Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Corporate Welfare: Why?
Corporate Welfare: Why?
Dec 20, 2025 3:58 PM

I have yet to read a moral argument for why the taxes collected from working men and women should be redistributed to businesses. It’s called “corporate welfare.” This is the odd state of affairs where, business pete for government funding rather than peting for customers in the marketplace. In fact, many of the biggest recipients of corporate welfare are the same businesses that hire high-priced lobbyists to help write laws in Congress that protect them petition. Why, then, do voters turn a blind eye to corporate welfare?

reports that:

The federal government directly spends between $75 billion and $100 billion a year on everything from farm subsidies to research grants. Include indirect benefits from things like tariffs and corporate tax exclusions, and the favors granted by local and state governments, and the total is much higher—probably more than $1 trillion.

Moreover, oil-and-gas industry subsidies account for $8 billion a year while $25 billion of federal spending goes to big agribusinesses—not to the family farmers who are used as pawns in the political theater to justify this form of welfare. The Department of Housing and Urban Development manages $16 billion in mortgage subsidies whose final destination is the revenue ledger of banks. To get us off the fiscal cliff, reports , Congress passed $40 billion in tax breaks for such worthy causes as filmmakers, rum distillers, and racetrack owners. Why do filmmakers need tax breaks?

The New York Times published a lengthy investigation last December examining and tallying thousands of local incentives granted nationwide and found that “states, counties and cities are giving up more than $80 billion each year panies. The e from virtually every corner of the corporate world, passing oil and coal conglomerates, technology and panies, banks and big-box retail chains.” The newspaper highlighted panies that have each received over $100 million dollars since 2007:

General Motors: awarded at least $1.77 billion ($1.76 billion since 2007) from 208 grants in 16 states.

Boeing: awarded at least $338 million ($327 million since 2007) from 81 grants in 11 states.

Sears: awarded at least $163 million ($150 million since 2007) from 26 grants in 10 states.

Fresh Direct: awarded at least $131 million ($128 million since 2007) from 9 grants in 1 state.

Apple: awarded at least $119 million from 3 grants in 3 states.

is calling for a reduction in corporate welfare programs by forming a “corporate mission” that could “operate much like the military missions, examining which corporate welfare programs are worthy and which have outlived their purpose.” While this might be a good first step toward reducing the corruption, negative externalities, sustaining of inefficiencies, and the introduction of disincentives to properly respond to shareholders introduced by corporate welfare; it might be a better idea just to end it altogether taking their lobbyist in Washington, D.C. with them. Why do I say this? Because there is neither an economic nor moral reason for tax payers to subsidize any business. None whatsoever.

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
Giuseppe Franco to Deliver the 2019 Calihan Lecture: ‘Religion, Society, and the Market’
Mark your calendar! As announced earlier this year, Professor Giuseppe Franco is the recipient of the 2019 Novak Award. In the ing 19th annual Calihan Lecture, Franco will examine the social philosophy and economic ethics of Wilhelm Röpke, 19th century economist said to be one of the spiritual fathers of the social market economy. The lecture will take place on Wednesday, October 9, 2019 at the University of San Diegoin California, during which Prof. Matt Zwolinski, director of the University’s...
Freedom, virtue and redemption: what have we been saved from?
“We have a sense that, actually, we do not have to be redeemed by Christianity but, rather, from Christianity,” wrote Pope Benedict XVI in an outstanding essay first published in English last year with the title Salvation: More Than a Cliché? “There is an insistent feeling that, in truth, Christianity hinders our freedom and that the land of freedom can appear only when the Christian terms and conditions have been torn up.” The question that the Pontiff Emeritus asks is...
6 ways to combat consumerism
The Gospel reading on Sunday was the story of Lazarus and the rich man. I often refer to this parable in discussions about poverty, because Augustine points out that it was not wealth that sent the rich man to hell, but his indifference. He just didn’t care. He was too attached to the world and his ings and goings to notice Lazarus. As Pope mented in Evangelii gaudium, Almost without being aware of it, we end up being incapable of...
Boris Johnson emphasizes transatlantic links, optimistic post-Brexit future (video)
Despite a series of setbacks on the most important political issues of his day, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson still envisions a free, innovative future that links the transatlantic sphere in prosperity. He recently outlined his vision of a post-Brexit future that will unleash the creativity and wealth-creating powers of citizens on both sides of the Atlantic. Johnson made surprisingly forward-looking and optimistic remarks shortly after the Supreme Court of the UK ruled his decision to prorogue Parliament “unlawful.” The...
Farewell Letter from Rome
This will be my last letter from Rome, as I am resigning as director of Istituto Acton, effective tomorrow, October 1. I started writing these monthly pieces in January 2010 to give you some idea of what it’s like to live and work in the Eternal City, with occasional missives from different parts of the world that I visited. I hope you have found them entertaining, maybe even enlightening. After twenty wonderful years here, it is simply time for a...
A word from the man who inspired Greta Thunberg
As the leader of a Christian think tank in Sweden, Per Ewert watched Greta Thunberg’s global crusade unfold earlier than most of the world. But when he saw her demonstrating outside parliament with her school strike movement, he got a jolt: The book Greta was reading was co-written by … him. In a new essay for the Acton Institute’s Religion & Liberty Transatlantic website, Ewert writes: When I think of the school book Greta was reading when it all began,...
St. Nikolai Velimirovic: How Christians should view technology
Like Americans today, St. Nikolai Velimirovic witnessed dizzying technological changes between his birth in 1881 and the day he died in 1956 in a rural Pennsylvanian monastery. The former bishop of the Serbian Orthodox Church, who spent time in the Nazi concentration camp at Dachau, shared how Christians should view technology – something equally important in our day, as everyone from parents to legislators offers their own solutions. “The New Chrysostom,” as he was known, began with an eloquent turn-of-phrase:...
Pope Francis makes connection between aid and corruption
Much has been written about the unintended consequences of foreign aid flowing from the West to “developing” countries. Economists such as Dambisa Moyo, William Easterly, and Angus Deaton have mented on the downright pernicious effects of government to government aid. Not too long ago, a new voice was added to this chorus of foreign aid critics: Pope Francis. During his recent visit to the East African nation of Mozambique, Pope Francis made ments which suggested a link between foreign aid...
The sermons that sparked a socialist revolution
1917 was the year of socialist revolutions. In the United States, an abortive revolt took place in Oklahoma that August, fueled by revolutionaries twisting the Gospel. The “Green Corn Rebellion” took place August 2 and 3 in Seminole County, in the rural, central portion of the Sooner State. Two weeks earlier, the draft lottery had begun during World War I. Hundreds of members of the secretive Working Class Union – many of them under threat of violence from the WCU’s...
On mythical materialism
Secular materialists and atheists like Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris like to mock religious people for being superstitious and illogical: resorting to fanciful explanations of events by invoking the work of God or miracles. Yet it is always amusing to me to see the length that materialists will go to hold fast to their mythical materialist beliefs. It almost charming to watch Sam Harris make a logical case for determinism and against the existence of free will, all the while...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved