The
Allure of Respectable Welfare
by
Anthony Gregory
Recently
by Anthony Gregory: It's
All the Republicans' Fault
Ludwig von
Mises noted that by calling their program "welfare" the
economic interventionists slanted the debate in their favor, for
who could oppose such a thing? Everyone wants welfare in the broad
sense. Indeed, the "general welfare" is a principle, however
confused, affixed in the Preamble of the U.S. Constitution.
Today, welfare
has lost its rhetorical advantage. Ever since the bipartisan welfare
reform of the 1990s, the word "welfare" has not had the
positive connotations of the past. Liberals rarely talk openly about
how we need more of it. Conservatives talk freely about how it should
be discarded. Even in substance, the debate has changed somewhat.
So too has
the center left abandoned its talk about redistribution for the
very poorest among us. Liberals used to complain about homelessness,
calling it an epidemic. Their programs have not improved upon the
situation. Now it is mostly ignored.
It makes strategic
sense to neglect it when the welfare state is much more palatable
when directed not toward the very bottom of the ladder, but to voters
of the middle class. This helps explain why those opposed to welfare
by name have won the linguistic struggle that Mises long ago identified,
and yet have lost the entitlement war. Also important is that when
conservatives denounce welfare, they are mostly condemning payments
to the poor – programs like the long-maligned Aid to Families with
Dependent Children and food stamps.
These programs
are socially destructive and should be abolished. That will do only
so much good, however, because the preponderance of the Bismarckian
welfare state is not just tolerated but defended by all the
respectable people, the conservatives and middle class.
When the financial
crisis hit in late 2008, across the spectrum were pleas to do something
to save middle class homeowners from losing houses they probably
shouldn't have bought but did because of credit expansion, Fannie
and Freddie, Bush's Ownership Society and the entire insane bipartisan
project to stuff all of bourgeois America into increasingly expensive
houses at increasingly declining costs. Few people saw the desire
to shore up universal home ownership as a welfare scheme.
In attempting
to oppose expansions of government in late 2008, such as Bush's
TARP bailout, the conservatives were in a bind, for they had been
cheering on the biggest welfare statist president since Lyndon Johnson.
Bush’s Medicare plan was the most obvious example. Today we see
that Medicare and Social Security – Great Society and New Deal plots
that conservatives once called socialistic – are now favored by
nearly everyone. The left is shrewd to frame its argument for nationalized
medicine in terms of "Medicare for all," since it demonstrates
that the premise of health care subsidies has already been accepted
by the conservative movement. Most opponents of Obamacare said they
would support guaranteed coverage for those with preexisting conditions,
and many attacked Obama’s plan for threatening the existing welfare
apparatus. We’ve all seen the Tea Party activist holding up the
sign warning Obama: "Hands off my Medicare!"
The idea that
the elderly are entitled to this money has enticed the entire right.
The intellectual purpose of the entitlement state – conditioning
people over generations toward dependency with vows to loot future
taxpayers to maintain the system – has worked perfectly. But no
one has a right to Social Security or Medicare, any more than they
have a right to food stamps or other welfare. Yes, they were robbed
for years, but that money has been spent already. Their victimization
at the hands of the state gives them no moral claim to victimize
current workers, any more than an abusive father having been brutally
beaten as a child can use this as an excuse for his own abusive
behavior.
Another key
feature of the welfare state universally accepted is the disaster
called public education. This is fundamental to the modern state,
much more than direct handouts to the poor, as it inculcates the
principles of collectivism in the young. Conservatives used to at
least call for decentralization, removing Washington’s influence
from state indoctrination. Whether this would immediately mean more
liberty for students and parents is not a priori obvious, but it
would likely allow for pockets of freedom to emerge and perhaps
the eventual separation of school and state in some places. In the
post-No Child Left Behind era, the nationalist conservatives have
a position essentially identical to that of the social democrats.
They may call for charter schools, as does the Democratic president,
or even advance the program of school vouchers – an expansion of
the welfare state even further into private education. The omnipresence
of federal aid in higher education is also a mark of the respectable
classes' comfort with welfare. Needless to say there is not the
stigma attached to sending children to public school that exists
with other welfare. Whether there should be, it is indisputable
that this component of contemporary welfarism is accepted by all
but the radicals. However, until public education is abolished or
seriously compromised, statism will dominate the culture.
Vast
cultural approval also exists for more conventionally identified
forms of welfare. Receiving unemployment insurance is regarded as
less contemptible than accepting traditional handouts. Apparently,
having had a good job and losing it privileges one to feed at the
public trough, whereas never having such an opportunity means one
is simply a bum. One can counter that a fraction of one's income
goes into this "insurance" program, but in the end if it is justifiable
to receive money financed through taxation, then the principle must
be observed more consistently. As
Walter Block argues, it is not unlibertarian to take money from
the government. The point here is not to condemn those who do it
but to recognize their daunting number – many in the bourgeois sector
should therefore not find themselves to be holier than a typical
welfare case.
The whole society
clamors in defense of subsidies not seen as welfare at all. Agricultural
aid is particularly popular on the corporatist right, as are obscenely
expansive patent protections, certain "uncontroversial"
avenues of scientific research, space exploration, new resources
for law enforcement, and protectionist trade policy. As for the
various public servants, especially those doing some of the most
harm – fighting the state's wars, enforcing its laws, teachings
its values to students – they are regarded as respectable members
of society. They are said to work for their share, although in most
cases what they do is socially deleterious and they'd be on better
moral footing if they just accepted handouts. Not only is their
income considered by virtually everyone to be in a different class
from welfare, so too are their cushy benefits and pensions. Veterans'
benefits in particular have obtained a nearly sacred status in this
society. A conservative who cheers on these programs and argues
for their aggrandizement and then condemns welfare mothers in the
next breath may wonder why the left finds his views so hard to swallow.
It is at least in part because they make no sense.
Foreign policy
presents an interesting case. Most Americans think the U.S. has
some sort of duty in some instances to elevate the beleaguered peoples
of the world. The conservatives argued for invading Iraq to save
the Iraqi people. The liberals argued the U.S. couldn't leave until
this job was done. Americans fancy themselves generous in their
warmongering. Few Americans recognize the immorality of seizing
tax dollars to pay for wars of occupation, putting aside the fact
that they are utterly immoral in themselves and fail to bring about
freedom and prosperity worldwide, but rather spread despotism and
mass death.
Welfarism has
moreover corrupted the immigration debate. The right complains that
immigrants, illegal as well as an excess of legal ones, drain the
public treasury. This is an empirical question much more complicated
than often assumed, as both citizens and foreign nationals pay taxes.
Yet the obvious solution – ending the welfare state wherever it
exists – is much harder to sell than it should be, precisely because
the welfare state’s permanence is unchallenged. If the notion is
framed as though they are taking our public benefits,
the whole collectivist premise has already been stipulated. Signing
up for government aid has become part of the very identification
of being American, and so is it seen as inappropriate for non-Americans,
however defined, to get in on the nationalist socialism. There are
enough conservatives in America to push for welfare reform that
would undercut any actual problem with illegal immigration, insofar
as welfare is the problem as they claim. But they do not mobilize
to do it. They are as invested in maintaining and solidifying the
idea of the modern American welfare state as is the left, and so
in response to immigration they mostly propose violations of commercial
freedom and police state measures to strengthen the national collective
rather than undermine it through a frontal assault on the entitlement
state.
The welfare
state has won over all of society. It has succeeded in making the
entire culture dependent on it. Middle class conservatives condemn
welfarism even as they clamor for better public schools, apply for
student loans for their kids, hold jealously onto their Medicare
and Social Security benefits, accept unemployment checks when they're
expedient, and resist any talk about cutting back the government's
support for its police and soldiers. Liberals today say they are
realists on welfare but never cease to agitate for more ways to
put us all on the dole. As we find ourselves in the wake of fiscal
catastrophe, we must recognize that only a tiny portion of government
expenditures go to the easy targets – the earmarks, the welfare
mothers, the roads to nowhere, the Woodstock museums, the funding
to study bird migrations, even the salaries of bailed out CEOs.
America is, despite the conservative and liberal propaganda to the
contrary, essentially as much a welfare state as most other nations
of the West, and the hugest chunk of the entitlement expenditures
are going not to the easily scapegoated classes, but rather to the
respectable masses.
Thanks
to Alexander Ovsov for this
translation of this article into Romanian.
July
21, 2011
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is research editor at the Independent
Institute. He
lives in Oakland, California. See his
webpage for more articles and personal information.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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