When Freedom reigns – even here in America

by
Skip

…Looking around the country, we find huge gaps in major metropolitan areas’ economic fortunes — for every booming Dallas-Fort Worth, there’s a sclerotic Detroit.

Adam Smith’s principles, put forth more than two centuries ago, go a long way toward explaining why some areas do so much better than others. In “The Wealth of Nations,” the Scottish economist linked prosperity to a political economy of freedom, built upon private property, market incentives, free trade, specialization and a culture of commerce.

Sor of like how the US was founded – freedom, respect for private property, marketplace over government, and for that time, commerce was seen as a public good to be elevated.  Sadly, we see these virtues being cast negatives (re: the rise of two Socialists in running for President).  I’ve posted before the listing of countries and the direct correlation of their economic freedom and the resulting heightened living standards of their citizens.  Here we see that it doesn’t just hold at the country level (reformatted, emphasis mine):

To see how Smith’s wisdom applies to the wealth of cities, we use an index of economic freedom for U.S. metropolitan areas that focuses on three broad factors — size of government, the tax burden, and labor-market freedom. The result is a single number that ranks each Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) from zero to 10 on economic freedom, with zero being lowest and 10 being highest.

MSAs that score highly on the index tend to have relatively low taxes, smaller government spending and public employment, less dependence on government transfers, pay rates largely driven by market forces, and below-average union membership. In short, these cities limit government and give markets more breathing space, letting businesses and individuals make the decisions that shape local economic activity.

Economic freedom varies among the nation’s 380-plus metropolitan areas — from a high of 8.52 in Naples, Fla., to a low of 3.32 in El Centro, Calif. Among the largest cities that account for most of the nation’s economic vitality, the freest MSAs are centered on Tampa, Houston, Dallas, Miami, Orlando, Denver, Atlanta, San Antonio, St. Louis and Phoenix.

And the important question:

Does greater freedom produce more vibrant local economies, ones that grow faster and create more jobs? To focus on the bigger cities that are the primary engines of the U.S. economy, we looked at the 100 largest MSAs — those with populations above 542,000. We divided these into five groups of 20, arrayed from highest to lowest in economic freedom.  The freest MSAs saw their economies grow by 30% from 2001 to 2013, after inflation. The next group expanded by nearly as much — 27.5%.  After that, average growth declined substantially as economic-freedom scores waned. Turning to job creation, the freest 20% recorded average employment gains of 17% from 2011 to 2014. The rate of job creation fell by half for the second-freest 20%, then nearly halved again for those at the bottom.

Most likely, these numbers reflect lighter tax burdens, which improve market incentives for activities that contribute to growth and job creation — working, investing, building job skills, starting businesses. MSAs with freer labor markets also create an edge by shunning high minimum wages, strong unions and other interventions that raise the cost of adding workers. State-level right-to-work laws are particularly important in restraining union power. Freer MSAs are also likely to attract companies looking to relocate to more business-friendly environments.

Unemployment rates are lower in MSAs with greater labor-market freedom, averaging 6.1% for the most-free group and 5.8% for the second 20%. Unemployment then rises steadily as economic freedom scores decline, reaching 7% for the least-free group.

Perhaps surprisingly, the average cost of living is nearly 35% lower in the most-free MSAs than in the least-free group, suggesting a link between economic freedom and higher living standards.  Housing prices contribute heavily to variances in living costs. MSAs with greater economic freedom impose fewer impediments on new housing, so supply-increases blunt price pressures. The same applies to other markets — less government meddling and greater market competition help keep prices low.

The combination of low taxes and living costs makes paychecks go further. Wage rates are often quite high in places with low economic freedom, such as New York and Los Angeles. After adjusting for differences in taxes and living costs, however, average hourly wages are nearly $16 in the 40% of MSAs scoring highest in economic freedom. Adjusted pay in the least-free group falls to $12.40. The less-constrained capitalism of the freest cities doesn’t widen the rich-poor gap. Income inequality, measured by wage dispersion, is lowest for the middle 20%, but the most-free cities show significantly less inequality than the least-free ones.

The evidence suggests that Americans recognize that metropolitan-area economic freedom makes them better off. Among the 100 largest MSAs, the freest 20% attracted a net in-migration of 9 million people from 1992 to 2011, while the least-free 20% showed a net loss of more than 7.1 million. The net gain for the freest group was 24%, compared to a net loss of 14% for the least-free MSAs.

Summary?  Not good for those that believe that the State should be making the decisions instead of those creating and doing the work:

Economic freedom in U.S. cities faces a constant threat from those who would raise taxes, spend more on pet projects, redistribute wealth or impose restrictions on how others use property. The metropolitan areas that resist these demands reap the gains of greater economic freedom.

The question is, we hear from politicians about “50 labs of Democracy” when talking about the States – but this proves it works at smaller levels as well.  The problem as I see it, there is a hard core cadre of Progressives that are trying as hard as they can to turn all the States into cookie-cutter cut-outs – each one exactly the same (think Zandra Rice-Hawkins of Granite State Progress who has been trying to YEARS to import the worst of California, Illinois, (heh!  Detroit), and New York to New Hampshire – more unions, more constraints on commerce, more regs on housing and zoning….yeah, the generalized complaint that Massholes moving up to NH for the freedom keep wanting to bring in MA governance with them.  Ideology trumps empirical evidence like that above.

But the worst is the idea that we individuals should never EVER be in charge of themselves – and this study shows that those that treat their residents like economic serfs, well, get serfs.  Worse, they don’t mind doing it to other people.  Gee, history, even here in America, just keeps repeating itself.

It just comes down to Power and Trust; who is greedy enough to march after Power over others and not Trusting others to act best in their own self interest. Or that IS the problem – they don’t want people to be able to decide themselves what is in their own self-interest.

(H/T: IBD)

Author

  • Skip

    Co-founder of GraniteGrok, my concern is around Individual Liberty and Freedom and how the Government is taking that away. As an evangelical Christian and Conservative with small "L" libertarian leanings, my fight is with Progressives forcing a collectivized, secular humanistic future upon us. As a TEA Party activist, citizen journalist, and pundit!, my goal is to use the New Media to advance the radical notions of America's Founders back into our culture.

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