Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Why Government Workers Should Get Pay Decreases for Longevity
Why Government Workers Should Get Pay Decreases for Longevity
Mar 15, 2026 9:27 PM

Imagine that you have a series of plumbing problems in your house—clogged sinks, backed up toilets—and decide to hire a plumber. Which of these two incentive structures would you choose?

(A) The plumber only gets paid when the problems are fixed.

(B) The plumber will continue to be paid indefinitely for working on the problem, and will continue to get paid as long as the problem persists

Most of us would choose option A since we are more interested in functional indoor plumbing than we are in providing a paycheck for plumbers. Hard-working plumbers should prefer option A too since it respects their dignity and skills. The vocation of the plumber is to solve plumbing problems, not to latch onto make-work projects.

So if most people would choose option A, why does the government almost always adopt an incentive structure that reflects option B?

As economist Arnold Kling notes, in the private sector workers are pensated on the basis of performance while in government workers pensated primarily on the basis of credentials and longevity. Kling mends replacing the system of automatic step increases with a system of automatic step decreases. He believes it would provide several benefits, including:

1. It would increase turnover at government agencies. It is unhealthy for lifetime service to be standard in government. It leads to a culture in which government workers are permanently detached from the private sector, and where workers in one agency lack familiarity with other agencies. That creates narrow thinking and a lack of empathy for people in business.

[. . .]

4. It would help to create a culture in which working for the government is a public service, not an entitlement. It would attract fewer people looking for a government career and instead attract more people who are motivated by a desire to contribute to public services for a few years.

This is a brillant and sensible idea, which is why it is will never, ever be adopted by the federal government.

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
Chappaquiddick film goes deeper than politics
“It was nearly 50 years ago that an infamous incident finished off the hopes of returning another Kennedy brother to the White House,” says Ray Nothstine in this week’s Acton Commentary.” A film about ‘Chappaquiddick,’ released this month, offers more than a historical retrospective. It reminds us of important truths that lay beneath the tumultuous world of political intrigue.” The movie revisits the details: The late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy drove his car off the Dike Bridge on Chappaquiddick Island,...
Victor Claar on Christian economics
Is there a Christian view of economics? If so, what makes the economic approach different for the Christian? Dr. Victor Claar joined the recent edition of the Christian Libertarian podcast to talk about those issues. ...
Radio Free Acton: RFA Reports on Direct Primary Care; Upstream on ‘Chappaquiddick’
On this episode of Radio Free Acton, we premier a new segment: RFA Reports. Guest Anne Marie Schieber-Dykstra, an award-winning reporter and former anchor with WOODTV Grand Rapids, discusses ways in which Christian healthcare centers are providing better care for affordable prices. Then, on the Upstream segment, Bruce Edward Walker talks about the new film “Chappaquiddick” with Henry Payne, editorial cartoonist and opinion writer atThe Detroit News. Check out these additional resources on this week’s podcast topics: Learn more about...
A lonely nation: Restoring true community in an age of individualism
Given the rise of social media and our expansive interconnectedness from globalization, one would think that our social bonds would be stronger than ever. With such an abundance of ways to connect and engage, trade and exchange, how could it possibly be otherwise? But amid the countless blessings of modernity, our expansion of freedom and prosperity has also been panied by new idols of individualism, leading many to pair forts and conveniences with a materialistic or hedonistic focus on the...
Once again, the Little Sisters of the Poor have to fight to defend their religious freedom
Once again, the Little Sisters of the Poor are having to go to court to defend their religious freedoms against government intrusion. The Little Sisters is an international Roman Catholic Congregation of Religious Sisters that serves more than 13,000 elderly poor in 31 countries around the world. The first home opened in America in 1868, and now there are nearly 30 homes in the United States where the elderly and dying are cared for. A few years ago, the Obama...
Alfie Evans and the UK’s paternalistic subversion of parental rights
Alfie Evans’s father wanted his son to remain on life support and be allowed to go to the Bambino Gesù Hospital in Rome for additional treatment. Earlier today, though, the UK’s Court of Appeal—the highest court within the Senior Courts of England and Wales—denied that request and upheld a previous ruling removing life-support for the British infant. (Rev. Ben Johnson wrote about “The trial of Alfie Evans” yesterday.) In this story sounds eerily familiar, it’s because it’s similar to the...
The trial of Alfie Evans
As this is being written, Alfie Evans is clinging to life, more than 18 hours after medical personnel disconnected life support and left the 23-month-old child to his fate. “For nine hours, Alfie’s been breathing,” wrote his father, Tom Evans, this morning, following an unbroken succession of “horrendous, scary, heartbreaking hours.” The hospital removed Alfie from a ventilator at 9:17 p.m. last night, but after sustained independent breathing, hospital officials were “forced morally to put him back on water and...
How not to think clearly on faith and economics
‘A view of Blanchard Hall in Wheaton College’ by Liscobeck Public Domain Mark Labberton, President of Fuller Seminary, recently addressed a meeting of Evangelical leaders held at Wheaton College and has released a reconstruction of his remarks. It is an interesting address which spends four paragraphs explicitly addressing questions of economics and economic policy. This section begins by rightly noting that, “It is very hard to read the Bible and ignore God’s heart for the poor and the vulnerable.” In...
Alexander Hamilton’s founding of the American economy
During even the first century of its founding, America had produced the world’s “largest capital driven economy.” How was such a young country able to outrun many of its petitors? Founding Father Alexander Hamilton is perhaps the primary figure to have kick-started America’s successful economic landscape. In an article written for The Online Library of Law and Liberty, Samuel Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research, reviewsAlexander Hamilton on Finance, Credit, and Debt, and gives readers a historical glimpse of the financial...
Themelios reviews Kuyper translation series
In the latest edition of the theological journal Themelios, Logan Dagley, Dennis Greeson, and Matthew Ng review all five volumes in the English translation series of Abraham Kuyper’s works on public theology: As the North American church moves out of a place of cultural dominance and into the cultural margins, we are faced with an important question: What is the church’s public calling? This question drove Kuyper’s life and writings, and his answers provide pelling and constructive path forward for...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved