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By SCOTT S. POWELL
Investor's Business Daily

'Atlas Shrugged" Ayn Rand's fourth and last novel, published in 1957 may be second to the
Bible as the most influential book read in America, according to a Library of Congress survey. It
is required reading in management training at BB&T, the 12th-largest bank in the U.S. and one
that resisted taking TARP bailout funds.

Since the Obama administration took office, "Atlas Shrugged" has been enjoying a renaissance
with rising sales and library waiting lists, partly because it explains our current economic woes
more straightforwardly than most of what we hear from today's experts.

What happened in Rand's narrative is coming to pass today, with an anti-business administration
reviling private industry and capitalizing on crisis to expand and redirect investment within and
between sectors of the economy setting quotas, prices and compensation.

Businesses responded by retrenching ceasing to invest, innovate and expand. Whole industries
contracted, closed down or moved offshore, much like the U.S. gas and oil drilling industry is
doing today. Then, just as now, management became frustrated, discouraged and reluctant to
create jobs in an environment of excessive government meddling.

A record $2 trillion now sits on corporate balance sheets waiting to be invested amid reasonably
cheap asset prices. What holds back investment is uncertainty and fear stemming from an
overbearing and free-spending government. Businessmen and investors would never attempt
spending and borrowing their way back to prosperity.

The debt-financed Obama stimulus plan is not only failing to create jobs. It ratchets up systemic
risk, inviting a currency crisis and bond-market collapse from which recovery might be
impossible.

President Obama recently took credit for a 0.2 -percentage-point drop in the nation's
unemployment rate to 9.5% and the creation of 71,000 private-sector jobs, claiming his policies
were working. In fact, many of those jobs were in the socialized automotive sector. The
supposed decrease in unemployment resulted from 611,000 Americans giving up on finding
work and dropping off the official rolls of the unemployed.

Official statistics mask the underlying truth of a private-sector economy that is failing to create
jobs. In fact, when all those who have given up looking for work are accounted for since the
recession began, the real unemployment rate may be closer to 18% almost double the official
numbers.

While the private sector shed nearly 8 million jobs in the last 2 1/2 years, the federal government
increased its payroll by 240,000. So the private sector that is the primary source of national
wealth has been shrinking while supporting a growing public sector that generally produces
nothing.

That burden is made greater by the fact that government workers have incomes that are 30%
higher and benefits 50% more costly on average than those received by equivalent private-sector
workers.

This shift of wealth from the productive private sector to the unproductive public sector is
stickier today than it was in "Atlas Shrugged" because government is now a union shop, with pay
having little to do with performance. Unionized government cannot be downsized easily, and its
employees have effectively become the country's most powerful entitlement special-interest
group.

Thus, government-run schools controlled by the teachers unions can fail decade after decade
without consequence or substantive reform. The government takeover of the health care industry
aka "ObamaCare" was a high priority not because it was good for the majority of
Americans, but because the ruling elite want to expand unionization, entitlement and dependency.

The media chase scandal and sensationalism but largely ignore the most consequential story of
our time: the Obama administration's drive to shift wealth and power from the productive private
sector to the nonproductive public sector. Rand calls this appropriation of wealth by the
government nothing less than looting.

For her, the primary source of social good is in ingenuity and hard work that produce wealth in
the form of invention and technological breakthrough. Crony capitalism and forced redistribution
of wealth by faceless government bureaucrats is anything but virtuous.

Rand warns us that government policies that engender entitlement and cause business owners to
go on strike and withhold their capital are detrimental to the economy. What compounds this
problem today is that an out-of-control profligate government that enlarges dependence also sets
us up for a greater economic crisis than the last one.

Fortunately, the catalyst for course correction is around the corner. Ironically, President Obama
can be thanked for making this midterm election an overdue referendum on liberalism. Average
Americans are now more informed and engaged than they have been in generations, and they are
highly motivated to vote.

The most credible and successful candidates, whether incumbents or new entries, are likely to be
those resolutely committed to deficit- and debt-reduction and getting government out of the way
of private-sector job creation the essence of Ayn Rand.

Powell is a director at RemingtonRand and Alpha Quest LLC and a visiting fellow at Stanford
University's Hoover Institution.

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