Read The Price of Civilization: Reawakening American Virtue and Prosperity Online
Authors: Jeffrey D. Sachs
Tags: #Business & Economics, #Economic Conditions, #History, #United States, #21st Century, #Social Science, #Poverty & Homelessness
Congress is notoriously ill equipped to deal with these technical
issues. Among the 535 members of Congress, those with advanced scientific and engineering training include three physicists, one chemist, six engineers, one microbiologist, and sixteen medical doctors, accounting for just 5 percent of the members.
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Several decades back the Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) helped Congress navigate through the technology thicket. The OTA lasted from 1972 to 1995 and was then closed by a Republican-dominated Congress imbued with free-market fervor and the belief that science doesn’t matter (or, perhaps more accurately, that it is threatening to powerful interests).
America’s scientific and technological experts in academia and industry would be honored to contribute their knowledge toward national problem solving, but they are too rarely asked. Expertise can be harnessed through special commissions and research programs led by leading scientific bodies (such as the National Academy of Sciences, the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the national laboratories). Both Congress and the administration need stronger and more systematic scientific advice. Congress should reestablish the Office of Technology Assessment, and the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) should be considerably strengthened and tasked with preparing major public studies on key policy issues.
Make Multiyear Plans
The lack of clear goals, inherent complexity of issues, and mix of scientific confusion and disinformation would probably be enough to stop most coherent action in its tracks. Yet there are even greater obstacles at play in the executive branch. Even when it tries, the federal government suffers a chronic inability to develop and implement sophisticated plans.
The problem, as noted earlier, starts with the two-year national election cycle, by far the most frequent of any major economy. The president also makes an extraordinary number of political appointments at the top of each department. This has the ostensible
advantage of bringing in fresh ideas with a change of political mandate. However, in practice, it leads to amateurism, a revolving door between senior officials and private business, and an incredibly time-consuming process to fill the administration’s top jobs. After one year in office, according to the Partnership for Public Service, the Obama administration had filled only around 60 percent of the top five hundred jobs.
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This has meant that throughout the administration, senior teams were not even in place as the 2010 elections approached.
All these problems of short-termism are compounded by an antiplanning mentality. More than two years into the Obama presidency, we’ve yet to see a coherent plan on almost any front. Health care reform was pushed through Congress without a plan. There is still no energy and climate plan. There is no plan to eliminate the budget deficit. Nobody in his right mind should advocate rigid central planning (in which the government tries to fix wages, prices, and outputs across the economy), but nobody should believe that complex challenges of science and technology, higher education, modernization of infrastructure, climate change mitigation, and the restoration of budget balance can be addressed without a careful, multiyear planning process within government.
The closest we now come to multiyear planning is the Office of Management and Budget, but OMB is focused largely on year-to-year budgets. Upgrading OMB or another agency to prepare multiyear plans for public-sector action will sound absolutely heretical to most Americans, but the truth is that most successful governments have such an agency or department, and make use of it especially to address the kinds of public investment challenges that America has been neglecting during the past thirty years.
One key—perhaps
the
key—to effective planning is to embrace complexity. The economy is a complex system, linking millions of public and private enterprises and billions of consumers around the world. With a complex system, there is rarely a single solution to a problem. “Magic bullets,” or single-minded solutions, are the favorite
prescriptions of superficial analysts. Beware! Whether we are dealing with balancing the budget, improving education, reducing unemployment, or addressing immigration, the solutions are likely to be messy and complex, change over time, and involve multiple levels of government, from the international to the local. Plans are vital, but they must include several interlinked policies, be adaptive over time, and be open to a wide range of participants from business, government agencies, and civil-society institutions. The point is that the solutions won’t come through the easy nostrums of our day, whether tax cuts, stimulus spending, immigration crackdowns, or getting tough on teachers’ unions. The only thing in common with these kinds of “plans” is that they are based on oversimplicity in a complex economy and society.
Be Mindful of the Far Future
We cannot, of course, peer into the distant future, but we can still train ourselves and orient our political system to be mindful of the far future, a time horizon, for example, of at least two generations ahead. The U.S. government pioneered such thinking with the establishment of national parks in the Yellowstone National Park Act of 1872, signed by President Ulysses S. Grant; the American Antiquities Act of 1906, signed by President Theodore Roosevelt; and the National Park Service Organic Act of 1916, signed by President Woodrow Wilson. The new National Park Service was directed “to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.”
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In a world rife with environmental degradation, such future-oriented stewardship has become a matter of survival.
The president should devote part of every State of the Union speech to describing the implications of our actions today—in science and technology, environmental threats, demography and aging, saving and investment—for an average American in the year 2050.
This alone would open the eyes of the citizenry to our stewardship for the future. After all, today’s newborns will be a mere forty years old at midcentury. We need not presume to shape the distant future; we need only respect the prospects of those newly born today.
End the Corporatocracy
As long as practical politics revolves around raising large sums for media campaigns, America’s corporatocracy will remain in place and the downward economic slide will continue. During the past decade, the curtain has been pulled away from the Wizards of Washington who manipulate campaign financing, lobbying outlays, and revolving doors, and the public now understands the flow of corporate money much better than in the past. Politicians would be foolhardy to believe otherwise. Rather than despair, I therefore ask instead what might be done. How can the broken system be fixed? For that, we need to identify practical steps that could extricate the federal government from the clutches of the lobbies.
When Obama became president, many of us hoped he would chase the moneylenders out of the Capitol. The financial crisis had exposed the tawdry side of Wall Street and politics and the intertwined tentacles connecting the two. Yet before the first stock market bell of his presidency had rung, Obama had installed a pro-banking team at the White House, led by Larry Summers. For the first two years of his administration, he sided mostly with the bankers, providing bailouts but asking for and getting too little in return regarding restraints on salaries, bonuses, and other abusive behaviors of the past. The bankers, not surprisingly, continued to feign surprise and hurt when anybody suggested their complicity in the crisis or the need to restrain their gargantuan pay. Whether Obama will ever take on Wall Street and the other corporate interest groups remains an open question, though hopes have grown somewhat dim.
Defeating the corporatocracy is, of course, easier said than done. American politics is a deeply entrenched, mutually supportive duopoly of parties, while the public is distracted and swayed by propaganda. Even if we know the means needed to break the power/money nexus, getting them adopted will require active political struggle. My guess is that it will be the rise of a credible third party, focused heavily on removing money from politics, that will sooner or later break the duopoly. It’s not as if the problem is so complex that it is hidden from view. It is widely known, but the public does not know
where to turn. Any political movement that offers a way forward will tap a very deep vein of disappointment, anger, and political mobilization. A new political party can be combined with other forms of political agitation—consumer boycotts, protests, media campaigns, and social networking efforts—to put the most egregious leaders of the corporatocracy on notice. As I discuss in the next chapter, my belief is that the young generation of Millennials, today’s young people aged eighteen to twenty-nine, will have both the motive and the means to take on this challenge.
Restore Public Management
The constant “reinvention” of government has amounted mostly to poorly supervised handouts for private contractors, such as Halliburton and Blackwater in the war zones and the “Beltway bandits” who swarm around the U.S. development aid programs. The extent of contracting vastly exceeds agencies’ ability to oversee the contractors’ work. The contracting process, frequently no-compete arrangements, encourages corruption on an unprecedented scale. Tens of billions of dollars have gone astray in recent years while the “war lobby” encourages Congress to prolong the senseless occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. The proper approach is to rebuild public management, not to turn it over to voracious private firms.
A starting point for proper public management would be a significant increase in trained professional managers within the departments, recruited on the basis of salaries competitive with those in the private sector. Political appointments would be reduced in number and converted to senior civil service appointments. Renewed efforts would be made to monitor, evaluate, and audit all outsourced programs. The enormous, corrupt, and wasteful no-compete contracts of the Pentagon would be brought to an end.
Decentralize
America is an enormous and diverse country that can be managed only with considerable local variation in its policies. For a long time,
the political Left has routinely looked to Washington to impose its will on the entire country, on social issues such as sexual mores, income redistribution, education policy, health care, and other issues. These efforts have mostly backfired. Rather than finding compromises on these contentious issues that allow for local variations in policies, pressures for Washington-imposed uniformity have often led to an anti-Washington backlash with no results at all. It is time for those in favor of a more activist government to accept the doctrine of
subsidiarity
. This doctrine, as I noted earlier, holds that policy problems should be addressed at the most local level of government that is capable of providing a solution. Education, health, roads, water treatment, and the like can generally be addressed locally. Most tax collection, on the other hand, should be national, to reduce the serious problem of tax competition between states and localities.
There is another compelling reason for decentralization of social services. The most powerful tool for breaking extreme poverty is a holistic community-based development strategy that combines vocational training and job placement, early childhood development, educational upgrading, and local infrastructure. Each part of the antipoverty effort supports all of the others. This kind of ground-up development effort must in practice be led by the communities themselves but backed with financing from the federal and state governments.
Options for Fundamental Change
My recommendations in this chapter can be called ameliorative: they aim to use moderate means to turn around a moderately broken situation. We have to ask, however, whether this will be enough. The despair and cynicism in America are deep. There is a widespread feeling that nothing will change. Perhaps only a more dramatic break with today’s political institutions can work.
One obvious starting point would be a third party, to break the corrupted duopoly of the Democrats and Republicans. The obstacles to such an effort are real but not quite as insurmountable as is often believed. In recent years we have had several important third-party candidates for president, including John Anderson in 1980, Ross Perot in 1992 and 1996, and Ralph Nader in 2000 and 2004. Each achieved ballot access across most of the United States, and each generated a significant following and made a significant contribution to the political debate.