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Tuesday, May 3, 2016

When in Rome

by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: Americans concerned with government corruption really should study Italy.

Why?

"You know Italians," septuagenarian Elio Ciampanella was quoted in the New York Times last week. "If there is a law, they will try to find ways to go around it!"

But it is not just ordinary citizens — the people — who are evading bad laws. It is government workers who won't do their jobs, and who engage in a wide range of corrupt deals and shady incompetence.

I know, this seems awfully unfair to the Italians. What I've said is the case with governments around the world. But not equally. (Scandinavian countries have a long history of government worker probity, if not ultra-competence.) And Italians do have a well-earned reputation for government corruption.

Arguably, it's the form freedom takes in Italy.

Be that true or not, Mr. Ciampanella's story, as related in the Times, is a fascinating one. He asked for a government-subsidized apartment, and had to wait ten years to get one . . . only to discover the problem wasn't a lack of apartments, but a surfeit.

Yes, the government owned too many apartments to keep track of!

And so they didn't.

And gave special deals to "special people."

In other words: incompetence and corruption as a way of life.

Market institutions that behave so chaotically and with so little attention to efficiency go out of business. But government? That's "necessary," so: too big to fail. And so, commonly excused.

No wonder, then, that the common-sense approach to government is to limit it.

This is Common Sense. I'm Paul Jacob.
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Paul Jacobs is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacobs is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.

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