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Blocking the Paths Out of Poverty
Written By : John Stossel

Have you noticed how often government takes sides against the little guy?

Street vending has been a path out of poverty for Americans. And like other such paths (say, driving a taxi), this one is increasingly difficult to navigate. Why? Because entrenched interests don’t like competition. So they lobby their powerful friends to erect high hurdles to upstarts. It’s an old story.

Now, growing local governments are crushing street vendors.

The city of Atlanta, for example, has turned all street vending over to a monopoly contractor. In feudalist fashion, all existing vendors were told they must work for the monopoly or not vend at all.

“Vendors who used to paying $250 a year for their vending site must now hand over $500 to $1,600 every month for the privilege of working for the monopoly,” wrote Bob Ewing in The Freeman. Ewing works for the Institute for Justice, the libertarian public-interest law firm that defends victims of anticompetitive regulation.

IJ has sued the city on behalf of two popular vendors.

In Hialeah, Fla., if you operate a flower stand too close to a flower store or if you’re not constantly moving, you can be arrested.

Institute lawyer Elizabeth Foley says the regulations make “it virtually impossible to be an effective street vendor. You can’t be within 300 feet of any place that sells the same or similar merchandise. That’s absolutely ridiculous for the government to use its power to enact a law like that. … These people are just trying to make an honest living, and the city is making it impossible to do so.”

The law does seem designed to cripple street vending.

“You have to be in constant motion, which is completely unsafe.”

Raul Martinez, the mayor when the law passed, defended the rule.

“You don’t want to have everybody in the middle of the streets competing for space on the sidewalk without some sort of regulations. In the city of Hialeah, we’re not overregulating anybody.”

He says one purpose of the law is simple fairness: Street vendors don’t pay property taxes. Brick-and-mortar stores must.

“They also create jobs,” Martinez said. “What we did back then is we got all the groups together and we came with an ordinance that was satisfactory to all of the parties at the time.”

But they couldn’t have gotten “all the groups” together because people who hadn’t yet entered the business weren’t included. How could they have been? No one knew who they would be. What the mayor did was get the established guys together. Such “fairness” regulation kills job growth and reduces consumer welfare because the entrenched interests write rules that cripple new competition.

Mayor Martinez argued that “you create an unfair advantage when you allow that vendor selling in the front of a flower shop to sell the same flowers that the flower shop sells, and to sell them at a much reduced price. That’s unfair competition.”

It’s a fair point: Why open a brick-and-mortar store and pay property tax if you could save maybe $3,000 a year by selling from a cart?

“These are different types of business models,” Foley replied. “A florist can offer professional arrangement. A florist can offer delivery. A florist has a bathroom. Air conditioning. A street vendor is out there on the street, and the way they compete is on price and convenience; you can drive up and get your flowers and go home quickly. There’s nothing wrong with having two different types of business models competing near each other. It happens in America all the time.

“It’s not legitimate for government to use its incredible power to make one business model have an unfair advantage over another.”

As a libertarian, I’d say that the store owners’ beef is with the local government that imposes the property tax, not the street vendor struggling to make a better life.

If government destroys all the paths out of poverty, the welfare state will look like the only way to help the poor.

Maybe, in addition to helping entrenched interests, that’s the bureaucrats’ goal.

1
  • Anonymous

    Rights and privileges are granted from on high to the well-connected few who can then exploit whoever they want for their own profit as long as they kick enough back to the higher ups to keep them happy.  The ability to make money isn’t available to everyone, it’s granted to a select few.  To get ahead you don’t need hard work or intelligence, you need connections and support from the political elite.

    Yep, feudalism seems like the right description for this.

    Which is why big-government types in general are opposed to the 2nd amendment.  Armed serfs are a contradiction in terms.     

  • Anonymous

    Constitutionalists versus Monarchists. That’s what we’re back to. Pay off the crown, curry favor with the right nobles, and only then are you able to do business. For everybody else it’s exorbitant fees and ridiculous licensing, or the brute squad overturns your cart and sends you off to the countryside.

    Due process and equal protection is supposed to prevent these abuses. Granting arbitrary exemptions from laws is highly unamerican and is supposed to be illegal. Obama embraces it, awarding his friends cash and favor, while punishing and taxing his opponents.

    The corruption of the Federal government has now reached a critical mass. The free market and business can no longer function in this environment, hence the results we see now.

    • Anonymous

      They’re more clever this time around.

      They won’t actually deny you permission all that often.  They’ll simply create fees and paperwork that make some action essentially impossible, but not technically forbidden.

      So when you say “why aren’t you letting us build/do/say/own/etc X” they can respond with “you are perfectly free to do whatever you want, you just have to pay the convenience fees that are there for everyone’s benefits and fill out this environmental report, labor report, diversity report, complete your necessary tolerance training, and subject yourself to regular inspections for compliance (and fees to cover those inspections”.

      Before you had to stay off the kings lands because he owned them by diving right.  Now you stay off the feds lands because you couldn’t possibly afford to push through even the initial stages of an environmental impact report (and if you could it would be delayed in committees until you are long dead).  

      • Anonymous

        God forbid that we make sure companies are good stewards of the land.  Surely you have no problem with making sure that buildings are up to code and the the environment is safe for people to work in.  Wow what a novel idea.

        • Anonymous

          If all these regulations were simply meant to be a fair medium between no development and completely destroying the world that would be one thing.

          And perhaps even that’s how they started out.

          But now it’s simply a method for the feds to flex their muscle and exert control over every aspect of our lives.

          Consider for instance the carts in this article.  Who is being saved by basically turning all these individual small business owners over to the control of one monopoly that is well connected with the local government?

          Does this save gaia?  Will it make our food safer, or water cleaner?  

          Will it literally save lives?  

        • Anonymous

          Because forcing urban street vendors to pay exorbitant fees to a monopoly organization will totally save the environment.

          Moron.

          • Anonymous

            Street vendors are the primary cause of global warming.

            The science is settled!

        • Anonymous

          I doubt anyone is advocating in favor of harmful food, dangerous buildings or wholesale pollution of the land, air and water.  The right recognizes and is opposed to government intervention which does more harm than good.  Government interference in the market often does more good than harm.  Training and licensing fees favor those already in the market and discourages competitors from entering the market.  This is basic economic fact.

          Leftists like yourself automatically support any additional control by the government because you accept their reasons for taking action.  The fact that the law of unintended consequences creates additional problems is ignored by the left and is another reason why the right is cautious of any action by the government to “solve” a problem.

          Have an Evil day

  • Bill Dalasio

    Perhaps a bit of a stretch, but not much, I have a store across from my office that makes absolutely wonderful schnitzel platters.  It’s a little more expensive than Mickey D’s (not by much) but it’s consistently terrific and its an actual meal that’s a few orders of magnitude better in quality.  It’s one of the few times I can honestly say that I feel a bit excited about going out for lunch.  The place started out as a food truck.  They still operate the truck in addition to the store.  Just yesterday, I grabbed lunch from a street truck that was selling “grilled cheese”.  I use the quotes because the grilled cheese in question was smoked gouda on artisan wheat bread with pulled pork and came with tater tots with a habanero relish.  The point is that street vendors often offer some of the most innovative and creative products you can find, often at good value.  And that makes sense, in a way.  If you’ve got a really off-beat idea that could be the next big thing or could go over like a lead balloon, you probably don’t want to commit a lot of capital to the venture.  In the case of the poor, well the capital just isn’t there.  It’s the opportunity that they need to build the capital stake to open the nice restaurant or store that would otherwise remain nothing more than a dream.  In addition to locking the poor out of the opportunity to lift themselves out of their predicament, laws against street vendors leave the rest of us locked into a stasis of established mediocrity where we are forced to do without (how many people start a habit of buying flowers for loved ones because they can pick up a dozen roses for $12 from a street vendor, rather than paying $50 to a florist) or never discover.

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