Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Suez Canal blockage: a metaphor for our economy
The Suez Canal blockage: a metaphor for our economy
Oct 30, 2025 2:25 PM

A team of engineers and an unusually high tide freed the Ever Given, the container ship that blocked the Suez Canal for six days, on Monday. Obstructing the canal that facilitates 13% of world’s maritime trade not only educated Americans about the international dimensions of our economy, it also served as a metaphor for the artificial constraints, taxes, and regulations that block so many people from participating in our economy.

“Engineers raced throughout Monday to finish the job of dislodging the Ever Given after partially refloating the ship at dawn, taking advantage of an unusually high tide to make the job easier,” reports the Wall Street Journal. Apparently, it’s true: A rising tide lifts all boats. By that point, the jam had trapped more than 360 ships, representing an estimate $9.6 billion in trade. That is where our es in.

In real life, the economy begins with the human person, and economic activity is human action. When a person finds his God-given talent, he searches for someone who will pay him to exercise it. When a person feels a need for an economic good or service provided by someone else’s talents, he will offer to pay for it. If the two parties – employee and employer, or buyer and seller – can agree on terms, a voluntary exchange takes place that enriches everyone.

Think of the economy as the Suez Canal and economic activity as the water. Without enough activity, individuals can get lodged into the shallows, but a torrent of exchange dynamically circulating through our economy can free those people to reach their chosen destination. Economic boom times, like the era just before COVID-19, allowed members of the most munities to achieve historic financial gains. bination of tax cuts and deregulation kept the economy moving, reducing overall unemployment to a 50-year low of 3.5% and creating record low black and Hispanic unemployment rates.

But a number of factors can partially pletely block the economy for others. New policies formed by misguided “equity” ideology would actually backfire, costing some members of minority groups the jobs they have. As Warren Buffet said, “Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.”

Rather than facilitate this voluntary process of exchanging goods and services, the government often wants to direct its ebb and flow. Politicians set parameters and, like King Canute, bid the tides to obey. But unlike the Danish king’s legendary decree, politicians and bureaucrats can affect the overall economy. Each new tax, regulation, and round of currency inflation (rebranded as “quantitative easing” or Modern Monetary Theory) drains the canal a bit or constricts its passageways.

Take proposals to raise the minimum wage. If you want to hire someone – and that person would be willing to work on the terms you offer – that’s far from the end of the matter. The government wants to assure that you cannot pay someone less than a minimum amount, even if you’d both willingly settle for less. Similarly, politicians may require a certain level of fringe benefits for full-time employees. If the job-seeker’s productivity creates less wealth than his artificially pensation would cost, that person is not hired; if this is an existing employee, that person is fired. “There is no inherent reason why low-skilled or high-risk employees are any less employable than high-skilled, low-risk employees,” said economist Thomas Sowell. “Someone who is five times as valuable to an employer is no more or less employable than someone who is one-fifth as valuable, when the pay differences reflect their differences in benefits to the employer.” Large corporations favor a higher minimum wage, because it advantages them against petitors – and sometimes, against one another. But those at the bottom of the socioeconomic ladder get lost in the paper shuffle.

Unfortunately, in our scenario, government policy blocks one person’s pathway to self-sufficiency until he can create enough wealth to merit hiring. The discouragement of being told he or she is “unemployable” may convince the applicant to drop out of the labor force permanently, like a rising number of Americans, possibly ing a public charge. That wealth transfer, in turn, lowers the water level even more.

Higher taxes work the same way, bleeding the canal a little bit at a time. Economist Arthur Laffer sketched his famous Laffer Curve in 1978. He found that, above a certain rate, raising taxes actually brings tax collectors less revenue. This truth, which has been borne out throughout North America, means that higher taxes discourage economic activity, lodging the tax code sideways across the canal merce.

Government regulations can also narrow the turn radius. Federal regulations cost the U.S. economy a total of $1.9 trillion in 2020, according to the Competitive Enterprise Institute. However, the burden does not fall evenly. Ironically for our metaphor, the larger the “ship,” the better equipped it is to navigate the waters. Large corporations can afford to hire enough lawyers, accountants, and experts to assure pliance – as large panies can invest in superior radar and steering equipment; small and medium-sized businesses have no such margin. Small wonder the most gargantuan corporations support the costliest federal regulations. All those people who were fired or never fired by firms of all sizes due to pliance find their forward motion blocked, not coincidently, but as the foreseeable e of interventionist economic policies.

Another barrier e when government officials demand an occupational license for services that pose little threat – like braiding hair – locking out those who cannot afford the time or expense of the credentialing process.

Government is not the only force that can affect these waters. To earn their dues, labor unions negotiate for the maximum salary, benefits, and working conditions they can exact from employers on behalf of union members. When possible, they pass “closed shop” laws restricting employment to union members pelling non-members to pay a portion of union dues. Union-negotiated labor agreements may demand pay or other benefits – such as paid time off, tuition reimbursement, or pensions – so excessive that employers cannot hire as many employees as they had intended. The people who would have otherwise had a job, but refused to join a union or lost the opportunity due to pensation, can see that the ship stopping up their escape route bears the union label.

Thankfully, a team of engineers finally freed the Ever Given and removed the blockage holding back hundreds of ships, containing precious cargo – including a million barrels of oil and 8% of the world’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) daily. We, too, must clear the way of excessive taxes, never-needed regulations, and economic interventions that prevent millions of individuals locked out of reaching their potential and serving others. Every human person has an incalculable treasure to share with the world around them.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
A new Member of European Parliament exposes Europe’s self-doubt
Last week’s elections for European Parliament swept a bountiful harvest of Euroskeptic thorns into the EU’s side. Among them are the Sweden Democrats; Trey Dimsdale has interviewed successful SD candidate Charlie Weimers for the Acton Line podcast, and Weimers contributes a book review of Kasja Norman’s stirring book Sweden’s Dark Soul: The Unraveling of a Utopia to Acton’s transatlantic website. The book’s evocative opening leads to probing questions of Sweden’s searing self-doubt. Weimers writes: Norman starts the book depicting hundreds...
Are rising education and healthcare costs our own fault?
Alex Tabarrok, professor of Economics at George Mason University and co-author of the Marginal Revolution blog, has co-authored a new book with Eric Helland exploring why prices have risen so sharply in healthcare and education. Helland and Tabarrok argue that most of these price increases are caused by the rising price of skilled labor in these fields, driven by what economists call the Baumol effect, The Baumol effect is easy to explain but difficult to grasp. In 1826, when Beethoven’s...
What Christians should know about recessions
Note: This is the latest entry in the Acton blog series, “What Christians Should Know About Economics.” For other entries inthe series seethis post. What it means: The economy shifts from periods of increasing economic activity, known as economic expansions, to periods of decreasing economic activity, known as recessions. This is known as the business cycle and includes four phases: expansion, peak, contraction, and trough. An expansion is a period between a trough and a peak, and a recession is...
New study exposes career training cronyism
Last week the Mackinac Center — a think tank that focuses on public policy in Michigan — published a new study: “Workforce Development in Michigan.” The study, authored by Hope College economics professor, Acton research fellow, and Journal of Markets & Morality associate editor Sarah Estelle, examines the wide variety of skills-training and employment programs in the state. As the Mackinac Center put it in their press release, The government has been actively involved in job training since the 1960s,...
Greed vs. self-interest: Toward markets driven by love
“When you see the greed and the concentration of power, did you ever have a moment of doubt about capitalism and whether greed is a good idea to run on?” That question was famously asked by Phil Donahue to economist Milton Friedman in a popular exchange from 1979. If you’re a defender of free markets, it’s a question you’ve surely wrestled with. Friedman’s response is characteristically insightful and straightforward, and was recently captured in a short animated film from PolicyEd:...
How ‘conservatives’ became the war party
The only thing that can e the stupidity of modern-day progressives like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and the 24 people contending for the 2020 presidential nomination of the Democratic Party is an understanding of the price—and the consequences — of the policies that they preach. Progressive policy is expensive, very expensive, and a wise person should be extremely reluctant to spend other people’s money on utopian schemes like the Green New Deal. But people are not wise, and that is why America...
Europe’s dream
Last week, EU voters went to the polls in the latest round of the project of pan-European governance, another step on the supposed road to further unity and prosperity. The results were varied and at odds with one another, and the only constant seems to be dissatisfaction with the status quo. Many nationalist parties—such as in Poland, Italy and the United Kingdom—posted strong results, while countries such as Spain went toward the opposite end of the spectrum and supported socialists....
Life goes on in Deadwood
More than decade after the conclusion of the critically-acclaimed HBO series Deadwood, a finale has been released that brings the gold-rush era drama to a close. The Deadwood film premiered on HBO last week, and fans of the show will find much to remember and appreciate in this conclusion. Much remains familiar in Deadwood a decade later; the surviving characters are older, but the dynamics and cadences of their interactions remain. The series concluded with an epic clash between the...
Household responsibility as a school of virtue
As I’ve grown older, I’ve enjoyed watching my childhood friends as they start families, have children, and share what is going on in their lives via social media. Their posts give a glimpse into how they manage their own households, and can often reveal how these same friends have changed over time due to a range of external factors. Such changes are particularly striking after the responsibilities of marriage and parenthood. This happens with men and women alike, to be...
When the Federal Reserve does too much
Note: This is post #123 in a weekly video series on basic economics. “If you think through all of the variables that shape a country’s economy, it’s no wonder that monetary policy is difficult,” says economist Alex Tabarrok. “It should e as no surprise that the Federal Reserve doesn’t always get it right. In fact, sometimes the Fed’s actions have made the economy worse off.” In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Tabarrok shows what happens when the Fed promotes...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved