Daily Camera (Boulder)

Political madness is taking place against a backdrop of astonishin­g U.S. strength

- Email: fareed.zakaria.gps@ turner.com.

The United States’ debt ceiling crisis is, once again, provoking the usual commentary about the country’s presumed dysfunctio­n. But the truth is that this unprovoked madness, causing self-inflicted wounds, is taking place against a backdrop of astonishin­g strength.

The facts cannot be disputed. The United States has recovered from the coronaviru­s pandemic faster than any major economy in the world. As Bloomberg’s Matthew A. Winkler recently pointed out, unemployme­nt is stunningly low. Gross domestic product growth has grown at three times the average pace as under President Donald Trump, real incomes are rising, manufactur­ing is booming and inflation has eased for 10 straight months.

The picture is even better when viewed more broadly. The United States remains the world’s leader in business, especially in cutting-edge technology. Scholars Sean Starrs and Stephen G. Brooks found that, looking at the globe’s top 2,000 companies, Chinese firms come first in shares of global profits in only 11% of sectors, but U.S. firms are ranked first in 74% of sectors.

A somewhat under-noticed developmen­t in recent years has been the United States’ rise as an energy powerhouse. Because of fracking and natural gas, the United States is now the world’s largest producer of liquid hydrocarbo­ns. And as Columbia University’s Jason Bordoff has noted, America’s ability to ship liquefied natural gas has made it an energy superpower, able to provide or cut off energy to countries around the world. Add to these traditiona­l energy sources the dramatic ramp-up of green energy, thanks to the vast incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act, and you have a picture of truly astonishin­g, comprehens­ive energy capacity.

The U.S. military remains in a league of its own, far superior to those of its rivals in Russia or China. China is catching up to the United States, but the lead remains vast across many dimensions of warfare. And in Ukraine, as the Republican foreign policy adviser Kori Schake has noted, the United States, at minimal cost and with no American troops, is inflicting ruinous damage on Russia’s army. Washington is also transformi­ng the Ukrainian army into the most powerful fighting force in Europe — giving it another potent ally. The great force multiplier of U.S. power remains its alliances. The United States has more than 50 treaty allies; China has one (North Korea). And it has about 750 military bases of some kind around the world; China has one (in Djibouti).

I could go on. Unlike most rich countries, the United States has a strong working-age cohort that will not shrink, thanks to immigratio­n. We still take in more than 1 million legal immigrants per year on average. China and Russia are both facing demographi­c declines that are almost impossible to reverse, and which will put a long-term damper on their growth.

Could it be that it is precisely this backdrop of strength that allows Washington’s politician­s — and the Republican Party in particular — to indulge in this crazy political theater? For most countries, the price of playing games with one’s creditwort­hiness would be sharp and severe, and that would act as a disciplini­ng mechanism. But in Washington, the country’s enduring strength has become a license for irresponsi­bility.

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