Biden’s economic plan vital for competing with China
Although President Joe Biden barely mentioned foreign policy in his address to Congress last week, it was really a foreign policy speech.
In laying out a multitrillion-dollar plan to invest in infrastructure, there was an underlying theme that may have eluded many listeners.
“We’re in competition with China and other countries to win the 21st century,” Biden said. “We have to prove democracy still works, that our government still works and can deliver for the people.”
Indeed, America’s paramount foreign policy challenge in this century will be to demonstrate that our damaged democracy is capable of competing with an authoritarian China.
And the key to that will depend on whether America can rejuvenate itself at home.
Many Americans have failed to grasp how far we have fallen from global leadership in critical areas, where we should still have the lead.
Our infrastructure is a crumbling disgrace.
During the pandemic lockdowns in 2020 and 2021, an estimated 20% of school-age children lacked the high-speed connection.
I still recall a Chinese official telling me how his teenage son recoiled the first time he traveled on a New York subway, asking his father, “Why do Americans put up with such filthy trains?”
Why, indeed. Why have Americans come to accept this as normal?
Does this mean an authoritarian system is better than ours because it “makes the trains run on time”? Not at all.
But it does mean that Americans have lost sight of what government can do for the people. They have forgotten that President Dwight Eisenhower signed legislation funding the building of our interstate highway system.
Americans have also forgotten the “Sputnik moment” after the Soviet Union launched the first Earth-orbiting satellite in 1957. This led to the creation of NASA.
As Biden proposed, it’s vital that Washington rise to the occasion again.
Yet, federal spending on basic research and development has been steadily falling. In fiscal year 2019, it declined to 0.6% of U.S. GDP, the lowest in more than 60 years.
America’s vital research and development needs can’t be met by the self-interested gods of Silicon Valley. This is a moment in history where advances in cutting-edge technologies will determine whether China rules the global economy along with space and military competition.
Many of Biden’s social proposals, including government-funded preschool, free community college and workforce development, are an investment in human capital. Did you know that, in international rankings, U.S. 15-year-olds poll 11th in science and 30th in math? Guess who polls first? Yes, it is China.
“China and other countries are closing in fast,” Biden rightly said on Wednesday night. America must “develop and dominate the products of the future. Advanced batteries, biotechnology, computer chips, clean energy” and more.
This competition isn’t about who can beat their chest and claim global superiority. It is about whether U.S. democracy can demonstrate that our system surpasses autocracy in providing for its own people, and leading the world scientifically.
Back in December, when America’s handling of COVID-19 was among the world’s worst, Chinese newspapers crowed about U.S. failures. After the Jan. 6 insurrection, even allied nations wondered if a dysfunctional America was self-destructing.
Today, the White House success with vaccinations has proven America can rise to the occasion (although continued GOP propagation of the big election lie undermines that progress).
So, whatever the debate over specifics or funding of Biden’s proposals, Americans should pay attention to the underlying message: In the 21st century, U.S. democracy faces critical competition from China’s autocracy.
To win that race Americans need their federal government to renew its historic role.