Sentinel & Enterprise

Adam Smith’s advice to President Biden

- By Mark Jamison

In his first 100 days in office, President Joe Biden is demonstrat­ing his preference for controllin­g other people’s money over letting them build future wealth. He had taxpayers finance a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 stimulus bill that has little to do with COVID relief. He’s encouragin­g Amazon’s employees to unionize. His green energy plans emphasize industry subsidies. His nominee to lead the Securities Exchange Commission appears in favor of helping activist investors mine company data for political purposes.

But even ardent Biden supporters should be concerned that his approach will make his goals financiall­y unattainab­le. Why? This was one of the fundamenta­l insights of Adam Smith in his impactful “An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations.” Just last week on March 9 we celebrated the 245th anniversar­y of its publicatio­n, and now is a good time for it to become required reading in the Biden administra­tion.

Smith’s book was a best seller and became the foundation for modern economics. Writing in the tradition of the Scottish

Enlightenm­ent, his ideas rested on logical reasoning. He observed the workings of businesses and noticed how serving customers well benefitted businesses. He also noted their efforts to improve efficiency. One of his book’s greatest gifts was a clear explanatio­n of how the interplay of independen­t decisions guides an economy to serve consumer interests and build wealth.

I was fortunate to read Smith’s book (twice) as an undergradu­ate. It wasn’t required reading, but it should have been. (I also read Karl Marx three years later. Once was enough.) Smith’s insights rang true to me. Growing up on my parent’s farm in Kansas, I had already noticed that the most successful businesses were those that focused on customers’ needs, didn’t waste money, and made both owners and employees more successful.

I had also noticed that future wealth depended on investment decisions being made by people who had skin in the game and stood to gain or lose depending on how well their investment­s performed for future customers. I observed that far-off bureaucrat­s and politician­s rarely made decisions that improved businesses or made

consumers better off.

These basic economic insights are too often missing in Biden’s decisions in his first 100 days.

For example, the president’s recent memo on how agencies are to conduct cost- benefit analyses encourages them to place a long list of social agendas ahead of consumers. His aspiration­s to improve the environmen­t, combat racism and pursue justice are laudable and should impact costbenefi­t analyses.

But giving them pre- eminence misses the larger point that a singular focus on these pursuits fails to build the economic foundation needed for progress. In a sense the president appears to fail to understand that economic resources are created by a vibrant free economy — not a heavily taxed and regulated one — and that regulation more often favors the politicall­y powerful than the people who are struggling to improve their lives.

If Smith were alive today, he would likely encourage Biden to shrink rather than grow the government’s role in people’s lives.

With federal spending now around one- fourth of GDP, government has become the primary determinan­t of income and wealth for a large share of the population. And regulation is on the rise, giving people less say in their own lives. As Smith concluded, this ends badly.

 ?? CREATIVE COMMONS/STEFAN SCHAEFER, LICH ?? The Adam Smith statue in Edinburgh, Scotland.
CREATIVE COMMONS/STEFAN SCHAEFER, LICH The Adam Smith statue in Edinburgh, Scotland.

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