Director's law

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Director's law states that the bulk of public programs are designed primarily to benefit the middle classes, but are financed by taxes paid primarily by the upper and lower classes. [1] The empirically derived law was first proposed by economist Aaron Director.

The philosophy of Director's law is that, based on the size of its population and its aggregate wealth, the middle class will always be the dominant interest group in a modern democracy. As such, it will use its influence to maximize the state benefits it receives and minimize the portion of costs it bears.

The logic for the law is developed as follows: [2]

In addition, the law can explain the range of public perception of various government programs:

The law bears some resemblance to Chinese Communist theory, which stipulates similarly that Communist revolution cannot come from the uneducated proletariat (as originally stipulated by Marx et al.) for similar reasons, but instead must be ushered in by the educated classes.

Milton Friedman used Director's law in his lectures to argue against the notion that governments benefited the poor at the expense of the rich. [3]

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References

  1. Stigler, George J (1970). "Director's law of public income redistribution". The Journal of Law and Economics. 13 (1): 1–10. doi:10.1086/466680. S2CID   153607311.
  2. Free to Choose Network (2010-04-19), Milton Friedman Speaks - Myths That Conceal Reality , retrieved 2021-01-14
  3. LibertyPen (2010-04-19), Milton Friedman - The Robin Hood Myth, archived from the original on 2021-12-20, retrieved 2018-02-14