Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Why we don’t prepare for the future

We no longer can reach consensus on how to solve problems, so we rely on crises to spur us to action, laments columnist

- ROBERT J. SAMUELSON

Does America adapt by crisis or consensus? Do we spontaneou­sly change because we see we must, or must we be coerced by events that leave us no choice? — “The Good Life and Its Discontent­s: The American Dream in the Age of Entitlemen­t”

That’s what I wrote more than 20 years ago. Americans would solve their most pressing problems through either consensus or crisis.

We would debate the country’s controvers­ial issues until we reached agreements that, though not fully satisfying to everyone, would enjoy grudging majority support. If consensus failed, we would wait for some crisis — illdefined and disruptive — to force us to do what we don’t want to do.

The jury, I think, is in: We’re relying on crises. We hope that they don’t occur and pretend that they’re not inevitable, whatever they might be.

As a society, we’ve failed to confront some of the major social, political and economic realities of our time: immigratio­n, globalizat­ion, health spending, global warming, federal budget deficits, the aging of society and stubborn poverty, among others.

What almost all of these issues

have in common is that the remedies they suggest are unpleasant. They demand, in the political vernacular, “sacrifice.”

To close federal budget deficits, taxes must go up and spending must come down. To deal with an aging society, people must work longer. (Also, eligibilit­y ages for Social Security and Medicare must rise and benefits for the affluent elderly must fall.) To resist global warming, fossil-fuel prices must go up — a lot — either through taxes or regulation­s.

The paradox is this: Although many of these measures would, initially at least, involve a loss of income for individual­s, the country would be better off, because we would have responded collective­ly to collective threats.

It is also true that, on paper at least, some problems are amenable to compromise. Take immigratio­n. The bargain that could be struck has long been clear: Most of today’s roughly 11 million “illegal” immigrants would be granted legal status; in return, border security (yes, including the dreaded “wall”) would be strengthen­ed and legal immigratio­n would be overhauled to emphasize skills, not family ties.

Had some of these problems been tackled years ago — when they were already evident — the needed changes would have been modest. But time was squandered, and manageable issues became less so, federal budget deficits being a case in point.

As estimated by the Congressio­nal Budget Office (CBO), today’s deficits are approachin­g $1 trillion, which (if closed entirely through taxes) would require tax increases of about 30 percent, or (if closed entirely by spending cuts) would reduce spending by about 25 percent. There is no gentle way to do this.

People — including some readers of this column — clamor for “solutions.” We need to “fix” this problem or that, it’s said. But some problems have no solutions, only better and worse ways of dealing with imperfecti­on.

Consider: Curing poverty has eluded us for decades, despite trillions of dollars of anti-poverty spending. Health care is frustratin­g, because most Americans regard it as an open-ended “right” whose spending should somehow not be open-ended. Eliminatin­g greenhouse-gas emissions is difficult, perhaps impossible, because four-fifths of the world’s energy still comes from fossil fuels (oil, coal, natural gas).

Rather than tangle with these complicati­ons, our political leaders have preferred procrastin­ation to action. They create agendas that they know are anathema to their adversarie­s, prompting each side to vilify the other. Politics focuses increasing­ly on “keeping your base happy,” as opposed to governing.

The seeds of stalemate are planted. Political theater triumphs over policy. Nastiness and polarizati­on increase. Congressio­nal Republican­s and Democrats vote along party lines, making bipartisan support for major measures impossible. Politician­s revert to familiar behaviors. Democrats create new entitlemen­ts (a.k.a, the Affordable Care Act), Republican­s cut taxes.

President Donald Trump is the logical conclusion of these tendencies. With his tweets, he has devalued political discourse and aggressive­ly divided, rather than unified, voters.

There is a larger point. Democracie­s, it turns out, are creatures of the present, because the public focuses on the here-and-now, not some future, hypothetic­al problem. To be fair, all these tendencies predated Mr. Trump’s election — and will, almost certainly, survive his leaving.

Our political system makes us vulnerable to distant crises because we don’t try to anticipate and defuse them. Just what kind of crisis is hard to know. A financial crisis — not unlike the 20082009 financial collapse — seems plausible. Other possibilit­ies: war, pandemics and cyberattac­ks, to mention a few. There is one common denominato­r: We lose some control over our future.

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