Friday, May 27, 2011

The American Devolution

by Tom Kando

A hot debate in California at this time is whether or not to build the high-speed rail. Voters approved $10 billion for this in 2008, the Obama administration has appropriated nearly $3 billion, and California will receive several more billion reallocated to our State, after Florida, Michigan and some other states declined to participate and returned their share to the Feds (speaking of cutting your nose to spite your face!). The total cost, though, will run at least $45 billion.

So this brings up, again, the fundamental issue of the day: are public projects and the public sector good or bad?

There is now a second American Revolution going on. It’s actually an American Devolution. All the arguments for and against California’s High-speed rail can be generalized to other public projects and to the entire public sector.

There is today in this country, at all levels, a push to dismantle a century of social democracy, and its funding. From progressive taxation to Medicare and Social Security, from State and local parks to libraries, pubic transportation and public education.

The excuse for this has been the country’s indebtedness, mixed with a tinge of demographics: We know that our aging population increases the dependent sector while decreasing the productive sector. Each year, fewer working tax-payers must support more retirees and elderly. The conclusion drawn by the rich, the Republicans and the rest of the brainwashed population is that we must therefore dismantle the welfare state.

In the 1930s, when the country was in trouble, FDR responded with a glorious New Deal and magnificent public projects such as the TVA and the Hoover Dam. There was an elan of social awareness and collective action. Today, the response is the opposite.

Elsewhere in the Western World, the right-ward trend (which is what this is) exists, but it is much weaker. This, despite the fact that (1) their populations are aging more rapidly than ours, (2) their deficits often exceed ours (Japan’s is over 200% of GDP!) and (3) their public services and infrastructure are superior to ours. For example, California has been debating high-speed train service for 16 years, while France, Germany, Japan and even Poland have HAD it for many decades.

The difference? More of that dreaded thing called “Socialism,” or, if you prefer, FDR’s New Deal approach.

Because you see, the choice is NOT the one which House Budget Chair Paul Ryan and the Tea Party want to impose on us: The Status Quo vs. Dismantling the Welfare State. The solution is NOT the privatization of Social Security, Medicare, schools, prisons, juvenile institutions, reducing the entire service sector to a for-profit nightmare.

The solution is to IMPROVE the existing system, through simple and yes, sometimes draconian measures such as raising Social Security and Medicare age significantly (after all, we live much longer now), raising SS and Medicare contributions significantly, and above all: making taxation much, much more equitable, as it was until a generation ago. To begin with, return to the pre-Bush era tax rates on corporations and on wealthy individuals. Where is it written that the Federal budget should not exceed 20% of GDP?

To claim that the welfare state is not sustainable is to be ignorant of history and of the foreign experience. Despite two catastrophic wars - an entirely different topic - the Europeans have maintained successful welfare states for centuries, as have Japan, Canada, Australia and others. And they are not about to dismantle them.

The alternative is a devolution comparable to that of the Roman Empire - where roads, schools, public safety, literacy and the quality of life gradually wither, like vines in the winter... leave comment here

9 comments:

csaba said...

Dear Tom,
I really agree with your keen observations that draw attention to false ideas -swallowed by
"the Republicans and the rest of the brainwashed population" (and the European Right may I add) - concerning government
investment in public service in general and in infrastructure in particular.
I have just read a manifesto introduced by Philippe Askenazy and signed by 630 renowned
economists entitled "Manifeste d'economistes atterés" (published by LLL Les Liens Qui Libérent, ISBN 978-2-918597-26-1, nov. 2010)
that provides decisive aarguments supporting your ideas. I really recommend the reading of this short pamphlet that disproves
Tea Party demagogy concerning investment in public services, instead of me regurgitating inefficiently the same arguments.

Csaba

ps. Just a thought: In opposing public investment in infrastructure (roads, trains, etc.)
the hard-core capitalists cut their own throats: how can you develop business without them,
how can you make sure that your slaves get to work for you on time???

tom said...

thanks for your supportive comments, Csaba. I'll check out Askenazy's paper.

Gail said...

As a sociologist, and observer of life- I find the state of our economy and public life problematic. Maybe the U.S. is headed for its own revolution or paradigm shift. Something has to change. My grandma would say,"If you put to much pressure on a surface it eventually breaks". My sociological introspection leads me to believe that our global world is near a breaking point or evlutionary transition of some kind or another. With this said, I hope that the next phase of our human evolution is much more conscientious and mindful of social justice and community-Although the internet has brought us together, our ability to relate to one another across culture, class,region and political ideas is very fragmented-At some point we have to merge as a civilization.
Too many issues and too little cohesion as a human race is not good-At some point humans have to pull together to see our common humanity and oneness. Thats my two cents worth of knowledge.-

Gail Wallace

Tom Kando said...

An eloquent statement, Gail.
I couldn't agree more.

Marc Hersch said...

Gail,

I agree. It seems that we are at a tipping point where some sort of qualitative shift is underway. I tend to think of such shifts as revolutionary in nature rather than evolutionary. I think of evolutionary processes as bio-genetic and revolutionary processes a symbolic-paradigmatic.

Evolutionary and revolutionary shifts are both driven by changing facts on the ground. Paleontologists think a meteor changed the facts on the ground for the dinosaurs. Not being revolutionary by nature, most of them just rolled over and died, though a few went on to become birds. A big meteor could do something like that to humans as well--knock on wood.

Fire, agriculture, the smelting of ores, seagoing ships, machines, the power of the atom and digital communicaitons---all self-made facts on the ground---have propelled human revolutions such as the rise of cities and states, global religions, governments, wage labor, riches amidst poverty, global commerce, war and knowledge disembodied of knowers.

The big question in my mind has always been if our ideas themselves can initiate revolutions and shape their course. Can we construct our way forward with purpose in order to make a better world or are we simply doomed to suffer the consequences of our ceaseless tampering and cope as best we can?

Thus far it seems, our revolutions are uniformly reaction though I have met many who argue that action is needed. If we are to cease making ourselves victims of our own devices--digging our holes deeper and deeper---then the next revolution will need to be one in which our considered action--as you say, "to pull together" to make a better world--takes precedence over our copious reactions.

Although I am not holding my breath, it is just possible that we have come to the first point in our history at which such a revolution is possible.

Gail said...

Marc,

I agree. We are in the process of change. Dr Tom Kando is doing a great job of keeping us informed about our social world from a national and global perspective. At least we have the internet to keep us glued together as our world stands on the precipice of something new and different.

Gail

tom said...

Thanks for your support, Gail.
"Precipice" says it all!

maxwell said...

I hope many people read your comments.
Would you like to appear as a guest on a local radio station?

Your voice would be welcome with these comments.
Thank you!

tom said...

Thank you for your sympathetic comment, Maxwell.
I would certainly like to be a guest on a radio talk show (again). I have had the privilege before, and I have enjoyed it.

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