This is not an
exercise in hindsight—discussing what we could or should have done differently
in 2020—but an examination of that year’s political trends, which represent a
growing threat to freedom, social peace, and economic prosperity in Canada.
The trends that
pose this threat were driven by leaders in the world of academia, media, and
politics who find their inspiration in the manifesto of the prophet Karl Marx
that was dictated to him by the God of Fairness. In 2020, they accelerated the
shift from arguing that income inequality is caused by capitalists who exploit
workers to arguing that inequalities are caused by the systemic discrimination of
females, indigenous, racial, and other minorities taking place in rigged capitalist
markets.
Under the
traditional strategy, the advocates for greater income equality made much of
the decadent life of the world’s billionaires and other super-rich people. The
complementary part of the traditional strategy was to give much exposure to
accounts of the sufferings of low-income families and their children that we
encounter in the media every day.
Past efforts
using this strategy have led to the creation of Canada’s welfare state. We now
have a social security net that provides financial support to the physically
and mentally handicapped, the retired poor, and the unemployed. It provides
access to free medical services and basic education to all. The spending
programs are backed by a progressive tax regime under which low-income earners
pay no tax and the top 10 percent pay one half of all personal income taxes.
This welfare state is supplemented by the efforts of food banks and many
private charities.
However, more
recent efforts to expand the welfare state have not succeeded. Gini coefficients—which
are one if inequality is total, and zero if income equality is perfect—during
the years 1999 to 2018 averaged .44 for families before tax and .31 after tax,
without any trend and with annual values always within one percentage point
around the average.
The recent
failure to create enough voter support for the expansion of the welfare state
to make the distribution of income fairer undoubtedly has contributed to the
decision to switch to the new strategy with its focus on the role systemic
discrimination plays in the economic and social suffering of demographic
minorities. This strategy appeals to people who are unhappy with their income,
wealth, or social status and makes them ready to vote for politicians who
promise to end systemic discrimination and raise their incomes.
Finance
Minister Chrystia Freeland’s 2020 fiscal update promised that her government
would revamp social institutions and laws. This will almost certainly require
changes to policies and institutions that are blamed for the discrimination
suffered by several important groups of Canadians, but which have made Canada
one of the freest and richest democracies in the world.
The first of
these changes already has led to significant reductions in the freedom of
speech, which arguably is the most fundamental safeguard of democracy. It was
lost when universities in recent years have prevented in increasing numbers
visits by speakers who defend existing institutions. Publishers of such views
in public media are regularly shamed and some lose their jobs. More important
is the restrictions on free
speech caused by hate-crime legislation,
which requires some state-appointed individuals to decide whether an author
should be fined or jailed for voicing an opinion they consider incites hate.
The new
strategy also envisions chipping away at the traditional methods used to hire
employees or admit students on the grounds that they are a root cause of
systemic discrimination. Thus, under the threat of legal action, some
institutions of higher learning and private sector employers have been
pressured into using quotas to select employees and students. Harvard
University and the University of California are high-profile examples of U.S.
institutions that have used such quotas, though they are also used in Canadian
universities.
Private
companies also are increasingly pressured to use quotas when selecting board
members. It is reasonable for business owners to appoint board members
with the best qualifications needed to contribute to the health of the company,
but the quota system forces them to employ less-qualified individuals and
reduces their income and property rights. Canada’s national income and
prosperity thus suffer.
The use of quotas
to eliminate systemic discrimination and reduce income inequality is
wrong-headed because it rests on the false premise that discrimination leads to
and is evidenced by differences in the proportion of minorities employed in
specific occupations and the proportion they represent in the entire
population. The basic fact is that no one can really know why such over- or
under-representation of minority groups exist in any occupation.
The problem
with using differences in the proportion of demographic groups in specific
firms or industries as evidence of discrimination is glaringly obvious when we
consider that blacks make up 13.4 percent of the U.S. population but are 81.1
percent of the players on professional basketball teams. Athletic abilities and
personal preferences rather than discrimination explain the over-representation
of blacks in this sport, just as they do in the rest of the economy.
Quotas are not
a productive way to eliminate discrimination, so what can be done to discover
where discrimination exists and how it can be dealt with? In his book “The
Economics of Discrimination,” Nobel laureate economist Gary Becker has provided
the answer: Encourage and enable employers to maximize profits by hiring the
most qualified workers regardless of their gender or ethnic backgrounds.
Employers who follow this rule increase their business at the expense of those
who do not and ultimately go under. Basketball teams that discriminate against
hiring blacks no longer exist.
This model for
the creation of a world without discrimination has room for government
policies. Public education about the evils of discrimination is one such
policy, but more important is the elimination of obstacles to the efficient
operation of labour markets created by unions and government regulations, which
in the past prevented women from becoming firefighters, soldiers, medical
doctors, and workers in many types of occupations.
The removal of
such restrictions will take time, as will the growth in the number of employers
who realize that discrimination is not in their interest. But relying on
markets will cost less and will be fairer than relying on quotas to eliminate
systemic or any other type of discrimination.
Herbert G. Grubel is professor of economics (emeritus) at Simon
Fraser University and a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute in Vancouver.
This paper has appeared on the website of The Epoch Times
https://www.theepochtimes.com/2020-and-the-future-of-freedom-social-peace-and-prosperity_3653940.html
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