Incentives Matter and Always Will

It used to be that achievement and taking personal responsibility mattered and were rewarded. Incentives have changed. If your company is “too big to fail” or has too many union employees, the government won’t let you fail whether you deserve it or not. If you haven’t made it a priority to pay for your own insurance, the government will take money from other Americans to pay your bill. It used to be that you had to serve customers at a competitive price; now, the government will provide free incentives to buy your clunkers! That’s your government at work.

We know incentives work, but liberals continue to act as though they can control people’s lives and destroy free-market incentives and people will still keep achieving, keep investing, keep hiring, keep serving, and, of course, keep paying higher and higher taxes. If the more you make, the more they take, why work harder?

What if the next time you went to a department store, they locked the doors, identified the top 10% of the wealthiest customers and forced them to pay for the purchases of all of the other customers in the store. If you received free purchases, you’d be surprised and certainly happy. You’d probably come back with your friends! But what are the chances those wealthy clients would return? How long would it take until you were now the top 10% forced to pay the whole bill? Incentives matter and always will.

Many economists believe that the recession is coming to an end and the economy will improve. The stock market has a long way to go to recoup losses, but progress has been made in recent months. Problems still remain. Although a “lagging indicator,” over 9% of Americans are still out of work and even President Obama suggests it may reach 10%. It’s true that the president has not “raised” anyone’s taxes…yet! But with the deficit hitting an all time high of over $1.27 trillion with no sign of abating any time soon, that day is coming. Even worse, with the incentives Obama’s administration is putting in place, you can expect stagflation—anemic growth, limited job creation and deficit-induced inflation.

What is the conservative answer? What it has always been—better incentives for new business growth and lower taxes for those who invest and produce that growth. With such a plan, this economy would turn around with the vitality and strength that it has always shown. But if we don’t reclaim our free-enterprise heritage, don’t expect other countries to invest their “cash” in our economic “clunker!”