I have received more personal emails
regarding my earlier essay Declare
Detroit a Free City than all my
other essays put together. Some have been especially poignant. For example, one lady said that she and her
husband, who has been unemployed for two years from a company for which he
worked for twenty-five years, would move to a Free Detroit themselves,
confident that her husband could find work.
I pointed out to her that Ludwig von Mises explained that the only real
barrier to economic expansion was the limited supply of labor, which puts a
practical limit to the expansion of the division of labor. In other words, the larger the pool of labor,
the more specialized is the economy, which results in lower costs of
production.
No Unwilling Unemployment in a Free Market
By himself an individual cannot exist
much above basic survival, if he can even do that. However, larger groups who engage in peaceful
cooperation develop a division of labor which allows each individual to
specialize according to his comparative advantage, accumulate capital, and
provide everyone else in the group with goods and services that would be
impossible for them to produce in a hermit's existence. Given the fact of an unlimited desire to
improve our condition that is limited only by the size of the labor pool, Mises
explained that under free market capitalism there is no unwilling unemployment. There is always more work to be done than
there are people to it. Therefore, the
first step to freeing Detroit from its downward economic spiral is to remove
whatever barriers exist that prevent people from working.
Step One--Free the Market for Labor
The greatest of these barriers to work are
the myriad and complex laws that interfere in the ability for labor and capital
to arrive at mutually agreeable terms of employment. Minimum wage laws should be the first to go,
but also the many costly labor regulations that business must consider when
hiring. Government has been piling on costly
mandatory benefits, whether these benefits would be valued by the employee in a
free labor market or not. Again, Mises
explained that business must take into account the total cost of labor, not
just the wage cost. If business must pay
for other benefits, then that cost must be added to the explicit wage cost to arrive
at the real, total cost of labor.
Protecting the All Important First Rung of the Ladder
Minimum wage laws and onerous regulation
raise--or eliminate altogether--that critical first rung on the employment
ladder for many workers, preventing them from gaining that all important first
step on the road to independence and self-reliance. The entry level employees and younger
workers, those who have less marketable skills and whom labor laws are supposed
to benefit, are the ones who are harmed the most by labor laws. These workers are locked out of the labor
market by the inexorable laws of economic reality. If their skills provide business with less
revenue than their total costs of employment, no business can employ them for
long without running out of capital.
Hence, they never get on the ladder at all. This is a tragedy not only for them but for
all of us, too.
Dismantling the Ladder: Cooperative Relations Under
Constant Attack
Our lawmakers seem to live in an
alternative world where they believe that wages may be mandated ever upward
with no adverse economic consequences. In
this tragic world--where unfortunately WE live--they are doing everything
possible to stop new entrants from entering the labor force and gaining the
skills that businesses would be willing to give them. Currently there even is a movement afoot to
outlaw the practice of "employing" interns. Internships are one way for workers with low
marginal productivity to gain skills and contacts in the careers of their
choice. Typically, an intern works
either for free or perhaps for room, board, and a small stipend. Hypocritically, Congress itself
"employs" many interns. My son
was an unpaid intern for our congressman for two summers while in college. Needless to say his eyes were opened to the
ways of the world, which have served him well as an attorney.
The most egregious attempt at
interference in what has always been a free labor market occurred recently in
the great farm state of Iowa. The U.S.
Department of Labor, with assistance from the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
attempted, unsuccessfully, to bring the children of farm families under their regulatory umbrella! The rest of us benefited immensely when
Iowa's farm families said NO!. Not only
was this an intrusion into the hearths and homes of some of the most hard
working and independently reliant people in America, it would have created a
precedence for even more intrusions into American families' everyday lives. Tell junior to take out the garbage and mow
the grass? Make sure you pay minimum
wage, buy workers' comp insurance, and file that W-2 at the end of the
year! (Don't think that this could not
have happened!)
Detroit Could Become a New Beacon of Freedom
What might ordinary people achieve if
all barriers to the free use of their labor were removed? Might they not be inspired to move to such a
place, set up shop, take on interns, establish apprenticeships, and produce the
goods and services that all of us need and cannot produce for ourselves? They would be following in the footsteps of all
those who crossed an ocean to do just that, seeking only the opportunity to
live and work freely. Detroit could
become the new beacon of freedom and liberty for the oppressed people of
America, like the lady who told me that she and her husband would move to a
Free Detroit. She and her husband would
follow in the honorable tradition of our pilgrim ancestors and all who came
here later seeking only freedom. Let us
establish such a place, a haven free of the oppressive hand of the parasitic
state. And let us establish it in the
most dysfunction real estate in America--the bankrupt city of Detroit. All that our oppressors have to fear is our
success.
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