| Labor's Great, Capital is Key |
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Posted Under: Monday Morning Outlook |
For centuries, the philosophical, economic and intellectual debate has swung back and forth between the creation of wealth and the redistribution of wealth. In politics, this debate often shows up as a battle between capital and labor.
Labor Day celebrates labor, and it's really worth celebrating. Labor creates things; including self-worth. "Look what I accomplished" is a sentiment anyone who has labored to create something can relate to.
Unfortunately, many believe labor is undervalued, while capital is unjustly rewarded. But, labor and capital have a symbiotic relationship. One cannot prosper without the other.
Capital boosts productivity and productivity boosts living standards. Workers could seize this capital and redistribute it. But, without new capital to seize, the temporary lift to living standards would fade. Rapidly.
If labor wants higher living standards for a lifetime and their children's as well, public policies must protect and nurture capital so it's as plentiful as possible.
For example, auto workers in the Detroit-area often won contracts giving them more lifetime compensation (particularly health benefits) than the companies they worked for could consistently generate. The long-term result: a city that's a rusted skeleton of its former self, bankrupt, with fewer jobs, and lower living standards relative to the rest of the country.
Attempts to redistribute wealth in Detroit ended up redistributing the capital to other states, and to the suburbs. In fact, when looking at wealth disparity look no further than the disparity between Detroit and its surrounding suburbs.
The best way to increase capital investment is to increase the after-tax return to capital, by cutting taxes on corporate profits, dividends, and capital gains, as well as hastening the ability to write-off the cost of buying new plant and equipment.
What doesn't work is a modern mix of central planning and crony capitalism, where politicians grant favors or regulatory punishment. Think "green energy."
Rather than making capital more plentiful, and creating jobs, subsidies siphon capital away from companies that would use it more effectively. Wind and solar may make it on their own someday, and we hope they do, but current policies result in less overall capital and lower retuns on average to all capital. The impact is fewer jobs and lower incomes.
We know a better set of capital friendly policies are not immediately on the way. As a result, we suspect that the medium-term future will look a lot like the most recent five years. States and industries that have higher returns to capital will flourish (be Race Horses), but places which treat capital more poorly, will flounder (call them Dead Horses). Make a Race Horse drag a Dead Horse, and you get a Plow Horse.
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