Sunday, February 22, 2009

End of the Workers' Paradise

During the 20th Century, the world stage was dominated by a contest between two great economic and political ideologies. One the hand was Communism, state ownership of large-scale capital, and central planning, on the other was Liberal Democracy. In the non-Communist developed nations, some concessions towards central planning and income redistribution were made. The legacy of these concessions include the Income Tax, Minimum Wage, and the Welfare State.

As everyone knows, Communism failed and Liberal Democracy in its modified form survived. Unfortunately, in its efforts to win the people over, Liberal Democracy encouraged the notion that economic security was an entitlement. People imagined that making lots of money was as simple as following a formula: getting a college degree and a career-for-life would fall in their laps; buying a house and watching its value ascend skyward; or investing in the stock market and get reliable dividends and capital gains.

We opine this desire for stable and predictable economic returns is a vestige of agricultural civilisation. Note that the most important and durable Communist Powers, Russia and China, were still agricultural when they went Red. Industrial civilisation works on a less steady basis. If humanity is to embrace the full benefit of industrialisation, it must acknowledge that it not an especially stable system.

The current Depression is partly a result of attempting to force the industrial system to do something it cannot: supply steady, generous paychecks to the entire population. The Depression will be prolonged by governmental efforts to sustain the unstainable with bailouts, and expansions of both the public payroll and the dole. In a bizarre effort to "save capitalism," a grotesque is being created. This state will not last long, and eventually be seen as a tragic waste of resources.

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