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David Harsanyi
David Harsanyi
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An Assault on Taxpayers

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When Dan Nerad, the superintendent of schools in Madison, Wis., was informed that 40 percent of the teachers union was calling in sick this week (evidently, something's going around), he shut down the entire operation. "At this ratio," he explained, "we have serious concerns about our ability to maintain safe and secure school environments."

Where can one find a safe environment for children? As political props for union activists, of course, holding prefabricated signs demanding the state go broke funding increasingly inferior yet increasingly costly education. OK, by education I mean pensions. But isn't it nice to see kids thinking for themselves?

Now, as easy as it is to blame unions, it's not enough. We have a bigger problem, and that's monopoly.

Every year government grows, each time a state assigns itself new duties, the monopoly expands. Education is just the worst example.

Whatever you may think of the politics of private-sector unions — now less than 7 percent of the work force — they function in a competitive environment. Public sectors, on the other hand, have artificial leverage that no other workers in the nation enjoy.

In Wisconsin — where union sign wavers have yet to get the memo that Nazi imagery is no way to embrace the new era of civility — lawmakers are attempting to reform bargaining rights of about 170,000 public-sector workers in unions. More precisely, they want to restrict union members to bargaining for wages rather than take taxpayers hostage with unsustainable pensions and benefit demands every few years.

Wisconsin's fight is just a harbinger, of course. A recent Pew poll on states found that state pension systems have a combined $1 trillion in unfunded liability. In other words, every U.S. household may have the honor of subsidizing someone else's public service an extra $8,800.

The counterargument is familiar.

These folks are sacrificing healthy salaries by choosing to teach your children rather than greedily chasing riches that they would almost certainly realize if they took their talents to the private sector. (Funny, isn't it then, that when we try to inject competition into education, it's met with anger and scorn by the people who sacrifice without it.)

But according to the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics report — a new one is due next month — state and local government employees, all told, are already making approximately $12 more per hour than private workers. Last year, a USA Today analysis found that federal employees' average compensation had grown to be more than double what their private-sector counterparts were making. Public service, indeed.

Immunity from economic downturns and market fluctuations is a rarity in America — though we've been doing our best via bailouts. The problem isn't that government workers are trying to get theirs; it's that the arbitrary reward is often tied to the vociferousness of the worker's demand rather than reality.

Certainly, how Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker fares in this battle will be an important signal to the rest of the nation. Some places, such as Colorado, only recently have allowed state workers to organize. Other states are facing pension nightmares. Who knows? States may begin privatizing and allowing competitive outsourcing of jobs. States must, because nationally we're headed in the other direction.

"Some of what I've heard coming out of Wisconsin, where they're just making it harder for public employees to collectively bargain generally, seems like more of an assault on unions," explained President Barack Obama, who, unlike governors, can (and does) borrow trillions. The numbers, though, tell us that public-sector unions are the ones assaulting taxpayers and brittle state economies. And the more we grow the state monopoly the worse it will get.

David Harsanyi is a columnist at The Denver Post. Follow him on Twitter at davidharsanyi. To find out more about David Harsanyi and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 THE DENVER POST

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS.COM


Comments

3 Comments | Post Comment
A radio news report last night on the Wisconsin teachers' and public employees' union protests mentioned millions of dollars that the unions are pushing into their protests. If they have that much money available in their political budget, why do they need to bleed the states' taxpeyers???
Comment: #1
Posted by: partsmom
Sat Feb 19, 2011 4:34 PM
How can the argument be made that private sector workers can compete when overseas workers will take pennies on the dollar that Americans do? I guess when your biggest markets are no longer the USA, you don't have to pay workers in the USA.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Rich
Mon Feb 28, 2011 1:01 AM
REALITY CHECK

Prior to the illega lestablishment of the private Rockefeller-Rothchild et al FED
---all federal debt was paid for by revenues from tariffs.

Since the FED purchasing power of the American dollar has decreased 96%.

Further, it is not confessed and ON RECORD that the PRIVATE Federal Resserve
totally financed the Bolshevik Coup d' etat in 1917 ----AND deliberately precipitated the
Great Depression.

Their record of involvement with empowering fascism is already well known.

STOP wasting time with sideshow distractions.

OPEN, audit, prosecute and END the FED ----NOW.
Comment: #3
Posted by: free bee
Tue Mar 1, 2011 7:47 PM
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