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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
02.10.2008
Alan Wolfe on How America Will Change

In an effort to start making sense of what is an indisputably confusing situation, we asked some of the most thoughtful people we know the question: How will America change as a result of the economic downturn? Here's Alan Wolfe, who is a professor of political science and director of the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life at Boston College, as well as a contributing editor at The New Republic.

The cultural and political effects of the Great Depression lasted much longer than the Depression itself. An entire generation of Americans--my parents' generation--voted Democratic, chose Social Security over economic liberty, believed in government, and admired political leadership. The effects of Depression-era politics eventually faded, as the effects of any kind of politics generally do, but as bad as the economic conditions of the 1930s were, the political consequences in the decades following were positive.

Will the financial crisis of 2008 produce similar long-term effects? I do not think so. Too much about the United States has changed over the past few decades for history to come anywhere close to repeating itself.

The most important of those changes is that the anger that greeted the Great Depression is of very different quality than the anger apparent now. Seemingly like the 1930s, Americans are denouncing Wall Street. But their hostility is too diffuse and incoherent to help them channel it constructively. The past eight years have seen the enactment of public policies that time after time rewarded lobbyists, increased the wealth and power of the already best off, and redistributed income away from ordinary Americans. Yet by and large Americans accepted all this without protest. Now, all of a sudden, they are speaking like Populists of old, attacking greed and calling for regulation. Their protest, alas, is more symbolic than concrete. As such, we are unlikely to witness blame assigned where it belongs; nor are we apt to see the passage of serious reforms dealing with long-term structural changes in the economy or any diminution of lobbyist influence. A scary economic moment will transform itself back to politics as usual in the blink of an eye.

The fact that the language being used to respond to the financial crisis emphasizes fear is a second reason to question how much America will change. FDR was a president who somehow managed to instill hope in dreadful times. These days, our leaders instill dread in relatively good times. Many have already noticed how the financial crisis is being "sold" with the same techniques as the war in Iraq. The consequences are also likely to be similar: cynicism toward politics, constant lying and manipulation, scare-tactics that appeal to emotions rather than facts on the ground. The only thing we have to fear is the fear of fear itself.

The New Deal, finally, gave rise to extremist politics. But in those days most of the demagogues--Father Coughlin, the activists of the American Liberty League--were outside the halls of power. These days, voices of the extreme right (and to a lesser degree the extreme left) sit in the House of Representatives. Capable of stopping the bailout the first time around, they are likely to lose the next vote tomorrow. But win or lose, the bailout represents a movement of the extremes against the center. For that reason, the partisan polarization that has characterized American politics over the past two decades will continue, and perhaps even be strengthened if the economy does not respond.

It is true that, as many have pointed out, we are about to enter a period in which regulation is no longer a dirty word and laissez-faire no longer the touchstone of economic policy. But this does not mean that something coherent and disciplined will triumph. American democracy has suffered great damage in an era of polarization, sound bites, talk radio, and low-information voters. It will recover some of what once made it healthier. But it is too much to expect it to recover fully.

--Alan Wolfe

Posted: Thursday, October 02, 2008 5:14 PM with 11 comment(s)

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sdemuth said:

"The most important of those changes is that the anger that greeted the Great Depression is of very different quality than the anger apparent now. Seemingly like the 1930s, Americans are denouncing Wall Street. But their hostility is too diffuse and incoherent to help them channel it constructively. "

This is historical nonsense.  There were three years between the crash of '29 and the election of '32, in which American rage at their impotence before a crippled economy and ineffective government resoponse saw FDR into office.  The current econcomic turn is at most 11 months old, and the sense of true crisis about it less than a month old.

If we dig our way out with sensible leadership, then we'll never get to the "quality" of anger that led to massive political shifts 75 years ago.  But if we don't....

October 2, 2008 6:50 PM

teplukhin2you said:

Why do the TNR commenters immediately talk about the Depression and the New Deal? We're not in Depression territory or even anything close to it. There's a liquidity crisis that's being exacerbated by our leaders' stupid focus on trying to buy up sh*t mortgages with fistfuls of cash, and in a hurry (now there's a definition of Buffett's "patsy at the poker table" if ever there was one).

"Americans are denouncing Wall Street. But their hostility is too diffuse and incoherent to help them channel it constructively"

er, maybe that's because at the heart of this mess are a) tens of millions of ordinary Americans who went on a borrowing spree so they could move into houses they could not afford and buy stuff they didn't need with money they didn't have and b) these people's champions in Washington who fiercely resisted every effort to stop the Fan 'n' Fred train before it went off the rails. Americans know that the essence of their predicament is this culture of entitlement, and its complete disconnect with the real level of US households' savings and wealth.

Our Depression-era parents took nothing for 'granted. They saved every penny they could get. Even the least skilled and least educated of today's Americans consider themselves entitled to a cushy lifestyle that is beyond the reach of 90% of the population in Europe or Japan and 99% of the population in the rest of the world.

If you need 1930s-era wisdom to help us understand our mess and how to solve it, try Walt Kelly, not FDR.

October 2, 2008 6:52 PM

AlanK said:

Walt Kelly. Oh, how we miss him. Each year we sing "Deck us all with Boston Charley" in his honor.And each week for the last 8 years we have wept that he was not there to skewer the idiots in power. Yes, we have indeed met the enemy.

October 2, 2008 8:14 PM

psantillana said:

Stop sounding so professorial!

October 3, 2008 6:35 AM

mpintar2 said:

Although it seems the preferred historical analog to the present financial crisis is the one that preceded The Great Depression, I think a more appropriate one would be either Japan in the 90s.

The financial system crisis in the US is very similar to the one in Japan in the 90s and the policy responses are strinkingly similar. Fortunately for the US, it did not take 10 years for our policymakers to take action as it did in Japan. I think this is in very large part due to Bernanke being a scholar of not only The Great Depression but also the Japanese economic crisis. For those interested, go to the Federal Reserve website and read a paper he eerily wrote when he was a governor back in November 2002. The report is entitled, "Japan:Making Sure It Doesn't Happen Here". Signals that he will be very aggressive in interest rate cuts if a post-bubble situation ever hits the US. (As he has done since the crisis began last summer)

The Treasury's proposal to buy troubled assets from banks and a little noticed but very very important proposal to pay interest on bank's reserves held in the financial system (called Quantitative Easing in Japan) come right out of the BOJ/MOF playbook.

October 3, 2008 8:27 AM

mpintar2 said:

sorry, disregard erroneous "either" in 1st sentence

October 3, 2008 8:35 AM

mpintar2 said:

also, sorry for acronyms. BOJ=Bank of Japan and MOF=Ministry of Finance in Japan

October 3, 2008 8:37 AM

luispc said:

God, Prof. Wolfe, how desperate you sound.

Yes, probably Americans had it coming. Yes, the political and economic risks around the corner are big.

But come on. This also could be thought as a wake up call to which Americans will respond, recovering a spirit they've showned to have in grave moments.

There is still ingenuity, goodness and genuine "public spirit" in America. In a degree inexistent anywhere else as seen in the simple fact that people still mobilizie massively around causes they hold morally important, independently of self-interests: the very fact that this bailout crisis as showned that is important in itself.

And perhaps for Americans to face (one way or the other) the dreadfull consequences of letting themselves go in an orgy of financial mercantilism and consumption will be a way for them to recover that very spirit....

At least let's hope. If things go totally wrong and you're right there'll be plenty of time in the future for desperation. For now, let's keep our hopes.

October 3, 2008 11:11 AM

luispc said:

CORRECTION: the very fact that this bailout crisis HAS showned that is important in itself.

October 3, 2008 11:20 AM

AlanK said:

You know, there were decent investment opportunities available:

If you had purchased $1,000 of AIG stock one year ago, you would have $42 left.

With Lehman, you would have $6.60 left.

With Fannie or Freddie, you would have less than $5 left.

But if you had purchased $1,000 worth of beer one year ago, drank all of the beer, then turned in the cans for the aluminum recycling REFUND, you would have had $214.

Based on the above, the best current investment advice is to drink heavily and recycle.

It's called the 401-Keg.....

October 3, 2008 4:33 PM

cansv said:

There's a lot of truth in what Alan Wolfe writes; I hope he's right. But he overlooks the possibilities of a right-leaning nativist demagogic populism with a mass base, fueled by talk radio, and that most American contribution to political science, the over-arching conspiracy theory a la Father Couglin and Huey Long.

October 7, 2008 8:01 PM