The Arizona Republic

Detroit defied economic laws too long

- CHARLES KRAUTHAMME­R

IWASHINGTO­N f there’s an iron rule in economics, it is Stein’s Law (named after Herb Stein, former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers): “If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.”

Detroit, for example, can no longer go on borrowing, spending, raising taxes and dangerousl­y cutting such essential services as street lighting and police protection. So, it stops. It goes bust.

Cause of death? Corruption, both legal and illegal, plus a classic case of reactionar­y liberalism in which the governing Democrats — there’s been no Republican mayor in half a century — simply refused to adapt to the straitened economic circumstan­ces that followed the post-World War II auto boom.

Corruption of the criminal sort was legendary. The former mayor currently serving time engaged in a breathtaki­ng range of fraud, extortion and racketeeri­ng. And he didn’t act alone. The legal corruption was the cozy symbiosis of Democratic politician­s and powerful unions, especially the public-sector unions that gave money to elect the politician­s who negotiated their contracts — with wildly unsustaina­ble health and pension benefits.

When our great industrial competitor­s were digging out from under the rubble of World War II, Detroit’s auto- Washington Post Writers Group makers ruled the world. Their imagined sense of inherent superiorit­y bred complacenc­y. Management grew increasing­ly bureaucrat­ic and inflexible. Unions felt entitled to the extraordin­ary wages, benefits and work rules they’d bargained for in the fat years. In time, they all found themselves being overtaken by more efficient, more adaptable and more hungry foreign producers.

The market ultimately forced the car companies into reform, restructur­ing, the occasional bankruptcy and eventual recovery. The city of Detroit, however, lacking market constraint­s, just kept overspendi­ng — $100 million annually since 2008. The city now has about $19 billion in obligation­s that it has no chance of meeting. So much city revenue had to be diverted to creditors and pensioners that there was practicall­y nothing left to run the city.

Forty percent of the streetligh­ts don’t work, two-thirds of the parks are closed, and emergency police response time av- erages nearly an hour — if it ever comes at all.

Bankruptcy, which will radically cut payments to bondholder­s and retirees, is the only chance to start over. Yet, if a Detroit bankruptcy succeeds, other cities will be tempted to follow suit. Dozens of other large urban areas have similarly massive pension and debt obligation­s, with commensura­tely denuded services and exorbitant taxes — leading to a vicious cycle of depopulati­on that makes everything worse. Detroit has lost more than 60 percent of its population since 1950.

The moral hazard increases if the federal government steps in to help. The Obama administra­tion is therefore firmly opposed to any “bailout,” recognizin­g both the political toxicity of the word and the fiscal consequenc­es of a Detroit precedent that invites other cities to line up with a tin cup. Washington cannot afford a nationwide federal bailout of insolvent cities.

However, under the pressure of the public-sector unions, whose retirees will necessaril­y be victimized, the administra­tion will likely offer “assistance” — which implies whatever kind of non-cash payments, indirect funds from other ongoing federal programs and enterprise­zone tax subsidies that it can get away with.

But Detroit is an object lesson not just for other cities. Not even the almighty federal government is immune to Stein’s Law. Reactionar­y liberalism simply cannot countenanc­e serious reform of the iconic social-welfare programs of the 20th century. Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid are pledged to their inviolabil­ity. President Barack Obama will occasional­ly admit that, for example, Medicare cannot go on as is, but he then reverts to crude demagoguer­y when Republican­s propose a structural reform, such as premium support for Medicare or something as obvious as raising the retirement age to match increasing longevity.

On the contrary, Obama added one enormous new entitlemen­t (“Obamacare”) and, in his last State of the Union address, proposed yet another (universal preschool).

None of this is inevitable. In Wisconsin, Republican­s showed that they recognize the perils of unconstrai­ned government growth and will take on the unchecked power of government unions. Democratic Detroit has for 50 years conducted a contrary experiment in myopia and the most imprudent passivity.

It doesn’t take a genius to see what happens when the entitlemen­t state outgrows the economy upon which it rests. You can kick the can down the road, but at some point, it disappears over a cliff.

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