Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

RiseInTheFuture.comRiseInTheFuture.com

Editor's Pick

Bad Policies Breed Bad Policies

Jeffrey Miron

grocery

Grocery bills are climbing again—up 3.2 percent over the past yearand nearly half of Americans say food prices are their biggest source of financial stress, beating out gas, rent, and utilities. Instead of fixing what caused those higher costs, Washington strangles farm labor with immigration enforcement and hikes input costs with trade barriers—and then throws farmers taxpayer money to survive. It’s the government setting the fire and then selling the water.

Take the labor market. In Oxnard, California, ICE raids cut the agricultural workforce by 20–40 percent, leaving billions of dollars’ worth of crops to rot. Farmers had to bid up wages to keep the remaining workers, raising costs, which were passed to consumers as higher food prices. Rather than freeing up labor supply, politicians now propose to subsidize farmers with taxpayer dollars to offset the damage from the very policies that caused it.

The pattern is wider than agriculture. In Houston, construction and food service industries report the same squeeze: fewer workers, slower projects, higher wages, and ultimately higher prices for households. Meanwhile, trade barriers continue to raise input costs for farmers and manufacturers alike. Rather than removing those barriers, proposals like Trump’s industrial-policy plan double down—spending billions to patch a wound that the government itself inflicted.

This is the real cost of policy layering: inefficiency compounded by redistribution. The government creates the shortage, consumers pay higher prices, and then taxpayers pay again to “fix” the shortage.

This post was cross-posted from Substack. Siddharth Pakalapati and Rishan Jaheer, students at South Forsyth High School, co-wrote it.

You May Also Like

Editor's Pick

Trump’s latest Hollywood “hit” isn’t the kind you stream. Threatening to slap a 100% tariff on films produced in foreign countries, the president’s announcement...

Politics

Timothy Terrell makes the case for property rights and market-based stewardship as the true path to sustainability.

Editor's Pick

Neal McCluskey Every year, PDK International, a professional education association, conducts a survey gauging the American public’s views on various education issues. This year’s...

Editor's Pick

Markets don’t usually hit record highs, risk falling into bearish territory, and spring back to new highs within six months. But that’s what happened...