One of the many shallow statements that sound good-- if you don't
stop and think about it-- is that "at some point, you have made enough
money."
The key word in this statement, made by President Barack Obama
recently, is "you." There is nothing wrong with my deciding how much
money is enough for me or your deciding how much money is enough for
you, but when politicians think that they should be deciding how much
money is enough for other people, that is starting down a very slippery
slope.
Politicians with the power to determine each citizen's income are no
longer public servants. They are public masters.
Are we really so eaten up with envy, or so mesmerized by rhetoric,
that we are willing to sacrifice our own freedom by giving politicians
the power to decide how much money anybody can make or keep? Of course,
that will start only with "the rich," but surely history tells us that
it will not end there.
The French Revolution began arbitrary executions among the hereditary
aristocracy, but ended up arbitrarily executing all sorts of other
people, including eventually even leaders of the Revolution itself, such
as Robespierre.
Very similar patterns appeared in the Bolshevik Revolution, in the
rise of the Nazis and in numerous other times and places, where expanded
and arbitrary powers were put into the hands of politicians-- and were
used against the population as a whole.
Once you buy the argument that some segment of the citizenry should
lose their rights, just because they are envied or resented, you are
putting your own rights in jeopardy-- quite aside from undermining any
moral basis for respecting anybody's rights. You are opening the
floodgates to arbitrary power. And once you open the floodgates, you
can't tell the water where to go.
The moral bankruptcy of the notion that third parties can decide when
somebody else has "enough" money is matched by its economic illiteracy.
The rest of the country is not poorer by the amount of Bill Gates'
fortune today and was not poorer by the amount of John D. Rockefeller's
fortune a century ago.
Both men were selling a product that others were also selling, but
more people chose to buy theirs. Those people would not have voluntarily
continued to pay their hard-earned money for Rockefeller's oil or Gates'
software if what they received was not worth more to them than what they
paid.
The fortunes that the sellers amassed were not a deduction from the
buyers' wealth. Buyers and sellers both gained from these transactions
or the transactions wouldn't have continued.
Ida Tarbell's famous muckraking book, "History of the Standard Oil
Company," said that Rockefeller "should have been satisfied" with the
money he had acquired by 1870, implying greed in his continued efforts
to increase the size and profitability of Standard Oil. But would the
public have been better off or worse off if Rockefeller had retired in
1870?
One of the crucial facts left out of Ida Tarbell's book was that
Rockefeller's improvements in the oil industry brought down the price of
oil to a fraction of what it had been before.
As just one example, oil was first shipped in barrels, which is why
we still measure oil in terms of the number of barrels today, even
though oil is seldom-- if ever-- actually shipped in barrels any more.
John D. Rockefeller shipped his oil in railroad tank cars, reducing
transportation costs, among other costs that he found ways of reducing.
Would the public have been better off if older and more costly
methods of producing, processing and shipping oil had continued to be
used, leading to prices far higher than necessary?
Apparently Rockefeller himself decided at some point that he had
enough money, and then donated enough of it to create a world-class
university from day one-- the University of Chicago-- as well as
donating to innumerable other philanthropic projects.
But that is wholly different from having politicians make such
decisions for other people. Politicians who take on that role stifle
economic progress and drain away other people's money, in order to hand
out goodies that will help get themselves re-elected. Some people call
that "social justice," even when it is anti-social politiccs.