Boston Herald

Govt pregnant with paid family leave

- By GEORGE F. WILL George Will is a syndicated columnist.

WASHINGTON — The recent bipartisan budget agreement, which indicates that 10-digit deficits are acceptable to both parties even when the economy is robust, indicates government’s future. So does government’s pregnancy, which was announced nine months ago by this tweet from Sen. Marco Rubio (RFla.): “In America, no family should be forced to put off having children due to economic insecurity.”

The phrase “due to economic insecurity” is a way to avoid saying “until they can afford them.” Evidently it is now retrograde to expect family planning to involve families making plans that fit their resources. Which brings us to the approachin­g birth of a new entitlemen­t: paid family leave after the birth or adoption of a child. This arrival will coincide with gargantuan deficits produced primarily by existing entitlemen­ts.

Still, the president has promised to oppose House Speaker Paul Ryan’s and his party’s proclaimed determinat­ion to address the entitlemen­t crisis. And the president has endorsed paid family leave. Five states and the District of Columbia (and many other cities) have paid-leave laws, and at least 23 states are considerin­g them. Naturally, given the nature of democratic politics, the national government’s portion of the political class is eager to truncate states’ experiment­s by making paid leave either an explicit national entitlemen­t or an implicit one, by making states toe lines drawn in Washington.

Although this will advance the left’s agenda of broadening and destigmati­zing dependence on government, many conservati­ves support it in the name of “family values,” and because free stuff polls well. But it will not be free for

someone, so the argument is about who should pay. So, the debate will concern ways to disguise the benefit’s costs while requiring others to pay for it.

Congress is understand­ably fond of unfunded mandates that require others (state and local government­s, businesses) to pay for its preference­s, for which it neverthele­ss reaps political credit. But further burdening small (meaning the vast majority of) businesses is economical­ly and politicall­y imprudent. Besides, businesses would pay for this somehow, and most would pay for it, at least partly, by reducing employees’ pay.

So, one of the deficiten larging provisions of the recent tax cut is a two-year experiment with tax credits for businesses that offer paid leave. Another idea is to pay for family leave through unemployme­nt insurance, which would require a new tax, or a new level of a payroll tax.

Another proposal, which can be presented as revenue neutral, is to allow new parents to collect, say, 12 weeks of Social Security payments by committing them to forgo collecting, when eligible, an appropriat­e sum from Social Security. Neutrality regarding gender roles is mandatory, so this choice would have to be available to fathers, too, other than for the 40 percent of births that are to unmarried mothers.

America is more prosperous than it was a generation ago, when it was immeasurab­ly more prosperous than the previous hundreds of human generation­s that preceded today’s generation, which supposedly needs government help to get on with producing the next generation. Of course,

need is not quite the point. This is:

Paid family leave is another predictabl­e click of government’s leftwardmo­ving ratchet. Twentyfive years ago, Washington made many workers eligible for 12 weeks of unpaid leave, all but guaranteei­ng that merely “many,” and the absence of pay, would come to seem retrograde. The current administra­tion speaks of six weeks of paid leave. Democrats fancy 12. A likely compromise? Eighteen.

But whatever the length of, and whatever the financial support for, the paid family leave that Washington will provide or mandate, later iterations will expand both, as well as the percentage of workers’ current wages that must be provided. So, paid family leave, which will arrive in an era of trillion-dollar deficits, will demonstrat­e that limited-government conservati­sm has become a persuasion without a party.

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