Does anyone, for instance, believe that tax accountants contribute to national wealth or to productivity, and altogether add to society’s well-being, whether material, physical or spiritual?Perhaps you are thinking that it is so typical of this left-of-center blogger to beat up on tax accountants. If that is what you are thinking, ahem, you don't know me at all ;)
The writer also follows up with another comment that we are wasting well-educated human intellect on such "essentially sterile pursuits.”
So, who was that person who beat up on tax accountants?
Peter Drucker.
Yep, that Drucker.
It is bizarre how in a liberal democracy we continue to add taxes and tax-breaks, which almost always end up making creative work for tax accountants and attorneys, while making even more money for corporations, when the whole idea of government collecting revenue is for the "public interest." Thanks to the government and tax accountants, we now have a President whose fortunes were built on shell games!
It is a fine mess that we have created, and even an Alexander cannot handle this Gordian Knot!
To some extent, the tax attorney/accountant jobs that we have created are not that different from the textbook case of paying people to dig holes and have them fill those hole back. We pass laws that create all those tax loopholes, and then these highly educated folks get paid to needle the thread through those holes. One hell of a Keynesian jobs creation scheme, except that the ones who benefit from it usually attack Keynesian ideas.
But, back to Drucker's point on highly educated people following sterile pursuits. I wish I had known this phrase back in my undergraduate days, because all I knew then was that I didn't want to waste my life in sterile pursuits. But, it took me a while to also figure out what might be a worthwhile pursuit.
I am yet again reminded of the observation on "bullshit jobs" that I have blogged about. That same author--David Graeber, who is as far from Drucker as can be possible in the political economic spectrum--notes:
A world without teachers or dock-workers would soon be in trouble. But it’s not entirely clear how humanity would suffer were all private equity CEOs, lobbyists, PR researchers, actuaries, telemarketers, bailiffs or legal consultants to similarly vanishOf course, that is a a little exaggerated. But Graeber's larger point is no different from Drucker's.
Like many, I too worry that more and more are being led into into sterile pursuits, instead of liberating us to pursue activities that will add meaning. My father commented a while ago, "everybody says they are consultants. But I don't understand what they are consulting about." The next time he says anything like that, I should perhaps tell him that most are sterile pursuits--only because that sounds more decorous than saying "bullshit jobs."
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