Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Boycotts do not help the poor
Boycotts do not help the poor
Apr 19, 2025 9:11 AM

Religious groups that consider themselves progressive are always urging a boycott of one form or another. But an example that has gained national attention is unique in this respect: It is so absurdly silly that it might provide a good learning opportunity.

It seems that the restaurant Taco Bell buys some of the tomatoes it uses to make its food from growers in the Immokalee region of southwest Florida, who rely heavily on low-wage migrant workers. These growers employ people who otherwise have few opportunities, which one might think is a wonderful thing. Taco Bell, in turn, is glad to find low-priced suppliers, so that it can keep its food affordable and broaden its customer base to include even the poorest among us. This is a win-win situation for everyone, especially the workers who are undoubtedly pleased for the opportunity.

But activists do not see it this way. A boycott of Taco Bell began three years ago with a few people in the Florida area, but has been widely supported by national religious organizations. What will the boycott plish? It could cause lower profits for Taco Bell, leading to curbs on its production, leading to fewer tomato purchases, which leads to lower profits for growers and thus lower wages and layoffs. The end result is that the workers will be worse off. No matter how bad off you think these workers are, there is one sure way to make their plight worse: cut off their place within the economy of the division of labor.

And yet, that is precisely what the activists propose to do. Whether they do it through consumer boycotts or by forcing all migrant workers into a union that will impose high wage costs on the growers, it cannot be good for the poor. If the growers were to pay high wages, they would be culling from a different segment of the labor pool, and leave the poor to languish.

No one doubts the sincerity of these activists. But they are not thinking beyond step one. Their policy prescriptions –such as kicking corporations out of the developing world, unionizing workers, taxing businesses of all sorts, and imposing benefits that business cannot afford to pay – can only make everyone worse off. These policies harm economic growth, impede the right of association, violate private property, and hamper the hard work of enterprise and economic development.

Perhaps the activists could take the afternoon off from writing letters, giving radio interviews, building websites, and otherwise engaging in agitation, and curl up with a book on economics. Just one afternoon spent learning about production, prices, wage formation, profit, consumer demand, and the vast web of market relations in which people voluntarily trade toward their own betterment and that of society as a whole, would save them a lifetime a wasted effort. Instead of stamping out opportunities for people, they might actually do some good in creating some for a change.

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
God Disciplines Us in Love
  God Disciplines Us in Love   Weekly Overview:   There is no better father than Creator God. He formed us and knows us. He provides for us, loves us unconditionally, and longs for real, life-giving relationship with us. He runs out to meet us in our sin, clothes us with new identity, and restores to us the abundant life he has always...
The Filters of Justice
  “There are no solutions,” Thomas Sowell says. “There are only trade offs.” When considering policy and legal problems, tradeoffs must often be understood in light of the challenge of filtering: correctly sorting people, actions, or events into categories. The filter can be too wide or too narrow, and both flaws have costs.   Prominent changes in American law and policy based...
The Shepherd’s Desire
  Weekend, August 3, 2024   The Shepherd’s Desire   “The thief’s purpose is to steal and kill and destroy. My purpose is to give them a rich and satisfying life.” (John 10:10 NLT)   What is the desire of the Good Shepherd for His sheep? His desire for His flock is for them to flourish. He wants them to be well-fed and cared...
Who Are You Leaning On?
  Who Are You Leaning On?   By: Anne Peterson   Trust in the Lord with all your heart,and do not lean on your own understanding.In all your ways acknowledge him,and he will make straight your paths.- Proverbs 3:5-6   It was April 1972 when Bill Withers wrote the song, Lean on Me. A song many are familiar with. It addresses how we all...
AI Among the Austrians
  Dozens of startups now offer Artificial Intelligence tools to help businesses set market prices. Assuming unlimited computing power to run such models and comprehensive data sets to train them, can AI replicate the way human actors make decisions in the marketplace? Socialists have argued for more than a century that enlightened bureaucrats can set prices as well as the myriad...
A Prayer to Keep Jesus My Refuge
  A Prayer to Keep Jesus as My Refuge   By Chelsey DeMatteis   “He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty. I will say to the Lord, ‘My refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.’” - Psalm 91:1-2   Blessed are those who take refuge in Him, can I get...
Black Christian Leaders Find Hope with Kamala Harris
  Vice President Kamala Harris isnt the type of politician to cite the Bible a lot.   Darryl Ford, the former pastor of a nondenominational evangelical church in Atlanta, thinks that might be a good thing.   Weve gotten used to seeing people who will make Bible quotations and pray for me on a Sunday, then vote to disenfranchise me on a Tuesday,...
The Constitutional Line on Direct Taxes
  The idea of a federal wealth tax recently has become a popular cause among “progressives.” The question arises, however, of whether such a tax would be constitutional.   In theory, a federal wealth tax could pass constitutional muster. But unless it qualified under the Constitution as an “indirect tax” rather than as a “direct” one, its projected revenue would have to...
Jehovah Rohi: God Is Our Good Shepherd (Psalm 23:1)
  Jehovah Rohi – God is Our Good Shepherd   By Jennifer Kostick   Today's Bible Verse:The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.- Psalm 23:1   When I was a little girl, age ten, my grandfather passed away. The paternal side of my family was not active in church and to my knowledge knew nothing about the Jesus my next door neighbors...
Venezuelan Churches Brace for Migration Wave After Maduro’s Re
  Last Sunday, July 28, pastor Csar Mermejo preached about hope in difficult times to his congregation in Maracay, a city of 1.3 million that sits close to the Caribbean coast.   But he did so via a pre-recorded audio file he distributed via WhatsApp, following the governments advisory against in-person gatherings on Election Day.   In his digital broadcast to Comunidad Cristiana...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved