History
Suggests That Entitlement Era Is Winding Down
It's often good fun and
sometimes revealing to divide American history into distinct periods of uniform
length. In working on my forthcoming book on American migrations, internal and
immigrant, it occurred to me that you could do this using the American-sounding
interval of 76 years, just a few years more than the Biblical lifespan of three
score and 10.
It was 76 years from
Washington's First Inaugural in 1789 to Lincoln's Second Inaugural in 1865. It
was 76 years from the surrender at Appomattox Courthouse in 1865 to the attack
at Pearl Harbor in 1941.
Going backward, it was 76
years from the First Inaugural in 1789 to the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, which
settled one of the British-French colonial wars. And going 76 years back from
Utrecht takes you to 1637, when the Virginia and Massachusetts Bay colonies
were just getting organized.
As for our times, we are
now 71 years away from Pearl Harbor. The current 76-year interval ends in
December 2017.
Each of these 76-year
periods can be depicted as a distinct unit. In the colonial years up to 1713,
very small numbers of colonists established separate cultures that have
persisted to our times.
The story is brilliantly
told in David Hackett Fischer's "Albion's Seed." For a more downbeat
version, read the recent "The Barbarous Years" by the nonagenarian
Bernard Bailyn.
From 1713 to 1789, the
colonies were peopled by much larger numbers of motley and often involuntary
settlers -- slaves, indentured servants, the unruly Scots-Irish on the
Appalachian frontier.
For how this society became
dissatisfied with the colonial status quo, read Bailyn's "Ideological
Origins of the American Revolution."
From 1789 to 1865,
Americans sought their manifest destiny by expanding across the continent. They
made great technological advances but were faced with the irreconcilable issue
of slavery in the territories.
For dueling accounts of the
period, read the pro-Andrew Jackson Democrat Sean Wilentz's "The Rise of
American Democracy" and the pro-Henry Clay Whig Daniel Walker Howe's
"What Hath God Wrought." Both are sparklingly written and full of
offbeat insights and brilliant apercus.
The 1865-1941 period saw a
vast efflorescence of market capitalism, European immigration and rising
standards of living. For descriptions of how economic change reshaped the
nation and its government, read Morton Keller's "Affairs of State and
Regulating a New Society."
The 70-plus years since
1941 have seen a vast increase in the welfare safety net and governance by
cooperation between big units -- big government, big business, big labor --
that began in the New Deal and gained steam in and after World War II. I
immodestly offer my own "Our Country: The Shaping of America From
Roosevelt to Reagan."
The original arrangements
in each 76-year period became unworkable and unraveled toward its end.
Eighteenth-century Americans rejected the colonial status quo and launched a
revolution and established a constitutional republic.
Nineteenth-century
Americans went to war over expansion of slavery. Early 20th-century Americans
grappled with the collapse of the private sector economy in the Depression of
the 1930s.
We are seeing something
like this again today. The welfare state arrangements that once seemed solid
are on the path to unsustainability.
Entitlement programs --
Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid -- are threatening to gobble up the whole
government and much of the private sector, as well.
Lifetime employment by one
big company represented by one big union is a thing of the past. People who
counted on corporate or public sector pensions are seeing them default.
Looking back, we are as far
away in time today from victory in World War II in 1945 as Americans were at
the time of the Dred Scott decision from the First Inaugural.
We are as far away in time
today from passage of the Social Security in 1935 as Americans then were from
the launching of post-Civil War Reconstruction.
Nevertheless our current
president and most politicians of his party seem determined to continue the
current welfare state arrangements -- historian Walter Russell Mead calls this
the blue state model -- into the indefinite future.
Some leaders of the other
party are advancing ideas for adapting a system that worked reasonably well in
an industrial age dominated by seemingly eternal big units into something that
can prove workable in an information age experiencing continual change and
upheaval wrought by innovations in the market economy.
The current 76-year period
is nearing its end. What will come next?
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