A CEO’s Advice to Congress

How can government policy contribute to the kind of environment in which human productivity is maximized and in which individuals can pursue their personal happiness?

by John Allison | Jan 3, 2013 | POLITICS

With the “fiscal cliff” mess not solved but merely kicked down the road a few months, it’s a good time to summarize a few points I make in my book, The Financial Crisis and the Free Market Cure. I hope – but do not expect – that our elected representatives learn to take a more broad-thinking approach in their problem solving when they revisit this issue in the coming months. It would be useful for them to have these points in mind (excerpted from chapter 19 “Some Political Cures: Government Policy.”)

In the long term, we cannot consume more than we produce. Our standard of living is fundamentally driven by our ability to produce goods and services that improve our quality of life and the quality of life of those with whom we trade. The question is, how can government policy contribute to the kind of environment in which human productivity is maximized and in which individuals can pursue their personal happiness?

The following are government policy structures that lead to a better quality of life, based on observations of the impact of government policies and of psychological and philosophical incentives on human action – especially on the behavior of business leaders:

  1. Low or neutral tax rates increase productivity and raise the standard of living for everyone, including the poor. High tax rates discourage investment and encourage high-income individuals to spend a great deal of their intellect and capital trying to avoid taxes.
  2. Government spending as a percentage of GDP needs to be materially reduced.
  3. The most important focal points for cost control are the massive entitlement programs: Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare.
  4. Government regulations must be radically reduced. According to an annual study, the total cost of U.S federal government regulations in 2008 was $1.75 trillion, or 12 percent of GDP.
  5. Free trade is essential for economic well-being.
  6. Immigration of productive and hardworking individuals must be encouraged.
  7. At the macro level, we must restore discipline to our political system. Above all, we need politics that encourage savings and investment and discourage unnecessary spending.

Made available by The Cato Institute.

John Allison was CEO of BB&T.

John Allison is an executive in residence at the Wake Forest School of Business. He is a member of the Cato Institute’s Board of Directors and chairman of the Executive Advisory Council of the Cato Institute’s Center for Monetary and Financial Alternatives. Allison was president and CEO of the Cato Institute from October 2012 to April 2015.

The views represent those of the author and not necessarily those of Capitalism Magazine.

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