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  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    It’s a Very Merry Christmas for Washington’s Parasite Class

    It’s a Very Merry Christmas for Washington’s Parasite Class

    Daniel J. Mitchell | Dec 24, 2013



    Last year, while writing about the sleazy and self-serving behavior at the IRS, I came up with a Theorem that explains day-to-day behavior in Washington.

    It might not be as pithy as Mitchell’s Law, and it doesn’t contain an important policy prescription like Mitchell’s Golden Rule, but it could be the motto of the federal government.

    Simply stated, government is a racket that benefits the DC political elite by taking money from average people in America



    I realize this is an unhappy topic to be discussing during the Christmas season, but the American people need to realize that they are being raped and pillaged by the corrupt insiders that control Washington and live fat and easy lives at our expense.

    If you don’t believe me, check out this map showing that 10 of the 15 richest counties in America are the ones surrounding our nation’s imperial capital.

    Who would have guessed that the wages of sin are so high?

    But even though the District of Columbia isn’t on the list, that doesn’t mean the people actually living in the capital are suffering.

    Here are some interesting nuggets from a report in the Washington Business Journal.
    D.C. residents are enjoying a personal income boom. The District’s total personal income in 2012 was $47.28 billion, or $74,733 for each of its 632,323 residents, according to the Office of the Chief Financial Officer’s Economic and Revenue Trends report for November. The U.S. average per capita personal income was $43,725.
    Why is income so much higher? Well, the lobbyists, politicians, bureaucrats, interest groups, contractors, and other insiders who dominate DC get much higher wages than people elsewhere in the country.

    And they get far higher fringe benefits.
    In terms of pure wages, D.C., on a per capita basis, was 79 percent higher than the national average in 2012 — $36,974 to $20,656. …Employee benefits were 102 percent higher in D.C. than the U.S. average in 2012, $7,514 to $3,710. Proprietor’s income, 137 percent higher — $9,275 to $3,906. …The numbers suggest D.C. residents are living the high life.
    Now let’s share a chart from Zero Hedge. It uses median household income rather than total personal income, so the numbers don’t match up, but what’s noteworthy is how DC income grew faster than the rest of the nation during the Bush years and then even more dramatically diverged from the rest of the country during the Obama years.



    In other words, policies like TARP, the fake stimulus, and Obamacare have been very good for Washington’s ruling class.

    Want some other concrete examples of profitable Washington sleaze? Well, here are some excerpts from Rich Tucker’s column for Real Clear Policy.
    The real place to park your money is in Washington, D.C. That’s because the way to get ahead isn’t to work hard or make things; it’s to lobby Washington for special privileges. Look no further than the sweet deal the sugar industry gets. It’s spent about $50 million on federal campaign donations over the last five years. So that would average out to $10 million per year. Last year alone, the federal government spent $278 million on direct expenditures to sugar companies. That’s a great return on investment.
    Big Corn may get an even better deal than Big Sugar.
    Then there’s ethanol policy. Until 2012, the federal government provided generous tax credits to refiners that blended ethanol into gasoline. In 2011 alone, Washington spent $6 billion on this credit.

    The federal government also maintains tariffs (54 cents per gallon) to keep out foreign ethanol,and it mandates that tens of billions of gallons of ethanol be blended into the American gasoline supply. Nothing like a federal mandate to create demand for your product.

    How much would you pay for billions of dollars worth of largesse?

    Well, the ethanol industry got a steep discount. In 2012, opensecrets.org says, the American Coalition for Ethanol spent $212,216 on lobbying.
    Rich warns that the United States is sliding in the wrong direction.
    What makes Washington especially profitable is that its only products are the laws, rules, and regulations that it has the power to force everyone else to follow. …we seem to be sliding toward what the authors term “extractive” institutions. That means government using its power to benefit a handful of influential individuals at the expense of everyone else.

    And let’s not forget that some people are getting very rich from Obamacare while the rest of us lose our insurance or pay higher prices.

    This Reason TV interview with Andrew Ferguson explains that there is a huge shadow workforce of contractors, consultants, and lobbyists who have their snouts buried deeply in the public trough.



    I particularly like his common sense explanation that Washington’s wealth comes at the expense of everyone else. The politicians seize our money at the point of a gun (or simply print more of it) to finance an opulent imperial city.

    So if you’re having a hard time making ends meet, remember that you should blame the parasite class in Washington.

    P.S. The insider corruption of Washington is a bipartisan problem. Indeed, some of the sleaziest people in DC are Republicans.

    P.P.S. Though scandals such as Solyndra show that Obama certainly knows how to play the game.

    P.P.P.S. Making government smaller is the only way to reduce the Washington problem of corrupt fat cats.

    http://finance.townhall.com/columnis...7872/page/full
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  2. #2
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Dec 17, 2013, 3:00pm EST

    D.C. far outpaces nation in personal earnings

    Michael Neibauer
    Staff Reporter-Washington Business Journal
    Email | Twitter

    D.C. residents are enjoying a personal income boom.

    The District’s total personal income in 2012 was $47.28 billion, or $74,733 for each of its 632,323 residents, according to the Office of the Chief Financial Officer’s Economic and Revenue Trends report for November.
    The U.S. average per capita personal income was $43,725. The highest of the 50 states, Connecticut, fell 25 percent short of D.C.
    Personal income is a combination of work and non-work related components — wages and salaries, employee health and other benefits, proprietor’s income, property income and transfer payments (such as Social Security).
    In terms of pure wages, D.C., on a per capita basis, was 79 percent higher than the national average in 2012 — $36,974 to $20,656. That, despite 10 consecutive quarters of slower-than-average D.C. wage growth and a $350 million slide in federal wages — the private sector is tugging the District's economy along.
    Employee benefits were 102 percent higher in D.C. than the U.S. average in 2012, $7,514 to $3,710. Proprietor’s income, 137 percent higher — $9,275 to $3,906.
    Social security income in D.C., meanwhile, fell 37 percent below the U.S. average last year, evidence, the CFO says, of the District’s changing, younger demographic, and a large number of retirees who many be ineligible for full Social Security benefits due to their years of government service.
    The numbers suggest D.C. residents are living the high life. Some are, but, of course, it’s not that simple. Poverty is entrenched in many D.C. neighborhoods, especially east of the Anacostia River, where earnings are virtually nonexistent and the need for social services is dire. But as long as the District is booming on a per capita basis, the money should be available to help.


    Michael Neibauer covers economic development, chambers of commerce, transportation and politics.


    Related links:
    Economic Snapshot

    http://www.bizjournals.com/washingto...-personal.html

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