You might have thought that the Crash of 2008 would have led Democrats to reconsider this neoliberal approach to providing public goods by private means. But to judge from President Obama's budget, the White House is still living back in the neoliberal era.
Barack Obama's bold, ambitious budget plan proves that he is
the true heir of Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal. Consider Obama's
Rooseveltian energy plan. In 1939, President Roosevelt decided to mobilize
Americans to create a new source of energy: atomic power. Although he was urged
to focus on government-funded R&D, FDR chose a different route. He wisely encouraged
private capital to invest in atomic energy research by a variety of tax
incentives. To make atomic power investment more palatable to private capital,
FDR boldly chose to make all other forms of energy in the U.S.
uneconomical, by slapping high taxes on kerosene and coal. With the money from
the new federal Kerosene Cap and Trade system, President Roosevelt and Congress
funded a small-scale federal research program, in the hope of attracting much
greater private investment ...
Wait. What's that you say? FDR didn't do that? He poured
federal money into the all-public Manhattan Project and created the first
atomic bomb in a couple of years? He didn't tax kerosene to make it
uneconomical and to encourage private investment in atomic power?
Oh. OK. Never mind.
But what about Social Security? In 1935, FDR signed the
historic Social Security Act. It created a complex "retirement
mandate" system, forcing all elderly Americans to buy expensive annuities
from private insurance companies, without, however, imposing price controls on
the insurance companies ...
What? FDR didn't force the elderly to subsidize private
annuity brokers? He imposed a single, simple, efficient tax to pay for a
single, simple, efficient public system of retirement benefits?
All right, then, forget FDR. He was a socialist, anyway. Let
Dwight Eisenhower serve as a model for the Obama administration. President
Eisenhower authorized the biggest infrastructure program in American history,
when he signed the National Interstate and Defense Highways Act of 1956. The
interstate highway act created an elaborate system of private tax incentives
and public-private partnerships (PPPs) to encourage private corporations to
build national highways. To begin with, all U.S. highways were leased to
domestic and foreign corporations for a period of decades. Second, all U.S. highways
were set up with toll booths, so that American drivers would be forced to repay
the corporate owners of the national highways every few dozen miles. Finally, a
system of high-speed lanes with higher tolls was created, so that the rich
could whiz down the road while middle-class and poor Americans were stuck in
traffic jams ...
All right, what now, wise guy? So that's wrong, too?
Eisenhower's national highway system wasn't based on tolls, leases to foreign
companies, income-based pricing, and tax credits for private corporations? It
used gasoline taxes to fund free public highways?
Free highways without toll booths, owned by the public, paid
for out of taxes? My God. So the John Birch Society was right after all. Dwight
Eisenhower was as much of a socialist as Franklin Delano Roosevelt!
The point of this imaginary monologue is simple. Once upon a
time in the United States, public goods -- from retirement security and energy
research to public roads -- were provided by the government and paid for by
taxes. As late as the Nixon administration, the provision of public goods by
government was considered perfectly compatible with a robust market economy by
so-called Modern Republicans like Eisenhower and Nixon as well as New Deal Democrats
like Roosevelt, Truman, Kennedy and Johnson. In the intervening 40 years,
however, free-market fundamentalists of the Chicago School have managed to
change the debate, redefining "socialism" to mean not only public
ownership of the means of production, but also public provision of public
goods.
Rather than fight back, most Democrats in the last
generation adapted to this hostile conservative political climate by
jettisoning New Deal "big government" liberalism for
"market-friendly" neoliberalism. Neoliberals shared the right's
enthusiasm for deregulating industries that New Deal Democrats had regulated in
the public interest. Jimmy Carter and Ted Kennedy supported the deregulation of
trucking and airlines, while Bill Clinton presided over the dismantling of the
New Deal era's banking regulations and declared: "The era of big
government is over." Neoliberals and conservatives agreed that public
goods should be provided by private, for-profit or nonprofit entities, rather
than government agencies. If private corporations or universities had no
motivation to provide public goods, well, then, they would be bribed with tax
credits or other government subsidies.
Neoliberals are liberals in one sense -- they fret about
unequal outcomes. But rather than help middle- and low-income Americans by
regulating the prices of privately provided public goods, as the crude and
direct New Dealers would have done, neoliberal Democrats have argued for
allowing the "market" (translation: the publicly subsidized entities)
to set prices and then promised to provide tax subsidies or grants to help
middle- and low-income Americans pay for the expensive, privately provided
public goods.
You might have thought that the Crash of 2008 would have led
Democrats to reconsider this neoliberal approach to providing public goods by
private means. But to judge from President Obama's budget, the White House is
still living back in the neoliberal era, when the diminutive Milton Friedman
cast a giant shadow.
Consider Obama's education proposals. The problem with
higher education is that it costs way too much. Tuition costs at private
universities and some state universities have been growing far more rapidly
than inflation. A crude, old-fashioned, old-thinking New Deal liberal would see
the problem as one of excessive prices demanded by universities, not
insufficient funds on the part of the students whom the universities gouge. The
hypothetical New Deal liberal would threaten to deny universities their
privileged tax-exempt status unless they spend more of their endowments on
tuition and keep their prices affordable.
The neoliberal alternative is to avoid impolite and divisive
inquiries into the reasons for skyrocketing tuition costs. That would entail
the government concluding that prices in a particular industry (in this case, a
nonprofit industry) are too high, something that government should not do.
Instead, the taxpayer will be forced to cough up money to help students meet
the exorbitant fees. Thus Obama's first budget calls for maintaining the $2,500
New American Opportunity Tax Credit for middle-class students, while converting
Pell Grants up to $5,550 into a permanent government entitlement. If I were a
university, I'd raise my tuition by ... oh ... let's say $5,550 a year.
Government subsidies without government price controls would encourage cost
inflation, one might think, but this possibility appears not to bother the
brilliant economists on Obama's team.
Then there's energy. The problem with alternative energy
sources like solar power and wind power is that they are still too expensive,
compared to coal, natural gas and nuclear energy. The answer, according to a
minority of enviromentalists like Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger,
should be massive, Manhattan-style public sector R&D to discover ways to
bring alternative energy prices down -- in absolute, not just relative, terms,
to maintain cheap electricity for American industry and American households.
That would be the Roosevelt approach. But the Obama approach is to use a
cap-and-trade system to artificially raise the prices of conventional energy,
in the hope that private capital (with modest help from public capital) will
pay for efforts to invent a cheaper solar cell or wind turbine. The fact that
most of the left embraces cap-and-trade should not blind us to the fact that
cap-and-trade is a classic example of an indirect, overly complicated,
"market-friendly" neoliberal approach, touted originally by
conservatives and neoliberals as an alternative to the allegedly discredited
"top-down, command-and-control" approach that gave us, among other
things, the TVA, the Manhattan Project and the Internet.
And healthcare? The Obama administration deserves credit for
trying to reduce prescription drug costs and to promote electronic medical
records. Obama's budget director Peter Orszag in particular deserves praise for
pointing out that escalating economy-wide healthcare costs, not the Social
Security and Medicare costs associated with the aging of the boomer generation
as such, represent the real long-term threat to the U.S. economy. Even so, it
seems likely that whatever ultimately emerges as the consensus Democratic
healthcare plan will be yet another Rube Goldberg scheme for massively
subsidizing employers, private health insurers, or both.
I'm sympathetic to the argument that the public, after
nearly half a century of conservative anti-government propaganda, will oppose
the direct provision of public goods paid for out of straightforward taxation
-- the "socialistic" old Eisenhower-Roosevelt approach. It was the
conviction that a single-payer healthcare system was politically impossible
that led me to endorse the individual mandate system as the next best
alternative, in "The Radical Center," a book I co-authored with Ted
Halstead in 2001.
But a lot has changed since Wall Street imploded last fall.
The great investment banks are gone, the U.S. has nationalized much of the
financial system, and appears to be on the way to effectively nationalizing the
automobile and housing sectors as well. In this environment, we need to
consider some heresies, like the idea that the best way to provide a public
good is not necessarily to pour subsidies on middlemen, and then bail them out
with more subsidies when they fail at their public function.
The fundamental barrier today is the way that the issues are
framed, by Democrats and Republicans alike. Thus the problem is defined not as
making credit available for individuals and businesses, but as saving the banks
and the shadow banking system. The goal is not to provide healthcare to all
citizens, but to enable all citizens to purchase private health insurance. The
objective is not to ensure universal access to higher education; it is to
insure universal access to colleges and universities. In these and other cases,
the means is confused with the end. The ultimate goal -- providing credit,
healthcare or education -- is identified with the interests of non-governmental
for-profit or nonprofit providers of that service. If these private
institutions fail to provide the public service in a low-cost, effective and
equitable way, then they must be subsidized even more. The idea of achieving
the same public goals through simpler, more direct and efficient means that
would cut out the middleman appears to be heresy to the Obama administration.
It's not necessary to nudge the Obama administration
leftward until it arrives at socialism. When it comes to the public provision
of public goods, Eisenhower Republicanism would be just fine.
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