By Kevin D. Williamson
Monday, September 07, 2015
The Obama administration is looking to pass mandatory
paid-leave laws and is issuing an executive order mandating paid leave for
employees of federal contractors. The argument is a familiar one: “We’re the
only advanced nation that doesn’t guarantee paid leave,” a White House
communique says.
Paid-leave laws are undesirable for a number of reasons:
The federal government is not a very good bank or insurance company or
venture-capital firm, and it isn’t going to be a very good HR department
either; and, contrary to the insistence of Senator Sanders et al., one of the
problems with the American economy at the moment is that Americans are doing
too little rather than too much work.
But ignore those for the moment and consider what often
is presented as the dispositive argument in these cases: The United States,
alone among advanced nations, fails to maintain policy x, where x represents
any item from the progressive wish list, from so-called universal health
insurance to censorship of unpopular political views to the abolition of
capital punishment to, in this case, mandatory paid leave. “The United States,
alone among advanced nations, clings to these atavistic ways,” the argument
goes, “and must join the rest of the civilized world in x.”
For the Left, “diversity” is about how you like your
chicken cooked—Kentucky fried, Kolhapuri, doro wot—the “gorgeous mosaic” of
multiculturalism being celebrated in the trivial under the expectation that the
world’s people will live under a standard of exacting conformity where it
matters.
One of the reasons that the United States often is alone
in the world is that there isn’t another country like it. In terms of
population size and diversity, the United States is more like India or Brazil
than any Western European country. If you are looking for an advanced Western
country with economic standing similar to that of the United States, the
nearest you’ll come is Germany, a very different sort of country: one-fourth
the population, partitioned within recent memory, governed by genocidal
dictatorship immediately prior to that, etc.
As regular readers of these pages will know, I have a
great deal of admiration for the Swiss model of governance and find much to
like in European, and particularly Scandinavian, practices, which apparently
confuses and vexes among others David Roberts of Vox, one of those Salon-level
writers who likes to go on about American “feudalism,” who recently demanded of
me: “Are you endorsing Swiss social and economic policies?” Well, some of them,
sure. But the policy transplant is a tricky operation; Switzerland is full of
Swiss people, and the United States is not.
The Left, full as it is of being who have for years
received their news from Jon Stewart, believes the Right to be full of
cartoonish Europe-haters who cannot believe that there is no NASCAR event in
Florence. (They cannot believe that John O’Sullivan exists.) But if you flip
over to, say, the Heritage Foundation’s annual ranking of countries on the
metric of economic freedom—not only freedom from excessive taxation and
regulation but freedom from corruption and political management—you see a lot
of those wicked welfare states high up on the rankings: New Zealand, Australia,
Switzerland, Canada, Ireland, and Denmark are all more highly rated than is the
United States.
Conservatives sometimes turn the “no other country in the
world” argument around: The government of no other economically advanced
country presumes worldwide tax jurisdiction, as the United States government
does, and no advanced country has a corporate tax as high as in the United
States. If we are to go around the world cherry-picking policies from happy
countries, we might pass over French paid-leave laws in favor of the Swiss
capital-gains tax (generally 0.00 percent) or the Swiss national minimum wage (there
isn’t one), or Finland’s very liberal (in the good sense of that word)
education system, or Sweden’s free-trade regime and its financial-regulatory
system. We’d have to make radical improvements on our federal balance sheet to
get our public debt down to Norwegian levels. Our friends on the Left note that
Germany has stronger labor unions than we do; we might also note that they have
better unions, that IG Metall is a far less destructive and more collaborative
organization than is the UAW. As our progressive friends celebrate Australia’s
relatively high minimum wage, we might nod along and note that it excludes
workers 21 years of age and younger, which is not unlike Charles Krauthammer’s
proposal for a two-tiered minimum wage.
Where conservatives differ radically from progressives is
in understanding that polities are not plastic, that culture and institutions
and history and people matter, and that as attractive as we might find this or
that aspect of another country’s governance, it takes the mind of a child to
believe that Swiss or Singaporean policies will product Swiss or Singaporean
results in New Jersey or Mississippi.
When confronted with a policy maintained by the United
States alone, the progressive finds it very difficult to imagine that there
might be a good reason for that, or that this might be desirable. The United
States is practically alone in the world in its absolute commitment to freedom
of speech, for example, something in which old-fashioned liberals once took
pride but modern progressives detest and seek to change, pronouncing themselves
scandalized by a Supreme Court decision declaring that a group of American
citizens is entitled to show a film critical of Hillary Rodham Clinton without
government permission and that the government may not ban the showing of films
or the circulation of books and other media. G. K. Chesterton’s
advice—economically summarized by John Kennedy as “Don’t ever take a fence down
until you know the reason why it was put up”—is almost always relevant. It is,
for example, why we still have a Bill of Rights, one of the greatest barriers
in the history of political immuring, rather than conducting periodic referenda
on individual liberties.
There is much for us to learn from our friends abroad.
There is also an excellent reason why there are more people of Swedish origin
living on this side of the Atlantic than in Sweden. “No other country . . . .”
In the case of the United States, that’s often been an excellent thing.
No comments:
Post a Comment