Fareed Zakaria's Optimism
Fareed Zakaria is
everywhere these days, articulating a message similar to those in my own book The End of the American Century. But I think he underestimates the seriousness
of the situation facing the
Zakaria argues
that it is not so much that the
These bad habits include spending and consuming more than we produce, leading to record levels of household debt, which has grown from $680 billion in 1974 to $14 trillion today. Spiraling consumer debt has been matched by the government. "The whole country has been complicit in a great fraud," he writes in Newsweek. He quotes the economist Jeffrey Sachs: "We've wanted lots of government, but we haven't wanted to pay for it."
He believes the
current crisis will force greater fiscal "discipline" by both families and
government, recognizing that "this discipline will be painful for a country
that has gotten used to having it all."
It will also be good for our country's foreign policy. Being the only superpower "has made
I make similar arguments in my book and I agree with all of this, but especially that last sentence, which appears near the end of Zakaria's Newsweek essay. However, I think Zakaria understates just "how wildly out of order" our system has become. Record consumer and government debts and a bankrupt financial system and foreign policy, as bad as those are, constitute only parts of the problem. At the same time that we have been madly spending on consumer goods, wars and debt servicing, we have let languish education, health care, infrastructure, science and technology. We have shuffled to the side the hugely expensive fixes required for Social Security and Medicare. Poverty and inequality are higher in this country than a generation ago, and among the highest in the developed world. Even our vaunted democracy, eroded by money and abuse of executive power, is no longer such a beacon for other countries. A major part of my book shows how all these interrelated problems result in a much more serious situation than Zakaria recognizes.
While we seem
prepared to spend a trillion dollars bailing out a financial system led by
incompetent multimillionaires, we need at least that much to fix the health
care system, not to mention these many other neglected issues. It is difficult to see where the resources
will come from to mend our society, once the banks are taken care of. It will require many years to restore the





thoughtful post. I too question the notion that America will once again play by its own rules. On the face of it anyway.
I haven't read his book, so I don't have a complete understanding of what he means by that.
Do you?
October 30, 2008 10:50 AM | Reply | Permalink
I have read "The Post-American World" and have a small review of it on my own blog. But this reference to our "own rules" is in Zakaria's Newsweek article, and not in his book (as far as I remember). Since the reference is right at the end of that Newsweek piece, he doesn't really elaborate on it. That's why I, too, found it a little puzzling.
October 31, 2008 1:40 PM | Reply | Permalink