Houston Chronicle Sunday

Forgetting the Founders’ realism on limiting government

George F. Will says that America’s policy dysfunctio­n is based on the consensus thatwe should have a big transfer state, and not pay for it.

- Emailwill at georgewill@ washpost. com.

Elections supposedly prevent convulsion­s, serving as safety valves that vent social pressures and enable course correction­s. November’s election will either be a prelude to a convulsion or the beginning of a turn away from one.

America’s public- policy dysfunctio­n exists not because democracy isn’t working but because it is. Both parties are sensitive market mechanisms, measuring more than shaping voters’ preference­s. The electoral system is a seismograp­h recording every tremor of public appetite. Today, the difference­s that divide the public are exceeded by the contradict­ions within the public’s mind.

America’s premise is the possibilit­y of dignified self- government— people making reasonable choices about restrained appetites. But three decades ago, Harvard political scientist Samuel Huntington postulated that America suffers recurring political convulsion­s because the gap between the premise and reality becomes too wide to ignore.

NowMichael Greve, a constituti­onal scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, argues: “We like to tell ourselves that all our constituti­onal storiesmus­t have a happy ending.” The Founders’ foremost problem, Greve says, was debt. To establish the nation’s credibilit­y, they needed to replace the Articles of Confederat­ion with the Constituti­on. “We,” Greve says, “merely have to return to it, if we can.” He wonders whether we can.

The official national debt of $ 16 trillion, plus what the government owes its various trust funds, is more than 100 percent of GDP. Ninety percent is where economic anemia seems to deepen. States’ debts are about $ 3 trillion and their unfunded pension liabilitie­s are another $ 4 trillion. “Debts of thismagnit­ude,” Greve says, “will not be paid.”

Barack Obama’s risible solution is to add 4.6 points to the tax rate for less than 3 percent of Americans. Some conservati­ves have the audacity of hope — expecting 5 percent economic growth ( the post- 1945 average: 2.9 percent) and planning to continue financing the debt by borrowing at negative interest rates. Of our long slide into financial decrepitud­e, Greve says: “The rate of deteriorat­ion does not correlate in any obvious way with political control over the presidency and Congress.”

The housing debacle was not the result of “a spontaneou­s outbreak of private irresponsi­bility.” Public policies provided occasions and incentives for the exercise of private vices. Washington pays up to 80 percent of stateMedic­aid expenses, so states’ citizens demand moreMedica­id services. Although the elderly consider Social Security and Medicare benefits earned, Greve says: “Most retirees could not have earned their expected payment streams if they had worked two or three jobs.”

“Our politics,” says Greve, “aims at inspiratio­n on the cheap.” We should reduce government’s complicity in illusions by, for example, sending retirees “a statement showing the estimated present value of their old- age benefits; their lifetime earnings and contributi­ons; and the earnings and contributi­ons that it would have taken to ‘ earn’ those benefits. We might then ask them in what sense it would be ‘ unfair’ to modify the empty promises.”

Rash promises were made, Greve says, “in an era of prosperity, when and because we thought we could afford them.” Now they “are far too entrenched to be dislodged in the course of ordinary politics.” Even grantingMi­tt Romney’s embrace of something like his running mate’s reforms, this year’s politics are terribly ordinary. Although consensus is supposedly elusive, it actually is the problem. “Our operative consensus,” says Greve, “is to have a big transfer state, and not pay for it.”

Writing in 1830, Thomas Babington Macaulay asked, “On what principle is it that, when we see nothing but improvemen­t behind us, we are to expect nothing but deteriorat­ion before us?” Greve’s gloomy answer is: Because we actually see behind us protracted abandonmen­t of the Founders’ realism about the need to limit government because of the limitation­s of the people.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States