InzeladunMaster
First Post
The bureaucracy of government is similar in many ways. In theory, you can take a dollar or an hour of your time, or both, and achieve something like feeding the hungry....
"Our country puts $1 billion a year up to help feed the hungry. And we're by far the most generous nation in the world when it comes to that, and I'm proud to report that. This isn't a contest of who's the most generous. I'm just telling you as an aside. We're generous. We shouldn't be bragging about it. But we are. We're very generous."—George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., July 16, 2003
This is what I suspect and fear about the government model of providing services, health care, etc versus the free market model. It's also more of a core principal of conservatism.
I think you are overlooking the areas where the free market fails, namely in the arenas of public goods (roads, national defence, etc), externalities, market power abuses, and equity issues. Lack of oversight and a laissez faire attitude about economics brought about the Great Depression - and gave rise to Keynesian economics, which you seem to dismiss pretty handily.
Oversight is also just another kind of bureaucracy and is inefficient, not to mention the political difficulties that our party system entails when oversight fails.
Without this oversight you decry, we wouldn't even have GAAP (accounting standards). GAAP was pretty liberal for its time - it totally reinvented accounting, changed the way things were and paved the way for a more uniform future (in regards to accounting issues). Now it is old hat, and seen as rather conservative... Oversight (checks and balances) is important, from both an economic and accounting standpoint. Of course, what do I know? I am just an economics teacher with an bachelor's degree in accounting, an MBA and a lot of economic coursework underneath my belt.