Public policies are rarely judged by the effects they produce. They are far more often evaluated by the intentions they declare. In The Vision of the Anointed, Thomas Sowell identifies this habit, not as a mere analytical error, but as a moral failure. Intentions have no causal power, results do.
This distinction offers a precise lens for understanding contemporary fiscal policy when taxation is presented as social action. Taxes are seldom described as extraction; they are framed as instruments of justice, care, and/or inclusion. Language shifts attention from effects to purposes; cost fades; intention becomes an alibi.
In this narrative, taxation is presented not as revenue collection, but as social correction—taking from the rich to give to the poor.
Sowell observes that policies legitimized by declared virtue tend to acquire ethical immunity. When they fail, they are not abandoned, in fact, they are expanded, adjusted, or reintroduced under new rhetoric. Failure does not discredit the policy because the intention remains intact.
In fiscal policy, this logic sustains the continuous expansion of state action through taxation, often without rigorous examination of concrete outcomes. Revived taxes, technical adjustments, and new forms of incidence are justified as necessary means to higher social ends.
A contemporary factor intensifies this process: the high digital permeability of small expenditures and modest incomes. Everyday transactions become visible, traceable, and adjustable in near real time. Taxation ceases to appear as a discrete act, it operates as an environment.
As Sowell reminds us, “There are no solutions, only trade-offs.” The opportunity cost of these choices does not disappear, it is merely displaced. Under diffuse taxation, it dissolves quietly into everyday economic calculation.
Sowell’s critique is not directed against social concern itself, rather it is directed against replacing responsibility for outcomes with the performance of virtue. No one lives on intentions; people live with consequences.
Judging policies by what they promise is comforting; judging them by what they produce demands responsibility. It is this simple, uncomfortable standard that Sowell restores to the center of analysis.
History suggests that what narrows social distance is not redistribution by decree, but the expansion of markets and individual freedom.