Why Private Investment Works & Govt. Investment Doesn't
From transportation to energy, and everything in between, should the government invest money in as many promising projects as possible? Or would that actually doom many of those ventures to failure?
Burt Folsom, historian and professor at
Hillsdale College, answers those questions by drawing on the fascinating history of the race to build
America's railroads and airplanes.
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Script:
In
2011, a solar power company called Solyndra declared bankruptcy. A company going bankrupt is not news. But Solyndra was not just any company. Its biggest “investor” was the federal government which had given it $
500 million dollars. That was news.
But, really, it shouldn’t have been. If history is any guide, it was quite predictable.
The government is a very poor investor. And always has been. There are countless examples, but two should serve our purpose here.
After the
Civil War, American leaders were anxious to bind the country’s
North, South, East, and West regions together with transcontinental railroads.
Congress therefore gave massive federal aid to build the
Union Pacific, the
Central Pacific, and later the
Northern Pacific Railroads. But all three of these roads had huge financial problems.
The Union Pacific, for example, was mired in financial scandal from its inception, went bankrupt several times, and had to rebuild large sections of track thanks to shoddy construction practices.
At that same time,
James J. Hill, with no federal aid whatsoever, built a railroad from
St. Paul to
Seattle -- the
Great Northern. How was
Hill able to do with private funds what the Union Pacific failed to do with a gift of tens of millions of federal dollars?
The starting
point is incentives. The Union Pacific was paid by the government for each mile of road it built. It was in the railroad’s interest not to build the road straight. The more miles it took the UP to cross
Nebraska, for example, the more money it made.
Hill, by contrast, used his own capital. To make a profit, he had to build his
Great Northern Railroad sturdy and straight.
Hill’s company remained in business for almost a hundred years until
1970 when it merged with other railroads.
The original Union Pacific, riddled with corruption and numerous other financial misdeeds, including the wholesale bribery of public officials, went broke within ten years.
The story of the airplane is even more stark. By the opening of the twentieth century, the major nations of
Europe and America were frantically at work trying to invent a flying machine. The first nation to do so would have a huge military and commercial advantage.
In fact, leading
American politicians of the day, such as
Teddy Roosevelt,
President William McKinley, and others argued that building an airplane was a national emergency. There was no time, they argued, to wait for private industry to get the job done. The government needed to pick the best aeronautics expert and give him the money he needed.
That expert was
Samuel Langley, the president of the prestigious
Smithsonian Institution and holder of honorary degrees from
Harvard,
Yale,
Oxford, and
Cambridge.
Langley was already an accomplished inventor and he had written a highly praised book Experiments in Aerodynamics.
Federal officials gave Langley funds for two trial flights. He immediately set to work. His theory was that his plane needed to be thrust into the air from a houseboat on the
Potomac River. The big engine on the plane would then propel it through air for several minutes.
When his first attempt failed, and the plane splashed into the river, Langley was not deterred. But when his second flight did no better, Langley and the politicians gave up.
If Langley, with the full backing of the government, could not solve the problem, people simply assumed that it could not be solved. Indeed,
The New York Times wrote that human flight might take a million years to accomplish.
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