Government is taking us a long way down the Road to Serfdom. That doesn't just
mean that more of us must work for the government. It means that we are
changing from independent, self-responsible people into a submissive flock.
The welfare state kills the creative spirit.
F.A. Hayek, an Austrian
economist living in Britain, wrote "The Road to Serfdom" in 1944 as a warning
that central economic planning would extinguish freedom. The book was a hit.
Reader's Digest produced a condensed version that sold 5 million copies.
Hayek meant that governments can't plan economies without planning people's
lives. After all, an economy is just individuals engaging in exchanges. The
scientific-sounding language of President Obama's economic planning hides the
fact that people must shelve their own plans in favor of government's
single plan.
At the beginning of "The Road to Serfdom," Hayek acknowledges that mere
material wealth is not all that's at stake when the government controls our
lives: "The most important change ... is a psychological change, an alteration
in the character of the people."
This shouldn't be controversial. If government relieves us of the
responsibility of living by bailing us out, character will atrophy. The
welfare state, however good its intentions of creating material equality,
can't help but make us dependent. That changes the psychology of society.
I'll explore this tomorrow night on my Fox Business show, 8 p.m. Eastern
(rebroadcast Friday at 10 p.m.).
According to the Tax Foundation, 60 percent of the population now gets more
in government benefits than it pays in taxes. What does it say about a society
in which more than half the people live at the expense of the rest? Worse, the
dependent class is growing. The 60 percent will soon be 70 percent.
Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin seems to understand the threat: He worries that
"more people have a stake in the welfare state than in free enterprise. This
is a road that Hayek perfectly described as 'the road to serfdom.'" (Tomorrow
I will ask Ryan why, if he understands this, he voted for TARP and the auto
bailouts.)
Kurt Vonnegut understood the threat of government-imposed equality. His
short story "Harrison Bergeron" portrays a future in which no one is permitted
to have any physical or intellectual advantage over anyone else. A government
Handicapper General weighs down the strong and agile, masks the faces of the
beautiful and distracts the smart.
So far, the Handicapper General is just fantasy. But Vice President Joe
Biden did shout at the Democratic National Convention: "Everyone is your
equal, and everyone is equal to you." If he meant that we're all equal in
rights and before the law, fine. If he meant government shouldn't put barriers
in the way of opportunity, great. But statists like Biden usually have more in
mind: They want government to make results more equal.
Two actual examples of the lunacy:
When colleges innovated by having students use Kindle e-book readers
instead of expensive textbooks, the Justice Department sued them, complaining
that the Kindle discriminates against blind students. The department also is
suing the Massachusetts prison system because it makes prospective prison
guards take a physical test. Since women don't do as well as men on that test,
Justice claims the test discriminates against women.
Arthur Brooks, who heads the American Enterprise Institute, says statism is
becoming the "central organizing power in our economy," and that the battle
between free enterprise and statism will shape our futures. He remains
optimistic because a recent poll showed that 70 percent of Americans want free
enterprise. I'm less sanguine. In that same poll, 54 percent of Americans said
government should exert more control over the economy. Brooks discounts that,
claiming people forget their "core values" during crises.
But he asks the right question: Do we want a culture of takers or makers?
Ryan and Brooks say most people want "the American idea": freedom and
self-responsibility. I fear they want a Mommy State to take care of them. What
do you think?
The choice is crucial. If we continue down the Road to Serfdom, our
destination will be a poorer society, high unemployment, stagnation and
complacency.
Copyright 2010, Creators Syndicate Inc.