I asked GMU Econ student Max Laraia to write up for Café Hayek a description of a fascinating tool that he and Edward Tiesenga, a CPA located in Illinois, have developed. And I urge you to check it out.
…………………..
An exciting new tool for applying Austrian school subjective value, marginal utility, and partial-equilibrium analysis to state and local government is now available at www.statisnostics.com. This site was developed to give individuals and families a tool to deal with today’s complex economic environment that features so much government – and so much government that grows so quickly. This tool is the Spending Pressure Score, which, like a blood-pressure reading, gives you a way to see the pressure on you the taxpayer from all of the government under which you live.
What’s especially interesting here is the focus on the local. It’s easy to get macro data of the likes of GDP, the federal budget, or the current amount of outstanding government debt. But each of us lives in a specific jurisdiction at a specific address. There are good states and bad states; and within each state (good and bad), there are better or worse locales.
The Spending Pressure score provides a critical missing piece of the puzzle to quantify the fiscal realities of different locations. With these data, you can see clearly how much pressure is exerted on the wallets of residents at each locale. The algorithm behind the score takes into account every level of government spending linked to every address in the United States, and incorporates longitudinal acceleration or deceleration of the revenue, spending and debt behavior of each of the 50 states, 3,031 counties, 25,705 townships and municipalities, and 12,546 independent school districts. Within these data, 30,000 fire departments can be analyzed as either standalone taxing districts, or units of other local governments. Publicly available data are geo-located and then expressed in per-capita values to enable benchmark comparisons between different addresses. StatisNostics rolls up expenditures, debts, revenues, tax rates, pension liabilities, and other key indicators into an overall Spending Pressure Score to clearly show if an area is fiscally stable, improving, or on a dangerous trajectory. All at your exact address.
The two components of the composite Spending Pressure Score—again like blood pressure—are the Debt Index systolic and the Spend Index diastolic that can be displayed for any address. From there, StatisNostics lets you explore the many variable factors that might explain that score, including data keyed to real estate, schools, health, economics, demographics, climate, public safety, government, and quality of life indexes.
Heat maps and data grids can be used to express this data and may be downloaded as a PDF report to be saved or printed.
Since each person operates with a subjective value perspective within the scope of their local reach, the ability to diagnose, or “StatisNose,” the pressure generated by immediate government units provides knowledge to guide daily decisions. Some people might prefer a lot of government , for economic or psychological reasons known best to themselves. Others may recoil at too much extraction of private resources and power by government and might wish either to stick around and try to change things, or to vote with their feet for an alternative, differently “pressurized” place to live.
StatisNostics can help supplement much more general, macro models of the economy that typically include simple drawings, complex math equations, and even analogue computers using fluids and pipes to mimic the circulation of income, taxes, savings and investment flows. The famous Monetary National Income Analogue Computer (MONIAC) invented by Bill Phillips in 1949, used a water pump to actually pressurize colored fluids from one tank to show the effect of taxes.
The Spending Pressure model is not so ambitious, but still draws on the “fluid logic” that taxes really do pump out dollars from the private economy, and that differential pressure is exerted on specific places depending on their proximity to the differential behaviors of disparate taxing jurisdictions. Data are geolocated to any address, and then compared to any other address in the United States. Additional tools enable you to probe into the data, metrics and trends reflected by any unit of government—from a city, to a school district, park district, county or state. Any of these government units extracting money from you to re-spend in service to the Keynesian multiplier can be analyzed as composites or de-layered to diagnose exactly where the spending is concentrated, and how it serves public employees, infrastructure, and the creditor class living off the interest payments holding up various levels of debt. Debt is included because debt is the future assurance of taxes unseen.



Libertarianism is based in economic theory, as economic science teaches how workable order can arise from the seeming chaos of free actions uncoordinated by a single outside intelligence, and how government intervention is apt to upset that balance. It is based in moral theory, positing what is or is not right when it comes to a human being, or group of human beings, using force or coercion on another. It is based in political theory, exploring the likely effects of granting human beings power over others. It is ultimately a delicate ecological balance of all these, with history in the mix as well, to further understand how the constant struggle of liberty versus power tends to play out in the real world.
I sometimes feel that the most conspicuous attribute of liberalism that distinguishes it as much from conservatism as from socialism is the view that moral beliefs concerning matters of conduct which do not directly interfere with the protected sphere of other persons do not justify coercion.
Every man is the best, the most responsive judge of his own advantage. Therefore don’t let some one else interfere.
