The Keys to Economic Growth
by
Ron Paul
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Recent economic
data show that U.S. job growth in May was negligible, while the
official unemployment figure at least the figure the Labor
Department admits to rose to 9.1%. The real unemployment
figure, however, as compiled by economist John Williams, may well
be higher than 20%. It is clear the U.S. economy is in terrible
shape, and that no amount of government spending or Federal Reserve
quantitative easing can reduce unemployment, increase real productivity,
or address our debt fiasco. U.S. jobs and productivity are dependent
on the accumulation of private capital to finance existing businesses
or fund new entrepreneurial activity. Private capital whether
accumulated by profitable U.S. businesses, invested by private equity
and venture capital firms, or attracted from abroad is the
key to economic growth and new jobs. But we cannot create jobs if
we demonize profits, punish risk-taking capitalists, and stay hostile
to foreign investment.
The steps to
encouraging capital investment and creating new jobs in America
are simple, though not easy:
- First and
foremost, we must create a sound U.S. currency backed by gold
or some other commodity respected by the market. No nation in
history with a rapidly depreciating currency has attracted private
capital. Unless and until we prohibit the Treasury and Federal
Reserve from essentially creating money and credit from thin air,
we cannot restore the U.S. economy.
- Second,
we must create a favorable regulatory environment for U.S. business.
This cannot be stressed enough. When businesses dont know
whats coming next from the EPA, when Obamacare spikes their
healthcare costs, or when the Dodd-Frank bill adds almost unknowable
regulatory compliance burdens, businesses simply will not expand
and hire. It is time to start shrinking the federal register.
- Third, we
must stop spending trillions of dollars overseas on foreign wars.
There is no point in debating a foreign policy we cannot afford.
It no longer matters what neoconservatives want. Our interventionist
foreign policy is financed on credit, and our credit limit has
been reached. Our economy would be infinitely better off if those
trillions of dollars had never been removed from the private economy
or added to our debt.
- Finally,
we must completely revamp the U.S. tax system and move to a territorial
model that does not tax foreign source income. U.S. corporations
are sitting on more than a trillion dollars in foreign earnings
that cannot be repatriated to the U.S. because of taxes. We need
to stop taxing unpatriated funds to bring those earnings home.
Better yet, we need to abolish the income tax altogether.
The U.S. economy
is in deep trouble. Congress needs to act immediately to restore
the rule of law and create an environment that rewards, rather than
punishes, the critical components of any healthy economy: capital
accumulation and investment.
In this struggling
economy it is essential for politicians to take a step back and
think about what government has been doing to business in this country.
In less than 200 years, the free market, property rights, and respect
for the rule of law took this nation from a rough frontier to a
global economic superpower. Today, however, our nation and our economy
clearly are headed in the wrong direction.
Of course,
America has never enjoyed absolute free-market capitalism: creeping
government intrusion and special interest political patronage have
existed and increased since our founding. But America historically
has permitted free markets to operate with less government interference
than other nations, while showing greater respect for property rights
and the rule of law. Less government, respect for private property,
and a relatively stable legal environment allowed America to become
the wealthiest nation on earth.
By contrast,
the poorest nations almost always demonstrate hostility for free
markets, private property, and the rule of law. Capital formation,
entrepreneurship, credit, and wealth accumulation are uniformly
discouraged in poor countries. Private contracts are not reliably
enforced, and private property is not secure in the hands of owners.
The predictable result is widespread poverty and misery.
See
the Ron Paul File
June
27, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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