By Michael Tanner
Wednesday, January 16, 2019
In the Broadway musical Chess, KGB agent Alexander Molokov rejects the West’s choice of
consumerism and individual choice over communal solidarity: “It’s the weak who
believe tawdry untruths about freedom. Trinkets in airports, sufficient to lead
them astray.” One can hear echoes of Molokov’s critique in Tucker Carlson’s
recent series of monologues on Fox News.
One might be less concerned about Tucker’s cranky
nostalgia for Archie Bunker’s America if he weren’t part of a growing strain of
American conservatism that is suspicious of — if not hostile to — free-market
capitalism.
Most prominent, of course, is President Trump, whose
attitude to the free market has long been indifferent at best. Simply consider
his opposition to free trade; his calls to regulate businesses he doesn’t like,
such as Amazon and Facebook; his support for subsidies in favored industries
such as farming and manufacturing.
But increasingly Trump is joined by a chorus of populist
conservatives who sound a lot more like Elizabeth Warren or Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez than Ronald Reagan or William F. Buckley Jr. Ann Coulter, for
instance, has entertained AOC’s call for a 70 percent tax rate, suggested a
wealth tax, and criticized corporate tax cuts.
Coulter and Tucker, of course, are provocateurs. But it’s
harder to excuse serious conservatives such as Oren Cass, Henry Olson, Michael
Brendan Dougherty, J. D. Vance, and Ross Douthat, among others. All these
thinkers have written favorably of government policies to regulate the economy.
Douthat, for instance, calls on conservatives to embrace government action to
secure what he calls a “family wage” for Americans. In a similar vein, Oren
Cass suggests that the U.S. embrace German-style labor regulation and welfare
payments to low-wage workers. And several conservative scholars have recently
called for the government to establish universal family leave.
I’m going to leave to others the debate about virtue and
whether markets have contributed to the breakdown of morality, as Tucker warns.
I will note, however, that those good old days weren’t all that moral if
measured by how we treated women, minorities, and others. Nor should we assume
that the coerced conformity actually represented some higher form of virtue.
But Tucker and his fellow populists also get the
economics wrong. It is doubtful that Carlson or the others really want to
return to the standards of living of, say, the 1950s. After all, it’s not just
the elites who are better off today. Yes, the rich have gotten richer, but in
many ways it’s the poor and the working class that have gained the most from
the economic growth of the last half-century.
And it’s not just a question of the poor being able to
buy cheap things, as Tucker says. By the end of the 1950s, the U.S. poverty
rate stood at 22 percent, far higher than at any point during the depths of the
Great Recession. Life expectancies for both men and women back then were ten
years shorter than they are today. Culture and entertainment were far less
accessible to the average American. Alcoholism was rampant. And, yes, things
cost more. “Our old LaSalle” may have run great, but a car cost some 45 percent
of an average worker’s annual income.
Rather, the populists seem to believe that government
intervention, regulation, and restrictions on individual choice would result in
the same prosperity we have today, but without the disruption and “creative
destruction,” in Schumpeter’s famous phrase.
But growth and disruption are inseparable. Improvements
in living standards come about through the experimentation that the market
economy allows. Entrepreneurs pour their efforts into satisfying their
customers and are rewarded if successful. This virtuous circle cannot occur
when the government is picking winners and losers.
Equally important, the populists misread the politics as
well. Yes, the elites often manipulate public policy for their own benefit. But
their actions are seldom pro-market. When the government picks winners and
losers, who do you think is likely to lose? Markets don’t care if you are rich
or poor, black or white, male or female. Politicians and bureaucrats do.
Throughout history, free markets have been the great
levelers. Early on, commerce was attacked for allowing mere tradesmen to rise
above the entitled aristocracy.
In my new book, The
Inclusive Economy, I show dozens of examples of how elites try to preempt
free markets in ways that hurt the disadvantaged: zoning laws that lock
low-income workers out of better neighborhoods; school systems that are
designed more for the benefit of teachers and administrators than for parents
and children; occupational-licensing, occupational-zoning, and minimum-wage
laws that prevent the poor from getting a toehold on the economic ladder. Not
one of these measures is about “worshiping the market.” Even protectionism,
often cheered by populists, usually benefits favored industries at the expense
of those without as much influence.
By turning against markets, Tucker, Trump, and their
fellow populists are turning against the single best tool for improving the
lives of poor and working-class Americans.
No comments:
Post a Comment