Government ‘Aid’ Makes Disasters Worse

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Texans affected by Hurricane Harvey, including my family and me, appreciate the outpouring of support from across the country. President Donald Trump has even pledged to donate one million dollars to relief efforts. These private donations will be much more valuable than the as much as 100 billion dollars the federal government is expected to spend on relief and recovery. Federal disaster assistance hinders effective recovery efforts, while federal insurance subsidies increase the damage caused by natural disasters.

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Federal disaster aid has existed since the early years of the republic. In fact, it was a payment to disaster victims that inspired Davy Crockett’s “Not Yours to Give” speech. However, the early federal role was largely limited to sending checks. The federal government did not become involved in managing disaster relief and recovery until the 20th century. America did not even have a federal agency dedicated solely to disaster relief until 1979, when President Jimmy Carter created the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) by executive order. Yet, Americans somehow managed to rebuild after natural disasters before 1979. For example, the people of Galveston, Texas successfully rebuilt the city following a major hurricane that destroyed the city in 1900.

FEMA’s well-documented inefficiencies are the inevitable result of centralizing control over something as complex as disaster recovery in a federal bureaucracy. When I served in Congress, I regularly voted against federal disaster aid for my district. After the votes, I would hear from angry constituents, many of whom would later tell me that after dealing with FEMA they agreed that Texas would be better off without federal “help.”

Following natural disasters, individuals who attempt to return to their own property — much less try to repair the damage — without government permission can be arrested and thrown in jail. Federal, state, and local officials often hinder or even stop voluntary rescue and relief efforts.

FEMA is not the only counterproductive disaster assistance program. The National Flood Insurance Program was created to provide government-backed insurance for properties that could not obtain private insurance on their own. By overruling the market’s verdict that these properties should not be insured, federal flood insurance encourages construction in flood-prone areas, thus increasing the damage caused by flooding.

Just as payroll taxes are unable to fully fund Social Security and Medicare, flood insurance premiums are unable to fund the costs of flood insurance. Federal flood insurance was almost $25 billion in the red before Hurricane Harvey. Congress will no doubt appropriate funding to pay all flood insurance claims, thus increasing the national debt. This in turn will cause the Federal Reserve to print more money to monetize that debt, thus hastening the arrival of the fiscal hurricane that will devastate the US economy. Yet, there is little talk of offsetting any of the costs of hurricane relief with spending cuts!

Congress should start phasing out the federal flood insurance program by forbidding the issuance of new flood insurance policies. It should also begin reducing federal spending on disaster assistance. Instead, costs associated with disaster recovery should be made 100-percent tax-deductible. Those who suffered the worst should be completely exempted from all federal tax liability for at least two years. Tax-free savings accounts could also help individuals save money to help them bear the costs of a natural disaster.

The outpouring of private giving and volunteer relief efforts we have witnessed over the past week shows that the American people can effectively respond to natural disasters if the government would get out of their way.

 

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26 Comments
starfcker
starfcker
September 4, 2017 2:18 pm

You’re making my head hurt, Dr. Paul

nkit
nkit
  starfcker
September 4, 2017 2:25 pm

starfcker, off topic, but what are your updated thoughts/forecast on Irma? tia

edit
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-09-04/floridians-panic-buy-water-gov-warns-make-sure-your-disaster-kits-are-ready

starfcker
starfcker
  nkit
September 4, 2017 3:19 pm

They’ve been sliding the forecast South and further West before it turns North. Looks like a path similar to Ivan. Let me get some charts and I’ll put them up. Hear this article has some good charts less than an hour old. Hurricane Irma path update: Latest models reveal Florida threat | Weather | News | Express.co.uk
http://www.express.co.uk/news/weather/849840/Hurricane-Irma-path-update-latest-models-storm-track-Florida-USA-Miami-forecast-NOAA-NHC

nkit
nkit
September 4, 2017 3:20 pm
MarshRabbit
MarshRabbit
September 4, 2017 3:21 pm

Sorry to hear the Coast Guard was such a nusiance Dr Paul. Maybe you could recommend some private entity to replace the USCG and other federal responders in the next natural disaster. [imgcomment image[img]

xrugger
xrugger
  MarshRabbit
September 4, 2017 4:10 pm

Excuse me Rabbit, but if you took even one minute to think it through, you would realize that Dr. Paul is not talking about the emergency responders who pull people off roofs and out of flooded houses. He is talking about all the inefficiencies that arise after the initial emergency is dealt with and the waste that invariably follows the use of public funds to clean up messes that people used to clean up themselves.

MarshRabbit
MarshRabbit
  xrugger
September 4, 2017 4:51 pm

I’ve heard this all before; bitching & moaning about government incompetentcy, while accepting government help. If the government post-disaster aid is so inefficient, nobody is stopping them from cleaning it up themselves. That means saying “no thank you” to help from FEMA, SBA, Corp of Engineers, HUD, Federal Transit Administration, etc. Ask Dr Paul for some private sector sources to rebuild the roads, homes, businesses, etc.

Wip
Wip
  MarshRabbit
September 4, 2017 5:12 pm

“nobody is stopping them from cleaning it up themselves. That means saying “no thank you” to help from FEMA, SBA, Corp of Engineers, HUD, Federal Transit Administration…”

I think you misread the article.

MarshRabbit
MarshRabbit
  Wip
September 4, 2017 7:37 pm

“I think you misread the article.”

Don’t think so.

Dr. Paul wrote:
“Federal disaster assistance hinders effective recovery efforts….the American people can effectively respond to natural disasters if the government would get out of their way.”

Dr. Paul, while well-intended, has a romantized view of disaster response back in the day. It seems to be part of the human condition for us to look back at “the good old days”, often oblivious to how wretched those days may have been. Dr. Paul referenced the 1900 Galvaston Hurricane, but he failed to mention how the clean-up was a pretty ugly scene:
“some of the citizens of Galveston who survived the storm were…pressed into service at gunpoint by local authorities to clear dead and putrefying bodies from the wreckage….And Galveston’s African-American community was wholly shut out of the rebuilding process and denied a seat on the Central Relief Committee….”

Should We Be “Like 1900”? Probably Not.

Fat Guy
Fat Guy
  MarshRabbit
September 4, 2017 10:57 pm

You’re a special kind of stupid, aren’t ya?

Llpoh
Llpoh
September 4, 2017 9:01 pm

Govt aid makes everything worse, always. All govt aid, all of it, should stop. Charity is a private matter.

If someone wants to support, say Israel, let them send their own money. Why should the govt send $3 billion a year to them? Disgusting. They are an affluent nation, with plenty of rich citizens overseas capable of pitching in. Ditto Egypt, Ethiopia, etc.

Local welfare? Stop all of it. Private charity will surge, and it is good at the thing govt welfare is not – it separates the worthy from the unworthy rapidly.

Govt needs to get out of the charity business now. And that means SS, SNAP, Medicare and Caid, etc etc etc. It has no business in those things. Those are private and family matters.

Harry, the Texas Patriot
Harry, the Texas Patriot
  Llpoh
September 4, 2017 9:23 pm

I will give up my Social Security payments just as soon as I am refunded all the money that I and my employers contributed through the years with interest. Also, I will give up my Medicare coverage just as soon as I can recover my retiree coverage from my former employer that was cut off when I went on Medicare. In the meantime, I am in favor of cutting off both of those to people who never paid in, like the freaking illegals that need deporting immediately.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Harry, the Texas Patriot
September 4, 2017 10:01 pm

Harry – the money is gone. It was spent. Any money you are getting or will get is being sucked out of the young or is borrowed.
You are happy for the govt – ie. the young – to keep borrowing so you can get yours, screw the young? Why, of course you are, you patriot you.

That defines immoral. You are demanding that the young pay your bills. Plus the minor issue remains that you will take out many times more than what you paid in. But I paid in, you squeal, like a stuck pig. Yeah, but not enough and it was spent already. So your answer is to screw the young just so long as you get some free shit yourself. Disgusting.

You should know better.

Your attitude is no better than that of the union drones – but I was promised my pension!

Reality is hell. That you would call yourself a patriot while proposing the enslavement of the young so as to enable your own circumstances is astonishing in its hypocrisy. You are simpy demanding the country be further damaged. That is some patriotism right there.

MarshRabbit
MarshRabbit
  Harry, the Texas Patriot
September 5, 2017 6:20 am

Social Security is an insurance program, not a retirement or investment plan. Just because I don’t have an accident, doesn’t mean I get my car insurance premiums back. Insurance doesn’t work like that.

March Rabbit
March Rabbit
  Llpoh
September 4, 2017 10:59 pm

Screw you LLPOS, Government good, private funding bad!

Llpoh
Llpoh
  March Rabbit
September 4, 2017 11:16 pm

March – the same flks that bleat on about losing their SS are the same ones that scream about taxes and deficits. $20 trillion in deficits and another $1 trillion a year each and every year. The only way that ever ends is that welfare has to be slashed. There is no other answer.

And these folks do not care about who gets the bill, so long as they get their debt-funded SS and healthcare. Not their problem. Passing bad things down to future generations is most immoral.

But convincing someone of the truth is impossible if their income depends on believing the lie.

starfcker
starfcker
  Llpoh
September 4, 2017 11:21 pm

Welfare and Social Security are two different things. We’re just going to have to disagree on this one

Llpoh
Llpoh
  starfcker
September 4, 2017 11:29 pm

Star – please explain to me how it is not welfare when the average person takes out far more than they put in? Please explain how that is not welfare? Please explain how when the current SS recipients get their money from those paying today, not from any accumulated account, that that is not welfare?

Just because people pay a regular pittance to something does not entitle them to a goldmine later, funded by the young. That is welfare.

And that does not even include the Medicare scam.

The country goes a trillion further into debt each year. The biggest reason is SS and other welfare. How is it not welfare when the payments are being borrowed, and the cost put onto future generations?

The current unfunded SS liability is estimated at $21 Trillion dollars. And that is just SS! How is that not welfare.

The current unfunded Medicare liability is much, much worse than that.

Of course it is welfare. It is not self-funding. And was never intended to be. It was meant to be an insurance program, not a pension fund.

starfcker
starfcker
  Llpoh
September 5, 2017 12:23 am

You’re bringing a lot of other things into the discussion. I’m strictly talking about retirement SS. Not Medicare. Not Medicaid. Not SSDI. SS retirement is hardly a goldmine. Although I’m troubled by how the government accounts for the money, that’s not the fault of the participants. I agree with Trump, they paid in, we should honor the deal. See Llpoh, I like defined benefit pensions, too. I think the amounts have been inflated to unsustainable levels. Pensions shouldn’t be financing lifestyles. I don’t think any pension in the public sphere should be more than a grand a month, starting at 65, no earlier. Public pensions are way out of control. I’m not an ayn rand kind of guy. I don’t believe strictly in survival of the fittest. Didn’t you point out one of the libertarian kooks for coming up with rational that you didn’t owe your minor children food? I’m not dogmatic. I like a kind, compassionate society. I don’t give bums money. But I have, on occasion, seen one in distress, so that rule went out the window and I gave that one twenty bucks. Doesn’t make me a sucker. You and I will always win. Hard work, good decisions, and good fortune are an unbeatable combination. Not everyone has that raw drive and ability. Should they suffer because of that? I’ve seen real suffering in third world countries. I don’t want to see it in my everyday life.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  starfcker
September 5, 2017 12:39 am

Star – SS alone is unfunded by $21 trillion. You do not address that issue. That makes it welfare.

By the sound of it you are happy to foist that bill onto the young. People are collecting many times what they pay in. The only ones that come close to being in balance are well paid couples that work their entire lives. Otherwise, the outgoings far exceed the incomings, even allowing for inflation and interest.

If you want to cut the SS paid out by 1/2 or so, then it becomes viable. Honoring the “deal”, as you and Trump put it, is not going to be possible. Especially when Medicare is tossed in.

And by the way, there is no “deal”. People believe there is a deal, but if you look at the SS legislation, it is an insurance scheme, and pension payouts are not guaranteed by law in any way, shape, or form. Any deal is imagined, assumed, etc., but not legislated.

People need to read the fine print.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
  starfcker
September 5, 2017 2:26 pm

Llpoh, you do remember that at the time, FDR sold the SS program to the PEOPLE as “insurance” and to the SCOTUS as “welfare”? Your argument is hollow; SS is a government FRAUD, whether it is welfare or insurance depends on which idiot you are asking.
Taking out more than you paid in? Of course not, NO ONE does that. The purchasing power of the dollar has dropped 99% since 1913 (see, “Federal Reserve”), so NO ONE can take out more than they put in over a lifetime. You would have to collect HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS in new, near-worthless dollars to get more than you paid in with OLD, BARELY WORTH ANYTHING dollars. And when the Crunch (loss of faith in a worthless currency) comes, the Ponzi will collapse with it; when dollars are worthless, everything real purchased EARLIER with near-worthless dollars will become infinitely valuable (as measured in new, worthless dollars). And those who own (and can defend) a stock of real assets will be millionaires (although under siege by the starving, hopeless fools who owned no real assets and can no longer buy food).
Was this the plan from the beginning? Steal everything with worthless currency so as to dispossess native-born Americans from all they ever earned with their own sweat all their lives?
There will be no where to run, no where to hide, when the lies break down. Count on it!

MarshRabbit
MarshRabbit
  March Rabbit
September 5, 2017 6:26 am

Are you referencing Lewis Carroll’s “March Hare”, or perhaps the British expression “mad as a March hare”?

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
September 4, 2017 10:21 pm

“Heckuva job, Brownie” should be emblazoned on the FEMA building. It should never be forgotten.

starfcker
starfcker
September 5, 2017 1:20 am

I’m not arguing with you. I’m just telling you I’m cool with the whole thing. If they’ve got to tweak it to make it work, I’m cool with that too. I like Social Security. I like living in a civilized country. Social Security is a big part of that. I don’t care how they make the numbers work, really. Doesn’t bother me a bit. It bothers me when they bring foreigners in who never paid in and put them on it. It bothers me when they turn it into a welfare program for people who don’t want to work (SSDI), but I think the retirement part has been a wonderful thing. I like taking care of our elders. Certainly Medicare needs a complete overhaul. But more on the provider side. Talk about a pig trough. The county south of me, Dade County has something like 80% of all the Medicare fraud in the United States. In one county. I’ll see if I can find some figures for you.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  starfcker
September 5, 2017 2:24 am

We are largely in agreement. TBP at its finest – arguing over the minutiae.

Anon
Anon
September 5, 2017 12:23 pm

Government ‘Anything’ Makes Disasters. – There,Dr. Paul, fixed the title of the article to more accurately reflect reality.