by Austin Hill
Are you ready for some football?
Super Bowl Sunday is, obviously,
a day for fun, food and friends. But as
you enjoy the football game, consider the deeper meaning of it all – and how
our economic fortunes could improve if we seriously changed our outlook. Consider these important “truths” about the
game, and how they can apply after the game.
1) By the end of the game one team will be declared the winner, one team will be declared the loser, and only one individual player will be declared “MVP” - These facts are so obvious and common place that we don’t really think much about them. Yet allowing for natural and healthy competition to determine the score is completely counter to how most Americans (as well as the politicians they elect) think about labor, the possession of wealth, and the health of the economy.
1) By the end of the game one team will be declared the winner, one team will be declared the loser, and only one individual player will be declared “MVP” - These facts are so obvious and common place that we don’t really think much about them. Yet allowing for natural and healthy competition to determine the score is completely counter to how most Americans (as well as the politicians they elect) think about labor, the possession of wealth, and the health of the economy.
Instead of
allowing the best performers to enjoy the spoils of their labor (as we do with
athletic competitions), with economic matters many Americans think in terms of
“shared prosperity” (you have too much wealth and the government should take
more of it away!), “shared responsibility” (the rich people should pay for my
food stamps, Medicaid, mortgage relief, etc..), and “leveling the playing field” (I can’t have
get enough success if you are enjoying too much of it). It’s not an accident that Americans
continually elect politicians who promise to make our lives easier by
minimizing the success of others. If we accepted other people’s success in the
economy the way we accept it on the football field, we might just find that
other people’s success actually creates jobs and benefits everybody.
2)
Every member of
each team will be required to play by the same rules –
the NFL goes out of its way to eliminate human error when it comes to
officiating. The referees are well-trained professionals who are expected to
enforce the rules in equal measure with all the players from both teams – and
when applying the rules is uncertain, digital instant replay technology is deployed
to make that the “law” is applied appropriately.
But
when it comes to real-life things like jobs, opportunity, wages and wealth,
Americans don’t necessarily like the “everyone plays by the same rules” approach. We prefer government policy makers who hold
some of us to the letter of the law, but give others of us special breaks. A tax deduction for me, a tax hike for you.
Special grants and opportunities according to our gender, ethnicity and marital
status. “Free” subsidies for so-called
“green energy” companies, but harsh taxes and penalties for oil companies. That’s apparently the way we like it. Yet we might just find that if we chose a
government that held us all to the same requirements, the “high scoring”
players among us might create more opportunity for all of us, and us “lower
scoring” players might be incentivized to improve our game.
3)
“Inequality” runs rampant in the NFL – and
it’s not a bad thing - By its nature the game of football treats
quarterbacks differently from punters and place kickers, and we think nothing
of it. Quarterbacks negotiate for the highest compensation possible with an NFL
team, yet many punters and kickers are lucky to play for the base minimum
salary guaranteed by their union.
Yet when it comes to economic matters outside
of professional sports it is often presumed to be unfair that the CEO of a
company earns a multi-million dollar salary, while entry-level employees of the
company earn a government mandated minimum wage. We accept the fact that the value that
football players bring to their team may vary according to their talents,
skills and position, but in our workplace everybody is somehow supposed to be
treated “equally.”
If we stopped
demonizing the high achievers among us (and quit electing politicians who
demonize them as well), we’d likely learn that other people’s achievements can
create opportunity and prosperity for all of us.
Will America return to being that
“shining city on the hill” where achievement is respected, both on and off the
field?
Comments are invited!
Send feedback to: WatchDog
.
Comments are invited!
Send feedback to: WatchDog
.
1 comment:
So
-every game should end in a tie.
- every player should get the same pay.
- every penalty should be off-setting
- every injury should--oh really!
Post a Comment