed. …The highest marginal income-tax rate oscillated up and down throughout the 1979–2011 period. It began in 1979 at 70 percent during the Carter presidency. It fell first to 50 and then to 28 percent in the Reagan and Bush years. It rose to 39.6 percent in the 1990s under the Clinton presidency, and went down again to 35 percent from 2003 to 2010. It is now back up to 39.6 percent. The highest rate on capital gains moved within a narrower band, beginning at 28 percent in 1979 and falling as low as 15 percent from 2005 to 2011. The highest rate is currently 23.8 percent. Over this period, regardless of the tax rates, the top 1 percent of the income distribution lost between 1 and 2 percent of the income share after taxes were levied. …At the other end, the poorest quintiles gained almost nothing (about 1 percent on average) in income shares due to cash and in-kind transfers from government. In 2011, for example, the poorest 20 percent of households received 5 percent of (pre-tax) national income, and 6 percent of the after-tax income.

taxes-1980-88-laffer-curve

Moreover, it’s laughably inaccurate to claim that the United States doesn’t have a progressive tax system.

Many in the redistribution camp attribute this pattern to a lack of progressivity in the U.S. income-tax system; a higher rate of taxation on the wealthy should solve it, they think. …A 2008 study published by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development found that the United States had the most progressive income-tax system among all 24 OECD countries measured in terms of the share of the tax burden paid by the wealthiest households. …The top 20 percent of earners paid 93 percent of the federal income taxes in 2010 even though they claimed 52 percent of before-tax income. Meanwhile, the bottom 40 percent paid zero net income taxes—zero. For all practical purposes, those in the highest brackets already bear the overwhelming burden of federal income tax, while those below the median income have been taken out of the income-tax system altogether.

Indeed, it’s worth noting that the reason that government is much bigger in Europe is not because they tax the rich more, but rather because they have higher burdens on low- and moderate-income taxpayers (largely because of the value-added tax).

Simply stated, there aren’t enough rich people to finance a giant welfare state, particularly when they can easily choose to avoid confiscatory tax levels.

And this explains why honest American leftists occasionally will admit that they’re real goal is higher taxes on the middle class. That’s where the money is.

But I’m digressing. Let’s get back to Piereson’s article.

He also explains that redistribution doesn’t work on the spending side of the fiscal ledger.

Turning to the spending side of fiscal policy, we encounter a murkier situation because of the sheer number and complexity of federal spending programs. The House of Representatives Budget Committee estimated in 2012 that the federal government spent nearly $800 billion on 92 separate anti-poverty programs that provided cash assistance, medical care, housing assistance, food stamps, and tax credits to the poor and near-poor. …most of the money goes not to poor or near-poor households but to providers of services. The late Daniel Patrick Moynihan once tartly described this as “feeding the horses to feed the sparrows.” This country pays exorbitant fees to middle-class and upper-middle-class providers to deliver services to the poor. …This is one reason that five of the seven wealthiest counties in the nation are on the outskirts of Washington D.C. and that the average income for the District of Columbia’s top 5 percent of households exceeds $500,000, the highest among major American cities.

Gee, I’m shocked to learn that big government is a racket that lines the pockets of Washington insiders.

So what’s the bottom line?

The federal government is an effective engine for dispensing patronage, encouraging rent-seeking, and circulating money to important voting blocs and well-connected constituencies. It is not an effective engine for the redistribution of income. …those worried about inequality should abandon the failed cause of redistribution and turn their attention instead to broad-based economic growth as the only practical remedy for the sagging incomes of too many Americans.

Amen.

If you want an example of how statism hurts the less fortunate, look at what’s happened to Venezuela.

It used to be one of the richest nations in Latin America, but bad policies in recent decades haveresulted in stagnation and deprivation.

Now, Venezuela is a basket case.

It’s so bad that even establishment media outlets can’t help but notice, as illustrated by this passage from an article in The Economist.

Though the poor initially benefited from “Bolivarian socialism”, economic mismanagement has made them poorer.

In other words, Venezuela is a real-world example of the famous parables about socialism in the classroom and buying beer with class-warfare taxation. Demagogic politicians don’t understand (or don’t care) that when you punish production and reward sloth, you get less of the former and more of the latter.

Which brings me back to Piereson’s concluding points. If you care about the poor, strive for more economic growth with policies based on free markets and small government.

Nations that follow that approach vastly out-perform the countries that choose statism.

That’s looking at the big picture. Now let’s look at an example that confirms Piereson’s point about redistribution programs mostly benefiting interest groups rather than poor people.

John Graham of the Independent Institute has a very sobering column about Medicaid in the Providence Journal. It turns out that record amounts of spending for the program doesn’t yield much benefit for poor people.

Medicaid is the largest means-tested welfare program in the United States.  …new research suggests that only 20 to 40 cents of each Medicaid dollar improves recipients’ welfare. …How much does Medicaid increase recipients’ actual welfare? In other words: Does $100 of Medicaid spending increase the dependent’s well-being by $100? More? Less? …recipients’ behavior indicates they only valued their benefits at one-fifth to two-fifths of the money spent is a serious indictment of the program.

So who does benefit from the program’s ever-growing fiscal burden?

Medicaid spending is driven by providers, especially hospitals, which have relentless lobbying operations. …The study group found that 60 percent of Medicaid spending comprises transfers to such providers

But here’s the most amazing conclusion from this new research.

Medicaid enrollment did not improve mortality or any physical health measure.

The only logical conclusion is that we need to reform Medicaid. Heck, let’s fix the entire mess created by the Washington-created welfare state.

It’s been bad for taxpayers and bad for poor people.

P.S. If you want to see sloppy and biased analysis (paid for with your tax dollars), take a look at efforts to rationalize that redistribution is good for growth from theInternational Monetary Fund and Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

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Like Sisyphus pushing the rock up a

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