In the realm of government schools, we can hire teachers to teach children effectively in the classroom, or we can hire more administrative staff to make sure that the school complies with ever greater regulation. Both would put wages in the economy that would then be spent on food, but only the first has the delightful knock-on effect of teaching others how to create more wealth. The spent wages of the administrators add little or no value until they land in the hands of somebody else who will create wealth with them.Yup, I get it. Damned few politicians – on either side of the aisle – have any clue at all, though. Or they just don't care, as the regulation devolves to their immediate political benefit, and that's their only consideration.
In the private sector, we can hire an engineer to design a new medical device, or an internal auditor to support our "internal controls" assessment required under Sarbanes-Oxley. We can add a programmer to improve our service to our customers and perhaps lower their own compliance costs, or an accountant to track the tax attributes of every product we sell.
You get the point.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
The Impact of Regulation...
Over at The Spirit of Enterprise there's a great post that points to this article about the impact of regulation on jobs. The post makes this point:
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