Leftist Women Are an Abomination
Watch a C-SPAN Caller Tear Into the Democratic Socialists of America's Co-Chair
Oh, the GOP Just Got Some Very Good News About the 2026 Midterms...
Head of Top California Med School Couldn't Say This Biological Fact During a...
Watch Bill Maher Rip an NPR Reporter Right to His Face
Ro Khanna Should Just Be Called Jussie Smollett Over This Fiasco in Israel
This Florida Woman's License Plate Should Give You a Good Laugh
Pregnant Women Suffer More Miscarriages When They Fall for 'Trans' Nonsense
WI Rep. Gwen Moore Repeats This Long-Debunked Lie About Illegal Alien Crime
Is Netflix Serious With Its Description of This Classic Oscar-Winning Film?
Maine Voters Deserve to Know Matt Dunlap Still Stands With Graham Platner
Democrat Bob Brooks’ Financial History Raises Serious Questions in Key PA House Race
If the Evidence Is Settled, Show Us the Data
Day 4 of Iran Strikes: US Bombards Iran, Israeli Special Forces Strike, and...
Arkansas Test Scores Are Up. Guess What Changed?
OPINION

What Makes Things Affordable?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
What Makes Things Affordable?
AP Photo/Heather Khalifa

Affordability. It's the word on everybody's lips.

Ever since self-described socialist Zohran Mamdani became the frontrunner in the New York City mayoral election by saying the word "affordability" with talismanic regularity, we have been told that the key to modern politics is that word's repetition. Say "affordability," and watch your polls rise.

Advertisement

And yet the world becomes ever more unaffordable.

Why?

Because there is, in the end, only one way to make things more affordable: to reduce prices. And there are only two ways to reduce prices: to reduce demand or to increase supply.

But governmental interventionism tends to do precisely the reverse. Government interventions are generally designed to increase demand through subsidies, thus increasing prices; or they are designed to reduce supply through restrictions and regulation; or both.

Here is a list of products that have become more expensive since 2000: hospital services; college tuition and fees; college textbooks; medical care services; child care; food and beverage; housing. Here is a list of products that have generally remained the same in terms of price or declined: new cars; household furnishings; clothing; cellphone services; software; toys; televisions. It is no coincidence that the first list includes heavy government regulation and subsidization; the second list includes products that have been left to the supposed predations of the free market. That is because free markets -- through competition and its consequent efficiency-seeking -- generate more supply and more efficiency.

And yet. 

Virtually no politician is willing to say the obvious: that in order to achieve affordability, politicians must be deprived of their power, not given more of it. It's far easier electorally to pander -- to tell voters that if only politicians are given more power, they can fix all voters' problems. 

Advertisement

That's a lie.

But it's an increasingly ubiquitous lie on both sides of the aisle. And when politicians deign to tell the truth, they are quickly savaged for it.

Take, for example, H-1B visas. Now, there are many honest questions to be asked about H-1B visas: Do they properly screen for assimilative capacity? Are the jobs for which they screen truly empty of competitive options from American workers? Are employers taking advantage of immigrant laborers? Are we offering too many or too few of these visas? But the overall objection to H-1B visas is broader: It is the general notion that legal skilled immigrant labor harms affordability.

That isn't true.

Obviously, restricting the supply of labor drives up wages in a protected industry -- which makes life more affordable for those particular workers in those particular industries. At least temporarily. But at the other end of the production pipeline are more expensive products. And those prices are passed on to all consumers. And if those products become uncompetitive, consumers turn to other suppliers, those impoverishing precisely the industries targeted for protection -- or forcing businesses to offshore or turn to technological substitutes for human labor.

Again, none of this is an argument for unfettered immigration. Mass migration damages America culturally -- and unskilled mass migration damages America economically as well. But if we wish to address the affordability crisis, we must actually address it -- not just repeat slogans about it, and then hope that, magically, government will be able to solve it.

Advertisement

Ben Shapiro is a graduate of UCLA and Harvard Law School, host of "The Ben Shapiro Show," and co-founder of Daily Wire+. He is a three-time New York Times bestselling author. To find out more about Ben Shapiro and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2025 CREATORS.COM

Editor’s Note: After more than 40 days of screwing Americans, a few Dems have finally caved. The Schumer Shutdown was never about principle—just inflicting pain for political points.

Help us report the truth about the Schumer Shutdown. Use promo code POTUS47 to get 74% off your VIP membership.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement