Are
America's
Best Days
Behind Us?
WASHINGTON &
SANTA FE, NM
(
By
Fareed
Zakaria,
Time) March
6,
2011
―
I am an
American,
not by
accident of
birth but by
choice. I
voted with
my feet and
became an
American
because I
love this
country and
think it is
exceptional,
but when I
look at the
world today
and the
strong winds
of
technological
change and
global
competition,
it makes me
nervous.
Perhaps most
unsettling
is the fact
while
these forces
gather
strength,
Americans
seem unable
to grasp the
magnitude of
the
challenges
that face
us. Despite
the hyped
talk of
China's
rise, most
Americans
operate on
the
assumption
the
U.S. is
still No. 1.
But is it?
Yes, the
U.S. remains
the world's
largest
economy, and
we have the
largest
military by
far, the
most dynamic
technology
companies
and a highly
entrepreneurial
climate. But
these are
snapshots of
where we are
right now.
The
decisions
that created
today's
growth —
decisions
about
education,
infrastructure
and the like
— were made
decades ago.
What we see
today is an
American
economy that
has boomed
because of
policies and
developments
of the 1950s
and '60s:
the
interstate-highway
system,
massive
funding for
science and
technology,
a
public-education
system that
was the envy
of the world
and generous
immigration
policies.
Look at some
underlying
measures
today, and
you will
wonder about
the future.
The
following
rankings
come from
various
lists, but
they all
tell the
same story.
According to
the
Organization
for Economic
Co-operation
and
Development
(OECD), our
15-year-olds
rank 17th in
the world in
science and
25th in
math. We
rank 12th
among
developed
countries in
college
graduation
(down from
No. 1 for
decades). We
come in 79th
in
elementary-school
enrollment.
Our
infrastructure
is ranked
23rd in the
world, well
behind that
of every
other major
advanced
economy.
American
health
numbers are
stunning for
a rich
country:
based on
studies by
the OECD and
the World
Health
Organization,
we're 27th
in life
expectancy,
18th in
diabetes and
first in
obesity.
Only a few
decades ago,
the U.S.
stood tall
in such
rankings. No
more. There
are some
areas in
which we are
still
clearly No.
1, but
they're not
ones we
usually brag
about. We
have the
most guns.
We have the
most crime
among rich
countries.
And, of
course, we
have by far
the largest
amount of
debt in the
world.
The Rise
of the Rest
Many of
these
changes have
taken place
not because
of America's
missteps but
because
other
countries
are now
playing the
same game we
are — and
playing to
win. There
is a
familiar
refrain
offered when
these
concerns are
raised: "We
heard all
this in the
1980s. Japan
was going to
dominate the
globe. It
didn't
happen, and
America
ended up
back on
top." It's a
fair point
as far as it
goes. Japan
did not
manage to
become the
world's
richest
country —
though for
three
decades it
had the
second
largest
economy and
even now has
the third
largest. It
is also a
relatively
small
country. To
become the
largest
economy in
the world,
it would
have to have
a per capita
GDP twice
that of the
U.S. China
would need
to have an
average
income only
one-fourth
of the
U.S. to
develop an
economy that
would
surpass
ours.
But this
misses the
broader
point. The
Harvard
historian
Niall
Ferguson,
who has just
written a
book,
Civilization:
The West and
the Rest,
puts things
in
historical
context:
"For 500
years the
West
patented six
killer
applications
that set it
apart. The
first to
download
them was
Japan. Over
the last
century, one
Asian
country
after
another has
downloaded
these killer
apps —
competition,
modern
science, the
rule of law
and private
property
rights,
modern
medicine,
the consumer
society and
the work
ethic. Those
six things
are the
secret sauce
of Western
civilization."
To this
historical
challenge
from nations
that have
figured out
how the West
won, add a
technological
revolution.
It is now
possible to
produce more
goods and
services
with fewer
and fewer
people, to
shift work
almost
anywhere in
the world
and to do
all this at
warp speed.
That is the
world the
U.S. now
faces. Yet
the country
seems
unready for
the kind of
radical
adaptation
it needs.
The changes
we are
currently
debating
amount to
rearranging
the deck
chairs on
the Titanic.
Sure, the
political
system seems
to be
engaged in
big debates
about the
budget,
pensions and
the nation's
future. But
this is
mostly a
sideshow.
The battles
in state
capitals
over
public-employee
pensions are
real — the
states are
required to
balance
their
budgets —
but the
larger
discussion
in
Washington
is about
everything
except
what's
important.
The debate
between
Democrats
and
Republicans
on the
budget
excludes the
largest
drivers of
the
long-term
deficit —
Social
Security,
Medicaid and
Medicare —
to say
nothing of
the biggest
non-entitlement
costs, like
the tax
break for
interest on
mortgages.
Only four
months ago,
the
Simpson-Bowles
commission
presented a
series of
highly
intelligent
solutions to
our fiscal
problems,
proposing $4
trillion in
savings,
mostly
through cuts
in programs
but also
through some
tax
increases.
They have
been
forgotten by
both
parties, in
particular
the
Republicans,
whose
leading
budgetary
spokesman,
Paul Ryan,
praises the
commission
in the
abstract
even though
he voted
against its
recommendations.
Democrats,
for their
part, became
apoplectic
about a
proposal to
raise the
retirement
age for
Social
Security by
one year —
in 2050.
Instead,
Washington
is likely to
make
across-the-board
cuts in
discretionary
spending,
where there
is much less
money and
considerably
less waste.
President
Obama's
efforts to
preserve and
even
increase
resources
for core
programs
appear to be
failing in a
Congress
determined
to
demonstrate
its clout.
But reducing
funds for
things like
education,
scientific
research,
air-traffic
control,
NASA,
infrastructure
and
alternative
energy will
not produce
much in
savings, and
it will hurt
the
economy's
long-term
growth. It
would happen
at the very
moment that
countries
from Germany
to South
Korea to
China are
making large
investments
in
education,
science,
technology
and
infrastructure.
We are
cutting
investments
and
subsidizing
consumption
— exactly
the opposite
of what are
the main
drivers of
economic
growth.
So why are
we tackling
our economic
problems in
a manner
that is
shortsighted
and
wrong-footed?
Because it
is
politically
easy. The
key to
understanding
the moves by
both parties
is that, for
the most
part, they
are
targeting
programs
that have
neither a
wide base of
support nor
influential
interest
groups
behind them.
(And that's
precisely
why they're
not where
the money
is. The
American
political
system is
actually
quite
efficient.
It
distributes
the big
bucks to
popular
programs and
powerful
special
interests.)
And neither
side will
even talk
about tax
increases,
though it is
impossible
to achieve
long-term
fiscal
stability
without
them.
Certain
taxes — such
as ones on
carbon or
gas — would
have huge
benefits
beyond
revenue,
like energy
efficiency.
It's not
that our
democracy
doesn't
work; it's
that it
works only
too well.
American
politics is
now hyper
responsive
to
constituents'
interests.
And all
those
interests
are
dedicated to
preserving
the past
rather than
investing
for the
future.
There are no
lobbying
groups for
the next
generation
of
industries,
only for
those
companies
that are
here now
with cash to
spend. There
are no
special-interest
groups for
our
children's
economic
well-being,
only for
people who
get
government
benefits
right now.
The whole
system is
geared to
preserve
current
subsidies,
tax breaks
and
loopholes.
That is why
the federal
government
spends $4 on
elderly
people for
every $1 it
spends on
those under
18. And when
the time
comes to
make cuts,
guess whose
programs are
first on the
chopping
board. That
is a
terrible
sign of a
society's
priorities
and outlook.
The
Perils of
Success
Why have our
priorities
become so
mangled?
Several
decades ago,
economist
Mancur Olson
wrote a book
called The
Rise and
Decline of
Nations. He
was prompted
by what he
thought was
a strange
paradox
after World
War II.
Britain,
having won
the war,
slipped into
deep
stagnation,
while
Germany, the
loser, grew
powerfully
year after
year.
Britain's
fall was
even more
perplexing
considering
that it was
the creator
of the
Industrial
Revolution
and was the
world's
original
economic
superpower.
Olson
concluded,
paradoxically,
it was
success that
hurt
Britain,
while
failure
helped
Germany.
British
society grew
comfortable,
complacent
and rigid,
and its
economic and
political
arrangements
became ever
more
elaborate
and costly,
focused on
distribution
rather than
growth.
Labor
unions, the
welfare
state,
protectionist
policies and
massive
borrowing
all shielded
Britain from
the new
international
competition.
The system
became
sclerotic,
and over
time, the
economic
engine of
the world
turned
creaky and
sluggish.
Germany, by
contrast,
was almost
entirely
destroyed by
World War
II. That
gave it a
chance not
just to
rebuild its
physical
infrastructure
but also to
revise its
antiquated
arrangements
and
institutions
— the
political
system, the
guilds, the
economy —
with a more
modern frame
of mind.
Defeat made
it possible
to question
everything
and rebuild
from
scratch.
America's
success has
made it
sclerotic.
We have sat
on top of
the world
for almost a
century, and
our repeated
economic,
political
and military
victories
have made us
quite sure
we are
destined to
be No. 1
forever. We
have some
advantages.
Size
matters:
when crises
come, they
do not
overwhelm a
country as
big as the
U.S. When
the
financial
crisis hit
nations such
as Greece
and Ireland,
it dwarfed
them. In the
U.S., the
problems
occurred
within the
context of a
$15 trillion
economy and
in a country
that still
has the
trust of the
world. Over
the past
three years,
in the wake
of the
financial
crisis, U.S.
borrowing
costs have
gone down,
not up.
This is a
powerful
affirmation
of America's
strengths,
but the
problem is
they
ensure the U.S.
will not
really face
up to its
challenges.
We adjust to
the crisis
of the
moment and
move on, but
the
underlying
cancer
continues to
grow, eating
away at the
system.
A crucial
aspect of
beginning to
turn things
around would
be for the
U.S. to make
an honest
accounting
of where it
stands and
what it can
learn from
other
countries.
This kind of
benchmarking
is common
among
businesses
but is
sacrilege
for the
country as a
whole. Any
politician
who dares
suggest
the U.S. can
learn from —
let alone
copy — other
countries is
likely to be
denounced
instantly.
If someone
points out
that Europe
gets better
health care
at half the
cost, that's
dangerously
socialist
thinking. If
a business
leader notes
tax
rates in
much of the
industrialized
world are
lower and
there
are far
fewer
loopholes
than in the
U.S., he is
brushed
aside as
trying to
impoverish
American
workers. If
a
commentator
says —
correctly —
social
mobility
from one
generation
to the next
is greater
in many
European
nations than
in the U.S.,
he is
laughed at.
Yet several
studies, the
most recent
from the
OECD last
year, have
found the average
American has
a much lower
chance of
moving out
of his
parents'
income
bracket than
do people in
places like
Denmark,
Sweden,
Germany and
Canada.
And it's not
just
politicians
and business
leaders.
It's all of
us.
Americans
simply don't
care much,
know much or
want to
learn much
about the
outside
world. We
think of
America as a
globalized
society
because it
has been at
the center
of the
forces of
globalization.
But
actually,
the American
economy is
quite
insular;
exports
account for
only about
10% of it.
Compare that
with the
many
European
countries
where half
the economy
is
trade-related,
and you can
understand
why those
societies
seem more
geared to
international
standards
and
competition.
And that's
the key to a
competitive
future for
the U.S. If
Olson is
right in
saying
successful
societies
get
sclerotic,
the solution
is to stay
flexible.
That means
being able
to start and
shut down
companies
and hire and
fire people.
But it also
means having
a government
that can
help build
out new
technologies
and
infrastructure,
that invests
in the
future and
that can
eliminate
programs
that stop
working.
When
Franklin
Roosevelt
launched the
New Deal, he
spoke of the
need for
"bold,
persistent
experimentation,"
and he shut
down
programs
when it was
clear they
didn't work.
Today, every
government
program and
subsidy
seems
eternal.
What the
Founding
Fathers Knew
Is any of
this
possible in
a rich,
democratic
country? In
fact it is.
The
countries of
Northern
Europe —
Denmark,
Sweden,
Norway,
Finland —
have created
a
fascinating
and mixed
model of
political
economy.
Their
economies
are
extremely
open and
market-based.
Most of them
score very
high on the
Heritage
Foundation's
Index of
Economic
Freedom. But
they also
have
generous
welfare
states and
make major
investments
for future
growth. Over
the past 20
years, these
countries
have grown
nearly as
fast as, or
in some
cases faster
than, the
U.S. Germany
has managed
to retain
its position
as the
world's
export
engine
despite high
wages and
generous
benefits.
Now, America
should not
and cannot
simply copy
the Nordic
model or any
other.
Americans
would rebel
at the high
taxes
Northern
Europeans
pay — and
those taxes
are proving
uncompetitive
in a world
where many
other
European
countries
have much
lower rates
and
Singapore
has a
maximum
personal
rate of 20%.
The American
system is
more
dynamic,
entrepreneurial
and unequal
than of
Europe and
will remain
so. But the
example of
Northern
Europe shows
rich
countries
can stay
competitive
if they
remain
flexible,
benchmark
rigorously
and embrace
efficiency.
American
companies
are, of
course,
highly
efficient,
but American
government
is not. By
this I don't
mean to echo
the usual
complaints
about waste,
fraud and
abuse. In
fact, there
is less of
those things
than
Americans
think,
except in
the Pentagon
with its
$700 billion
budget. The
problem with
the U.S.
government
is its
allocation
of resources
is highly
inefficient.
We spend
vast amounts
of money on
subsidies
for housing,
agriculture
and health,
many of
which
distort the
economy and
do little
for
long-term
growth. We
spend too
little on
science,
technology,
innovation
and
infrastructure,
which will
produce
growth and
jobs in the
future. For
the past few
decades, we
have been
able to be
wasteful and
get by. But
we will not
be able to
do it much
longer. The
money is
running out,
and we will
have to
marshal
funds and
target
spending far
more
strategically.
This is not
a question
of too much
or too
little
government,
too much or
too little
spending. We
need more
government
and more
spending in
some places
and less in
others.
The tragedy
is
Washington
knows this.
For all the
partisan
polarization
there, most
Republicans
know we
have to
invest in
some key
areas, and
most
Democrats
know we
have to cut
entitlement
spending.
But we have
a political
system that
has become
allergic to
compromise
and
practical
solutions.
This may be
our greatest
blind spot.
At the very
moment that
our
political
system has
broken down,
one hears
only
encomiums to
it, the
Constitution
and the
perfect
Republic
it
created.
Now, as an
immigrant, I
love the
special and,
yes,
exceptional
nature of
American
democracy. I
believe the
Constitution
was one of
the wonders
of the world
— in the
18th
century. But
today we
face the
reality of a
system that
has become
creaky. We
have an
Electoral
College that
no one
understands
and a Senate
that doesn't
work, with
rules and
traditions
that allow a
single
Senator to
obstruct
democracy
without even
explaining
why. We have
a
crazy-quilt
patchwork of
towns,
municipalities
and states
with
overlapping
authority,
bureaucracies
and
resulting
waste. We
have a
political
system
geared
toward
ceaseless
fundraising
and
pandering to
the
interests of
the present
with no
ability to
plan, invest
or build for
the future.
And if one
mentions any
of this,
why, one is
being
unpatriotic,
because we
have the
perfect
system of
government,
handed down
to us by
demigods who
walked the
earth in the
late 18th
century and
who serve as
models for
us today and
forever.
America's
founders
would have
been
profoundly
annoyed by
this kind of
unreflective
ancestor
worship.
They were
global,
cosmopolitan
figures who
learned and
copied a
great deal
from the
past and
from other
countries
and were
constantly
adapting
their views.
The first
constitution,
the Articles
of
Confederation,
after all,
was a
massive
failure, and
the founders
learned from
that
failure. The
decision to
have the
Supreme
Court sit in
judgment
over acts of
the
legislature
was a later
invention.
America's
founders
were modern
men who
wanted a
modern
country that
broke with
its past to
create a
more perfect
union.
And they
thought a
great deal
about
decline.
Indeed, it
was only a
few years
after the
Revolution
the
worrying
began in
earnest. The
letters
between
Thomas
Jefferson
and John
Adams, as
the two men
watched
America in
the early
19th
century, are
filled with
foreboding
and gloom;
you could
almost say
they began a
great
American
tradition,
that of
contemplating
decay.
Americans
have been
concerned
about the
health of
their
country for
much of its
existence.
In the 1950s
and '60s, we
worried
about the
Soviet Union
and its
march toward
modernization.
In the
1980s, we
worried
about Japan.
This did us
no harm; on
the
contrary,
all these
fears helped
us make
changes that
allowed us
to revive
our strength
and forge
ahead.
Dwight
Eisenhower
took
advantage of
the fears
about the
Soviet Union
to build the
interstate-highway
system. John
Kennedy used
the Soviet
challenge in
space to set
us on a path
toward the
goal of
getting to
the moon.
What is
really
depressing
is the tone
of our
debate. In
place of the
thoughtful
concern of
Jefferson
and Adams,
we have its
opposite in
tone and
temperament
— the
shallow
triumphalism
purveyed by
politicians
now. The
founders
loved
America, but
they also
understood
it was
a work in
progress, an
unfinished
enterprise
that would
constantly
be in need
of change,
adjustment
and repair.
For most of
our history,
we have
become rich
while
remaining
restless.
Rather than
resting on
our laurels,
we have
feared
getting fat
and lazy.
And that has
been our
greatest
strength. In
the past,
worrying
about
decline has
helped us
avert that
very
condition.
Let's hope
it does so
today.