Friday, January 29, 2010

America in Decline?

I like to listen to podcasts of The Diane Rehm Show every now and then. It provides a calmer, more detailed analysis than one can generally glean from Cable News shows.

This week I was listening to a podcast of one of last week's shows - "America in Decline?" Diane Rehm started off with a story that one of the country's professional organizations of engineers gave America's infrastructure the grade of "C" 20 years ago. A recent analysis by the same group updated America's infrastructure grade to "D", warning that certain parts of our infrastructure were in such disrepair that they were in imminent danger of collapse. It would take $2.2 trillion (with a "t") to bring our infrastructure up to date.

Rehm used this as a springboard to ask her guests the broader question - "Is America in decline and, if so, what do we need to be doing as a society to turn things around?" The concern was entirely focused on infrastructure - the flight control system, roads and bridges in the Northeast (especially older ones built in the 19th century), our relatively slow and spotty mobile networks, our clogged sea ports, and the declining capacity of our power grid and refining capabilities. The argument made by the guests was that American society is good at reinventing itself when it comes to business and local issues, but when it comes to large-scale systems that require national / federal coordination, it fails miserably because of our "antiquated political institutions" (read Congress).

This continues a theme among left-leaning folk that I that, frankly, baffles me. The story they are wanting to promulgate seems to be that the federal government coordinated national responses to truly national problems well through year 19XX (e.g., Eisenhower's National Highway System, Sputnik, and Arpanet research that led to the Internet). Then Corporatism, Oligarch-ism, Elitism, or some other -ism took hold 25-30 years ago, broke the consensus over the proper role of the federal government, and the U.S. has progressively developed more brittle and patch-worked responses to national issues ever since.

It seems to me, however, that this is too simple of a story. The United States is a truly federal system, and any problem that has been met with a federal response has generally been one that is defense in nature (e.g., the National Highway System and Sputnik were driven by Cold War concerns) or is so ripe that a true national consensus has formed to move Congress to action (e.g., Social Security). But these have been the exception, rather than the rule. Health care, the power grid, and the majority of the national roads and highways, among others, have always been patchwork systems, cobbled together by the states or by regional cooperative action. And it's not easy to patch or totally remake patchwork systems from the top down.

The liberals' story, I think, misses the point. They readily acknowledge that America's culture is still vibrant and the most inventive in the world. They point to the inventiveness and initiative of American citizens. But they bemoan the fact that the "antiquated" federal systems of governance were designed to stop things. They see this as a bad thing, but it is, in truth, what has been at the root of America's ability to prosper and grow for over 200 years. The traditional American view has been that government should do a few things well - defend its citizens and create a stable space within which they can chase liberty and happiness. Other than this, government should get out of the way. Let the citizens do the rest.

If any consensus has been broken over the past 25-30 years, it has been the liberal vision of an "efficient" national government. For 30 years after the 1930's, the New Deal Coalition ran the federal government more as a national government than a federal one, in which one-size-fits-all solutions were imposed upon the nation (the minimum wage law in American Somoa impacts the local population differently than in New York. Roe v. Wade is received differently in San Francisco than the Bible Belt.

The U.S. is a big, diverse Union. Rather than exposing the nature of our federal institutions as somehow problematic, perhaps the issues we are now faced with are testimony to the fact that the federal government is not the mechanism through which to deal with these types of problems.

1 comment:

Kelly said...

It's a political issue. Fixing a rusty old bridge doesn't attract the attention of voters like a promise of new jobs or breaking new ground for a commercial building complex. The followup question would be, is there a structural problem of our political system or is this evidence of democracies tendencies towards "Bread and circuses"?