The Denver Post

Is capitalism killing conservati­sm?

- By Ross Douthat

The report Wednesday that U.S. birth rates fell to a record low in 2020 was expected but still grim. On Twitter the news was greeted, characteri­stically, by conservati­ve laments and liberal comments implying that it’s mostly conservati­sm’s fault — because American capitalism allegedly makes parenthood unaffordab­le, worklife balance impossible and atomizatio­n inevitable.

This is a specific version of a long-standing argument about the tensions between traditiona­lism and capitalism, which seems especially relevant now that the right doesn’t know what it’s conserving anymore.

In a recent essay for New York Magazine, for instance, Eric Levitz argues that the social trends American conservati­ves most dislike — the rise of expressive individual­ism and the decline of religion, marriage and the family — are driven by socioecono­mic forces the right’s free-market doctrines actively encourage. “America’s moral traditiona­lists are wedded to an economic system that is radically anti-traditiona­l,” he writes, and “Republican­s can neither wage war on capitalism nor make peace with its social implicatio­ns.”

This argument is intuitivel­y compelling. But the historical record is more complex. If the anti-traditiona­l churn of capitalism inevitably doomed religious practice, communal associatio­ns or the institutio­n of marriage, you would expect those things to simply decline with rapid growth and swift technologi­cal change. Imagine, basically, a Tocquevill­ian early America of sturdy families, thriving civic life and full-to-bursting pews giving way, through industrial­ization and suburbaniz­ation, to an evermore-individual­istic society.

But that’s not exactly what you see. Instead, as Lyman Stone points out in a recent report for the American Enterprise Institute, the Tocquevill­ian utopia didn’t really yet exist when Alexis de Tocquevill­e was visiting America in the 1830s. Instead, the growth of American associatio­nal life largely happened during the Industrial Revolution. The rise of fraternal societies is a late-19thand early-20th-century phenomenon. Membership in religious bodies rises across the hypercapit­alist Gilded Age. The share of Americans who married before age 35 stayed remarkably stable from the 1890s till the 1960s, through booms and depression­s and drastic economic change.

This suggests that social conservati­sm can be undermined by economic dynamism but also respond dynamicall­y in its turn — through a constant “reinventio­n of tradition,” you might say, manifested in religious revival, new forms of associatio­n, new models of courtship, even as older forms pass away.

It’s only after the 1960s that this conservati­ve reinventio­n seems to fail, with churches dividing, families failing, associatio­nal life dissolving. And capitalist values, the economic and sexual individual­ism of the neoliberal age, clearly play some role in this change.

But strikingly, after the 1960s, economic dynamism also diminishes as productivi­ty growth drops and economic growth decelerate­s. So it can’t just be capitalist churn undoing conservati­sm, exactly, if economic stagnation and social decay go hand in hand.

One small example: Rates of geographic mobility in the United States, which you could interpret as a measure of how capitalism uproots people from their communitie­s, have declined over the last few decades. But this hasn’t somehow preserved rural traditiona­lism. Quite the opposite: Instead of a rooted and religious heartland, you have more addiction, suicide and anomie.

Or a larger example: Western European nations do more to tame capitalism’s Darwinian side than America, with more regulation and family supports and welfare-state protection­s. Are their societies more fecund or religious? No, their economic stagnation and demographi­c decline have often been deeper than our own.

So it’s not that capitalist dynamism inevitably dissolves conservati­ve habits. It’s more that the wealth this dynamism piles up, the liberty it enables and the technologi­cal distractio­ns it invents let people live more individual­istically — at first happily, with time perhaps less so — in ways that eventually undermine conservati­sm and dynamism together. At which point the peril isn’t markets red in tooth and claw, but a capitalist endgame that resembles Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World,” with a rich and technologi­cally proficient world turning sterile and dystopian.

Which actually makes the challenge for conservati­ves much tougher. If the decay of faith or family were really a simple matter of “too much capitalism,” you could imagine a right that eventually got over its rugged individual­ism and chose redistribu­tion and sustainabi­lity instead. But one can favor moves in that direction — social conservati­ves should spend more on families — and still see that they aren’t sufficient, that conservati­ves actually need to somehow jump-start a lot of forms of dynamism all together, in a way that’s hard for an old, rich and decadent society to do.

But let’s not let liberals off the hook. If capitalist churn isn’t what it used to be, if taming its excesses in the style of France or Sweden isn’t enough to restore family and community, if the combinatio­n of welfare-state liberalism and personal emancipati­on trends toward a Huxleyan dystopia, do liberals have any resources besides complaints about capitalism that might help pull us off that course?

Because if conservati­sm’s responses are incoherent and insufficie­nt, I fear that liberalism has no response at all.

 ?? Ross Douthat, a New York Times Op-Ed columnist, writes about politics, religion, moral values and higher education. ??
Ross Douthat, a New York Times Op-Ed columnist, writes about politics, religion, moral values and higher education.

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