End the Export-Import Bank and Other Forms of 'Crapitalism'
It's crapitalism when politicians give your tax money and other special privileges to businesses that are run by their cronies.


There's capitalism, and then there's "crapitalism"—crony capitalism.
Capitalism is great because it lets entrepreneurs raise money so they can scale up and get their products and services to more people. If there is free competition, innovators with the best ideas raise the most money, and the best and cheapest products spread far and wide.
But it's crapitalism when politicians give your tax money and other special privileges to businesses that are "most deserving of help." Often those businesses turn out to be run by politicians' cronies.
Many government agencies feed this crony capitalism. When there is scandal, such as when the Energy Department lost $500 million on Solyndra, we sometimes hear about it. But often we don't. You probably didn't know about the department's other fat losses on businesses like Solar One, the Triad ethanol plant, FutureGen, the Clinch River Breeder Reactor, and so on.
Even the Small Business Administration is an embarrassment. They loaned $1 million to a Lamborghini dealership and $3 million to a Rolex dealer. Is this where your tax money should go?
Voters assume government handouts go to people who need help. But they usually don't. Most government handouts go to the middle class and the rich.
Government has no business handing out loan guarantees to companies. Corporations can pay their own way. The Agriculture Department's Market Access Program gives millions of dollars to affluent groups like the Pet Food Institute, the Wine Institute, Sunkist, and Welch Foods. In return, politicians get campaign contributions. It's disgusting crapitalism.
The biggest funder of this crony capitalism is the Export-Import Bank. The bank says its "financial products enable exporters of all sizes to … protect against the risks of international trade and export with confidence."
That sounds good, and it's why most politicians support it. But for the first time in my memory, there is pushback. Many Republicans want to stop this corporate welfare. The chairman of the House Committee on Financial Services, Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, points out that most of the government's export loans go to "Fortune 500 companies like G.E., like Boeing, who could easily finance these things themselves … the Export-Import Bank claims they create American jobs, but when the Export-Import Bank helps Boeing sell a jet to Air India, it hurts Delta Air Lines."
Right. When government picks winners, it pats itself on the back—and gains crony friends in industry. But it creates losers at the same time.
"When Export-Import Bank helps G.E., and others build an oil refinery in Turkey, it hurts the domestic refining industry," says Hensarling. "For every job Export-Import creates in exports, they kill an American job domestically. It's not helping us."
But few of us bother to complain. Benefits of government spending go to a concentrated few—who fight to keep the program going. When taxpayers and domestic businesses suffer because of resources transferred to the well-connected Ex-Im Bank-linked businesses, we each lose just a few bucks. We will never hire as many lobbyists to criticize the bank as the beneficiaries do to keep it going. Like every other government program, Ex-Im Bank creates a vocal constituency that never wants to see the program die.
And that time and energy spent lobbying is time that companies might have devoted to improving their product or making their business more efficient. Gifts from government get companies to focus on lobbying instead of innovation. Government favoritism creates bad incentives.
Before he was president, Barack Obama agreed with me. He said, "I'm not a Democrat who believes that we can or should defend every government program just because it's there. There are some that don't work, like … the Export-Import Bank that has become little more than a fund for corporate welfare."
Yes! Candidate Obama understood. But now, instead of getting rid of the Ex-Im Bank, he wants the bank to loan out even more of your money.
Does America need "export assistance," as well as "small business support," an "energy policy" and so on?
No! We already have a time-tested policy for deciding, without government interference, where resources should go. It's called the free market. It works much better than government does.
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What?!? You mean President Obama is really just Bush the 3rd and nothing has gotten better? Well I never.
/turns nose up. Walks away briskly
Also does Francisco D like stossel? I can't remember.
I like Stossel.
I remember shortly after I became a libertarian, despairing of all the statism in the media. Then, I caught one of his specials.
So, thirded.
GIVE ME A BREAK!?
A little further back than that.
I respect a good mustache. The fact that he is a libertarian is a bonus.
But do you get the feeling, ever, that he's just preaching to the mustache choir?
Oh, don't even get me started about the mustache choir.
Take the excessive amount of money out of government and a lot of problems will fix themselves.
Does America need "export assistance," as well as "small business support," an "energy policy" and so on?
No! We already have a time-tested policy for deciding, without government interference, where resources should go. It's called the free market.
But,but that would be chaos, anarchy, how can we have anything without a plan from our betters? Failing to plan is planning to fail.
Progtard
Oh yeah, the free market fairy! Well who controls this "free" market of yours? The rich and the corporations! That's who! Without government control the rich and the corporations would enslave us all while reducing the environment into a barren wasteland! Is that what you want? Because that's where your "free" market leads! Slavery to the corporations! Aaaaaauuuuuggghhh!
"crapitalism"
That's worth stealing.
I'm suspicious of their ties to Vandelay Industries.
Kruger Industrial Smoothing
'We don't care, and it shows'
I'm not too worried about it.
We libertarians spend too little time bitching about corporate welfare and too much about social welfare to the poor. The social welfare state is a problem, but government's protection of rich people from the competitive destruction of capitalism is a bigger one. I firmly believe there are plenty of liberals and moderates out there who would happily join us if they understood we opposed this stuff.
Kudos to Stossel for tackling this issue. More in the future please.
Attraction for borrowers? Who cares? It allows bureaucrats to build empires and politicians to brag about "helping small business" without having to do anything to actually help small businesses. That's a statist win-win.
What is the attraction for borrowers?
The loans are taxpayer guaranteed. So if you know the right people it's more like a grand than a loan.
Because some people get very good at filling out the paperwork. You have an economic disincentive to pursue the guarantee that they lack.
*grant*
Also, they are probably available to people who wouldn't qualify for bank loans.
Like I said, more like a grant than a loan.
"What? Those greedy bankers laughed at your business plan? That's not fair. Sure I'll hook you up. What if you can't pay it back? Well, that's what taxpayer guaranteed means. Think of it more like a grant than a loan. If the greedy banker is right, and your business plan is a flop, then you don't have to pay it back! Isn't that great?"
For a small enterprise paying back an SBA loan is harder than paying back conventional financing.
All the time someone has to spend counting the number of paperclips on hand to report back to the SBA isn't spent making money for the business. I'm not exaggerating by much.
The primary force behind SBA loans come from the loan brokers and bankers who charge fees to handle the immense paper work burden involved before the loan ever gets approved. The process is so convoluted that attempting it without an experienced broker is mostly a waste of time. It only continues after the loan is made, it doesn't increase or decrease.
That is unless things have improved since the 90s. What are the chances of that ?
Sometimes compassion is more important than profits.
/prog