Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Envy Won’t Save the GOP—or America
Envy Won’t Save the GOP—or America
Mar 28, 2026 1:48 PM

After every electoral defeat—whether suffered by Republicans or Democrats—a period of hand-wringing and soul-searching inevitably develops in the days and weeks after the election. Journalists and politicians take to print to explain “What went wrong” and “Here’s what should be done differently.” Although the solutions are almost always what the pundits were saying before the election, the exercise in self-reflection is, on the whole, a much needed corrective. But too often the advice tends to be of the always terrible, “We should be more like the party that won.”

A prime example is an article today by Wick Allison, publisher of The American Conservative. Allison voted for Obama in 2008 and hinted that he would do so this year too. So it probably shouldn’t be surprising that that his economic solution looks similar to what President Obama would endorse.

Allison says that the “Republican Party can appeal to ‘Judeo-Christian values’ as long as the sun shines and their voices hold out. But they’ve abandoned the most basic moral value of all: fairness.” While he may have a valid point, Allison muddies the argument by his misunderstanding of both taxation and fairness:

A capital gains tax rate (making money off money) that is lower than the earned e rate (making money off work) is just not fair. Bestowing that rate on hedge-fund managers through a specially designed loophole is just not fair. Allowing the rich to take mortgage deductions for second and third homes, or for homes worth over $1 million, is just not fair. Allowing business owners like me to take myriad deductions that our employees cannot take is just not fair. But, most of all, allowing the wealthy to pay very low tax rates while interest on the war debt accumulates, deficits continue, and middle-class es deteriorate is just not fair.

It’s curious that his article quotes C.S. Lewis on fairness since Allison’s concept of fairness would be one that Lewis would likely reject as being unbiblical. Fairness is the idea that similar individuals should be treated similarly in the same circumstances. But Allison is not advocating that people be treated fairly. Indeed, he appears to think it is unfair that those who have more do not pay a disproportionate amount of their e in taxes.

For instance, Allison thinks it’s unfair that employees cannot take advantage of certain tax deductions that business owners are allowed. But the deductions that business owners get to take are those related to business expenses, the costs involved in carrying on a trade or business. Business owners like Allison pay certain expenses—like salaries and insurance premiums for employees—that their workers do not have to pay. If taxes had to be paid on those expenses, many businesses could not afford to operate and the employees would be out of work. Is that the fairness we seek?

Allison’s reference to the unfairness of a lower capital gains rate is also odd considering that capital gains is an unfair form of taxation. As Harvard economist Martin Feldstein explained over a decade ago, “The capital-gains tax violates the basic fairness principle because the primary source of capital gains are inflation and retained earnings.”

A taxpayer who invested $10,000 in1973 in a diversified portfolio of stocks like those in the Standard & Poors index, held it for 20 years, and then sold it in 1993 would have seen its value grow to $42,019 and would have been liable for tax on a nominal gain of $32,019. In reality, the rise in the consumer-price index means that it took $32,545 in 1993 to buy as much in consumer good and services as $10,000 bought in 1973. Inflation created an artificial gain of $22,545 that doesn’t correspond to any real increase in wealth. The real inflation-adjusted gain in 1993 was therefore only $9,474—the difference between the $42,019 value of the portfolio and the initial $10,000 investment related in 1993 prices. The real gain was only 30% of the taxable nominal gain of $32,019.

[. . .]

Taxing the nominal gain is like taxing someone on the money he takes out of his bank account. It’s not real e and it shouldn’t be taxed.

For a similar reason it is unfair to tax the retained earning portion of capital gains:

Since reinvested earnings have already been taxed at pany level, taxing the capital gain that results from retained earnings is double taxation. It violated the fairness principle that two taxpayers with the same e should pay the same tax.

The capital gains tax is not only unfair, it also incentivizes present consumption and discourages savings and investment—the key drivers of economic growth.

I have no doubt that Allison has the best of intentions. But his advocacy for economically confused, populist policies and his embrace of an unbiblical redefinition of “fairness” are not the path we should follow. The mands that Christians look after the well-being of the poor and powerless of society, ensuring that they are treated with justice and fairness. To do that, however, requires that we take actions that actually provide justice and fairness for the poor. Adopting the secular left’s policy of envy and forced equality of e is not the solution. If we want to save the poor, we have to do more than propose new ways to soak the “rich.”

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
Upcoming scholarship deadline: July 15
Time is running out to apply for the Acton Institute’s Calihan Academic Grants! These awards are designed to support seminarians and graduate students in theology, philosophy, politics, economics, or related fields as they engage in serious study on the relationship between religion, liberty, theology, the free market, and the virtuous society. If you or someone you know is interested in applying, go to the Calihan Academic Grants page, where you can apply now or learn more about eligibility and application...
Moral and religious people created by God not the state
Last week Joe Carter helpfully gathered many of the contributions to what John Zmirak has called ‘The Iran-Iraq War Among Conservatives’. This at times heated exchange is largely between liberal and illiberal American conservatives and it is an important and lively one. I’m squarely in the liberal conservative camp believing, with Lord Acton, that freedom is the highest political good. It would be wrong, however, to dismiss the very real concerns and anxieties of the illiberal conservatives. The best articulation...
Eric Hobsbawm revisited
The life of the late British Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm is subject of Richard J. Evans’ newest book Eric Hobsbawm – A Life in History (2019). Evans is a scholar of Nazi Germany and like Hobsbawm, a former professor at Cambridge University. Before I start to analyze Evans’ book, I must make a personal note: My attachment to Hobsbawm’s work is not only intellectual but emotional. The first substantial book on history read by me was his The Age of...
Religious faith: It’s a market?
When a market is mentioned, buying, selling, and everyday business activities e to mind. Economists Rachel M. McCleary and Robert J. Barro have a broader focus in their new book, The Wealth of Religions: The Political Economy of Believing and Belonging. Building on over a decade of work considering religion and economic growth, the authors approach religion as an economist would study any market characterized by demand and supply. The Wealth of Religions develops insights into economic and social situations...
Progressive activists object to State Department panel on ‘unalienable rights’
Two weeks ago the Department of State announced its intention to create a Commission on Unalienable Rights. The stated purpose of the Commission will be to “provide the Secretary of State advice and mendations concerning international human rights matters. The Commission will provide fresh thinking about human rights discourse where such discourse has departed from our nation’s founding principles of natural law and natural rights.” An unalienable right is a right that cannot be bartered away, or given away, or...
Winners of 2019 Mini-Grants on Free Market Economics
The Acton Institute Mini-Grants on Free Market Economics program accepts proposals from faculty members at colleges, seminaries, and universities in the United States and Canada in order to promote the scholarship and teaching of market economics. This program allows for collaboration between faculty from different universities, as well as help future leaders to emerge, strengthen, and expand the existing network of scholars within economics. Entrants may submit proposals in two broad categories: course development and faculty scholarship. Here is plete...
Red, white, and gray: American policy and people
“Red, white, and gray: Population aging, deaths of despair, and the institutional stagnation of America” is a new essay by American Enterprise Institute Adjunct Fellow Lyman Stone touching on pressing demographic and policy issues in the United States. While the paper uncovers the bleak condition of some American institutions, it presents a hopeful horizon and strong call for action in our social life. As the title suggests, Stone opens by describing the American population’s increasing age, due in part to...
Equality and the ever-changing definition of ‘human rights’
The misapplication of the word “equality” has caused more problems than perhaps any concept in Western history. A misunderstanding of equality lies behind maladies from the rise of socialism and 100 years of Marxist repression to the present culture wars. “The principles of equality and non-discrimination have e plex in recent years because they are being extended to behaviors and lifestyles, not merely to persons,” according to the book Equality and Non-Discrimination: Catholic Roots, Current Challenges by Jane F. Adolphe,...
Who are the candidates for UK prime minister/Conservative Party leader?
Nominations for the leadership of the Conservative Party – and, thus, to e the next prime minister of the United Kingdom – closed at 5 p.m. London time (noon EDT). The list of successful candidates was released by the 1922 Committee an hour later. Under new Tory rules, a candidate needed the support of eight Members of Parliament, up from two, in order to advance to the first round of voting. The 10 candidates running to succeed Theresa May as...
Introduction to fiscal policy
Note: This is post #124 in a weekly video series on basic economics. What is fiscal policy? As economist Tyler Cowen explains, it’s a government’s policies on taxes, spending, and borrowing. But how it’s practiced is a little plicated. Fiscal policy can be used in an effort to mitigate fluctuations in the business cycle so as to soften the effects of booms and busts. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Cowen discusses expansionary fiscal policy and explains the “fiscal...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved