Socialism And Big Government
The complexity of the economic crisis which we now find ourselves is impossible to truly understand. I am not alone in being frustrated at how we got to this point in our nation’s history. I know that I am not alone in trying to read and form a better understanding about how long it will take to recover, and what steps we need to take in order to reignite our economic power. What I am convinced of however is that we need to rid ourselves of the tired old political discourse, and instead face forward as we grapple with this crisis. Harping on outdated fears of ‘socialism’, as if we all are going to join communes, and gain a Politburo in Washington, are of course absurd.
But a European style approach to problem solving is something that needs to be looked at, and as such, one of the most rewarding reads about this matter comes from Micheal Freedman in the February 16th edition of Newsweek. It reflects where I am philosophically, but more importantly, it suggests where and why the nation may be headed in this direction.
Portions follow….but I suggest a full read here.
One of the more lasting effects will be a steady drift toward what could be called a European model of governance, regulation and paternalism. Already, big government is on the rise—projected public-spending figures show the United States will move ever closer to European averages over the next two years. More specifically, in the absence of a robust private sector (or at least public confidence in business) the U.S. government will be forced to fill the gap, firmly directing businesses in all sorts of ways—regulating some industries (particularly banking and the automotive sector) with big-brother vigilance, favoring others like clean energy with grants and loans, and turning still others—health care, pensions—into virtual wards of the state. Harvard economist Ken Rogoff predicts the United States will move toward “a more centralized, redistributional health-care system, as Europe already has,” with a greater emphasis on the environment, higher regulation and increased protectionism. “I take the 2008 U.S. elections as marking a turn toward continental Europe,” he says.
This is all likely to prove very popular if the conventional wisdom is right. Many economists think this is going to be a long, perhaps very long, recession. In this case, the banks would largely stabilize, thanks to the help of the federal government, but the stimulus package would be too small and insufficiently “timely, targeted and temporary,” as Obama economic adviser Lawrence Summers has frequently suggested it needs to be. Rather than a speedy V-shaped recovery, in which the economy quickly rebounds, the U.S. would face a Japan-style L-shaped recovery, which is to say extraordinarily slow growth over a decade or more. As in Europe, slow or no growth is likely to generate greater demand for publicly funded social services in the years to come.
Slow growth could kill rugged American individualism, too. Health care in the U.S. is for the most part tied to employment, so if job numbers continue to look dismal, or get even worse, an ever-greater number of people will start looking to the government for support. Moreover, if the New York Stock Exchange goes the way of Tokyo, still down by more than half from its level 20 years ago, the cultural impact will be profound. Today, basic U.S. social services are tied to private wealth generated by the stock market: retirement is funded through 401(k)s, for instance, and college tuition through 529 plans and endowments that help defray costs. As of last week the S&P 500 was down 41 percent from its 52-week high, and if it continues to bump along at that level, pressure will only grow on the Obama administration to step in and take over more and more public services. Think about it, and it’s very easy to imagine a chorus of former American individualists demanding cushy French-style pensions and free British-style health care if their private stock funds fail to recover and unemployment inches upward toward 10 percent and remains there.
Obama’s populist rhetoric will likely subside, but already U.S. government spending is expected to increase, approaching European levels. A decade ago, total government spending in the United States constituted 34.3 percent of GDP, compared with 48.2 percent in the euro zone—roughly a 14-point gap, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. That gap has declined dramatically, and by 2010, U.S. spending is expected to be 39.9 percent of GDP, compared with 47.1 percent in the euro zone—a gap of just 7.2 points. To be fair, much of the big increases in spending took place in the Bush era (in large part thanks to two wars), but a prolonged period of low growth and greater demands on the public sector will likely mean a further narrowing, as well as a seismic shift in spending priorities, away, perhaps, from defense and toward social programs. The baby boomers, meantime, will be putting an increased demand on Medicare and Social Security.
The public seems to want the government to fill in where the private sector cannot. Recent Gallup polls say trust in financial institutions is lower than at any point since it started asking that question in 1985, and 68 percent of Americans want major corporations to have less influence than they do now—up from 52 percent in 2001. Another poll shows a 12-point jump between 1994 and 2007, to 69 percent, in the number of Americans who believe government should do more for people who cannot care for themselves. So aside from expanding the social safety net, the government will have to take a greater role in guiding business toward ends the state deems healthy for the overall economy.



















This is what capitalism is about. From Glenn Beck:
“Letting the greedy, the corrupt and the downright stupid fail will replenish the soil of capitalism and give us the chance to rebuild the right way.”
Government has the ability to create the large social changes (integration) or implement with money and structure those areas of society (health care) that left to the whims of the populace at large, or the market would either never get accomplished, or take far too long to create. Government has the breadth and depth of power, finances, and reach to effect in a positive way the lives of its citizens. ‘Big government’ builds our highways, keeps our food safe (when fully funded and staffed) funds our colleges, and funds needed research into science and deep space.
The point on health care is a perfect example. The market, left to its own ebbs and flows will only find it comfortable to afford coverage to those who have the means to pay, or the ability to somehow find services. Meanwhile over 40 million citizens have no coverage.
The fact is that socialism is not the monster that some like to call it, and to deny that we have not incorporated some aspects of this philosophy into policy, or will not need to continue in such a fashion is folly. Pure capitalism or pure socialism does not fit the future of this nation, but an American hybrid of the two is in the cards.
For one, I think we need to have government more in control of the banking system. My view is not a new one, but one I have held for most of my adult life. While I am sorry to see the collapse of the economy, this is the type of greed and avarice in the board rooms of the mighty banks that only underscores what many of us knew to be the truth, and now that fear has become reality.
To get us back on track will require lots of government intervention. And as we know that intervention is easier to create than to release, so it is my hope that a more centralized role for the government will be long-lasting for the banking industry.
Am I getting this right? This is what you want? Big Brother Government over Capitalism?