
Iโve written many times about how big businesses often climb in bed with politicians to lobby for anti-market policies such as subsidies, bailouts, and protectionism.
To get these special favors, they often deploy the โbaptists and bootleggersโ strategy, which means finding some nice-sounding reason for special interest policies.
For instance, the big health insurance firms lobbied for Obamacare because they liked the idea of getting undeserved profits by having the government force people to buy their products.
But they pretended that their motive was more access to health care.
Another example is the way some large companies are embracing โstakeholder capitalismโ to curry favor with politicians and interest groups.
Today, letโs look at an additional version of this unsavory phenomenon.
The BBC reports that the CEO of a pretend-meat company likes the idea of big tax on his more tasty competitors.
The founder of the worldโs biggest plant-based meat company has suggested that a tax on meat could help tackle some of the problems from growing meat consumption. Asked if he backed a tax on meat, Beyond Meatโs Chief Executive, Ethan Brown told the BBC โthe whole notion of a Pigouvian tax, which is to tax negative, you know, things that are high in externalities, I think is an interesting one. Iโm not an economist, but overall that type of thing does appeal to meโ. โฆA tax on meat consumption would definitely be beneficial to companies such as Beyond Meat because it would make their products cheaper in comparison, says Rebecca Scheuneman, an equity analyst at US financial services firm Morningstar.How much of an advantage it would give โdepends how significant the tax would beโ, she told the BBC.
The woman from Morningstar is quite correct that a tax on meat would help the bottom line of companies that offer competing products.
Just as I wrote in 2012 that a tax increase on small businesses would tilt the playing field in favor of big businesses.
Matthew Lesh of the London-based Adam Smith Institute wrote about a potential meat tax in an article for CapX.
Beyond Meatโs call for a meat tax is a textbook example of โbootleggers and baptistsโ: a policy supported by a coalition of profiteering rent seekers hiding on the moral high ground. โฆdoes any of that make a new meat tax a good idea? โฆa cost-benefit analysis conducted by the University of Bristol concluded that a meat tax โcould do more harm than goodโ. The researchers found it would cost ยฃ242 million a year but only save ยฃ100 million per annum in reduced carbon emissions. โฆThen thereโs the most simple argument of all โ most people enjoy meat. We get satisfaction and it provides important nutrients. โฆmost people do not want to stop eating meat and there is substantial growing demand from the rising middle class in Asia and Africa.
While he makes a good point about the costs and benefits of meat taxation, I especially like Mr. Leshโs point about people wanting to consume meat.
This is also why I donโt want politicians imposing sugar taxes.
Or taxes on other things that fall into disfavor, such as tobacco. Or things that rise into favor, such as marijuana.
There are plenty of things in life that are unhealthy and/or dangerous. Maybe Iโm just a knee-jerk libertarian, but I think adults should be free to make their own choices about the levels of risk theyโre willing to incur.
And I certainly donโt want nanny state policies that โ in reality โ are the result of big companies trying to get unearned profits.
Remember, only earned profits are moral.
Reprinted from International Liberty
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