Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Samuel Gregg: United States succumbing to ‘Eurosclerosis?’
Samuel Gregg: United States succumbing to ‘Eurosclerosis?’
Oct 8, 2024 4:21 PM

In the New York Post, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg looks at “the spread throughout America of economic expectations and arrangements directly at odds with our republic’s founding” and asks what the slow walk to “Europeanization” means for the long term. Gregg:

Unfortunately there’s a great deal of evidence suggesting America is slouching down the path to Western Europe. In practical terms, that means social-democratic economic policies: the same policies that have turned many Western European nations into a byword for persistently high unemployment, rigid labor markets, low-to-zero economic growth, out-of-control debt and welfare states, absurdly high tax levels, growing numbers of well-paid government workers, a near-obsession with economic equality at any cost and, above all, a stubborn refusal to accept that things simply can’t go on like this.

It’s very hard to deny similar trends are ing part of America’s economic landscape. States like California are already there — just ask the thousands of Californians and businesses who have fled the land of Nancy Pelosi.

Europeanization is also reflected in the refusal of so many Americans to take our nation’s debt crisis seriously. Likewise, virtually every index of economic freedom petitiveness shows that, like most Western European nations, America’s position vis-à-vis other countries is in decline.

Is there a way out, even as the “fiscal cliff” negotiations vividly illustrate the inability of Washington’s political elites to take spending and tax problems seriously? Gregg holds out hope:

First, there remain many ways in which America has not succumbed to eurosclerosis. Risk-taking and entrepreneurship-levels remain, for example, much higher than in Europe. America’s labor markets also remain more flexible than those of Europe (despite American unions’ best efforts to the contrary).

Second, the problems of nations like Greece, Italy, Spain, Britain and France are functioning as a type of early-warning system. They’re enough of a “canary in the coal mine” to help us make the right decisions and get back to the principles that made the United States an economic superpower.

And this is the choice which increasingly faces America. We can either continue our long march towards a form of social democracy presided over by an all-pervasive European-like political class and associated insider-groups; or, we can embrace a dynamic market economy that takes liberty seriously and understands that government intervention in the economy must and can be limited.

Read ing Europe” by Samuel Gregg in the New York Post.

Gregg’s new book, ing Europe: Economic Decline, Culture, and How America Can Avoid a European Future (Encounter Books, January 2013) is now available for pre-order.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Adam Smith We Need
Scholars’ tendency to read the great economist through the lens of their own philosophical and mitments is neither unexpected nor helpful. One book helps us identify some of those biases and also something closer to Smith’s true legacy. Read More… There are two reasons to read Glory M. Liu’s prehensive book,Adam Smith’s America: How a Scottish Philosopher Became an Icon of American Capitalism. The first is that if you are a student of economics or history, there is a remarkable...
The Asbury Revival in the Long Run
When students at a small Christian college in Kentucky got caught up in prayer and refused to leave an otherwise routine chapel service, the world took notice. What it meant all depends on what—or Who you think was responsible. Read More… Sometimes God works and speaks to people in mysterious ways. At other times, He is as blunt and obvious as a slap in the face. The recent Asbury revival in Wilmore, Kentucky, qualifies as an example of the latter....
Getting Justice Right Is Harder than We Think
There are several forms of justice just as there are several realms in which justice operates. Confusing them can lead to injustice. Read More… The question of justice is fundamental to human nature and all human cultures. Little children have an immediate sense of fair and unfair, just and unjust. The theme of justice permeates myth and philosophy. Plato’s Republic and Gorgias are reflections on justice and the right ordering of the soul and society. So is Aristotle’s Politics. The...
Ad-Copy Gospel and the Christian Marketing Dilemma
The “He Gets Us” ad campaign that drew so much attention during the Super Bowl is sleek Christianity for a secular audience, but what does “success” really look like? Read More… With perhaps the exception of the recent Asbury revival, it’s rare to see Christianity referenced in popular culture in a positive way. Be it debates over Christian nationalism or the tragically unending list of church abuse scandals, Christianity’s portrayal within modern media often swings on a doom-and-gloom pendulum, between...
Conservative Compassion Fatigue
The 1990s saw several Republican-initiated welfare-reform proposals gain little traction. But some progress was being made on the local level, where most people still saw hope for real, personal change. Read More… Part 3 of my series on poverty and the welfare state ended with a brief look at munity associations in South Dallas. As the Washington welfare-reform impasse in 1995 and 1996 dragged on, I traveled the country learning and speechifying. I learned much from Deborah Darden and her...
C.S. Lewis on the Specter of Totalitarianism
The great Christian apologist’s “scientocracy” is upon us. What should be our response? Read More… It is safe to say C.S. Lewis is not known first of all for his treatment of totalitarianism. We are familiar with Lewis the Christian apologist, Lewis the writer of children’s stories and science fiction fantasy, Lewis the literary critic and Oxford don, and then chair of medieval and renaissance literature at Cambridge. We’re less familiar with Lewis the political thinker. But in the almost...
The Myth of American Inequality
A new book challenges false narratives and skewed statistics that make the e prospects of Americans appear worse than they are. We must get our facts straight before we can implement better policies and eliminate a key obstacle to real progress: government-sanctioned disincentives to work. Read More… The notion of rising e inequality has permeated modern American discourse and is assumed as inherent to our economic system such that any claim to the contrary is easily dismissed as ignorance or...
A Catholic College Guts Its Curriculum
Marymount is not alone in this. Colleges across the country are making hard decisions about what to keep and what to drop to stay afloat. But providing an education grounded in the search for truth, one that inspires the heart as well as the mind and that holds out hope of something more than a paycheck, should be part of that process. Read More… Some years ago, only tangentially related to the reading we were doing in our seminar class,...
Creating Christ: Challenging Christian Origins
A new documentary, 30 years in the making, argues for a Roman provenance for the Christian religion. Does it convince? Read More… As Creating Christ will have it, Christianity as we know it was more or less invented, or at least redirected, by two members of the Flavian dynasty, Emperor Vespasian and his son (and eventual emperor) Titus, as a way of enforcing docility on zealous Jewish sects who wanted pagan Rome out of Jerusalem and out of their lives....
Fear and the Feeble Foundations of Ideology
Whether in the spiritual or the political realm, lies, fear, and a lust for power threaten human dignity and flourishing. But the light of truth shines in the darkness still. Read More… I recently read the monumental essay “The Power of the Powerless” (1978) by Soviet dissident Václav Havel and immediately began to draw parallels between how he describes socialist oppression and what I understand of diabolical oppression. As a veteran Marine Corps infantry officer and 20-year catechist in the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved