In a Welfare State, How Much Is 'Enough'?
By Jonah Goldberg
PatriotPost.us
The flames from Greece's debt crisis protests have cast new light on the
perils of our own overspending and overborrowing. You know the litany.
California is imploding. Public sector unions there, and across the country,
are swallowing budgets. In California alone, pension costs have gone up
2,000 percent in a decade. At the national level, ObamaCare has done little
to fix -- and much to hurt -- America's long-term entitlement mess. Already,
America's structural deficit has tripled since 2007. Economist Price
Fishback has just published a paper finding that America spends more on
social welfare than socialist Sweden (though we spend it differently).
According to USA Today, "paychecks from private business shrank to their
smallest share of personal income in U.S. history during the first quarter
of this year," while government benefits rose to a record high. In fact,
government employment is becoming a method of redistributing wealth. In
2009, the federal payroll grew and the number of federal jobs paying over
$100,000 a year doubled.
The average federal worker earns over 70 percent more than the average
private sector worker, writes Arthur Brooks in his new book "The Battle":
"To find this acceptable, you must agree that the average federal worker is
much more productive or deserving than the average person in the private
sector."
Show of hands: Who thinks that's true?
Yet the Democrats want more. More what? More everything. Even as the
economy is starting to grow and many experts think we should trim debt and
spending, Democrats want yet another stimulus bill, to extend jobless
benefits. (They call them "jobs bills" now.) It turns out that all of that
talk of a "temporary" stimulus was just that: temporary talk.
Indeed, the mess we have today is merely the natural result of a
century-long battle over the size of government. When it comes to the
welfare state, liberals want more, conservatives want less. It seems that
nobody ever talks about "enough."
Except that's not entirely true. Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., offered an
alternative vision of government in his famous "Roadmap." It was, in the
words of New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, a blueprint for a
"conservative welfare state." The idea was that the truly needy would be
taken care of because they are truly needy, but middle-class entitlements
would be scaled back for two simple reasons: 1) we cannot afford them, and
2) excessive government meddling in areas such as health care increases
costs and wastes money.
Ryan's blueprint was denounced by liberals as too stingy and largely
ignored by much of the Republican leadership, who were happy to just say
"No" to Obama's plans without offering voters anything serious to say "Yes"
to.
William Voegeli, a scholar of impeccable conservative credentials, has
joined Ryan's battle in his book "Never Enough," a searing indictment of
what he calls the Hundred Years' War between the party of more and the party
of less. Voegeli argues that American voters (including most Republicans)
will never fully eradicate the welfare state because they don't want to. And
so conservatives should make peace with the idea that the federal government
should help the truly needy, while rejecting both the sorts of middle- and
upper-class entitlements that are bankrupting the country and the kind of
government "dole" that breeds bad habits among the poor and able-bodied.
Purist libertarians who see merely a surrender to liberalism should at
least acknowledge that liberals would denounce any suggestion of means
testing America's safety net (as will many voters) as cruel cutbacks and a
violation of FDR's "vision." Moreover, the current strategy hasn't worked.
We've had a century of nearly uninterrupted growth in the welfare state,
even under Ronald Reagan. That alone recommends a new strategy.
Consider Social Security. Liberals are absolutely committed to the idea
that everybody should be in the same creaky retirement system. They insist
that middle- and upper-class voters must be bribed to support the poor. So
Warren Buffett gets a Social Security check to ensure everyone does. In
fairness, some liberals also claim that a universal entitlement binds us
together as a nation. The former claim is cynical, the latter poetic
nonsense.
Governments do not generate wealth; they can merely distribute it. The
challenge for both liberals and conservatives is simply to define how much
distribution is "enough." What would an acceptable safety net look like? Who
should be taken care of by taxpayers and for how long? Paul Ryan offered an
answer to that question, and liberals scoffed because they reject the
question. There's no such thing as enough, as far as they're concerned.
That's what the Greeks thought.
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