Posted on 04/29/2014 9:06:22 AM PDT by Kaslin
I periodically (some would say over and over and over again, though occasionally made more palatable by using humor and cartoons) warn that the United States should not become a European-style welfare state.
But I wonder whether I spend enough time explaining why this would be a bad idea.
After all, some people may think that you get more security and benefits with the European approach, so why not head in that direction. And these folks arent just pointing with approval to the Nordic nations. A writer for the New York Times actually thinks we should copy Italy.
So it is fortuitous that Im currently in Poland as part of the Free Market Road Show and got to hear a speech by Prof. Leszek Balcerowicz of the Warsaw School of Economics (and former Deputy Prime Minister and head of Polands central bank).
Prof. Balcerowicz specifically compared economic performance in Western Europe and the United States, and the results are not very favorable to the welfare state.
Standard economic theory suggests that poor nations should catch up with rich nations. This convergence theory actually worked for the first few decades after World War II.
But as you can see from Prof. Balcerowiczs chart, the convergence process slowed down after the welfare state began to expand in the 1960s. And after the pro-growth reforms of the Reagan years and Clinton years, the United States actually has opened up a bigger lead.
But maybe this chart doesnt make things sufficiently clear. So I went to the OECD website and found the most recently available data on average individual consumption, which is a measure of actual living standards.
The United States is way ahead of Europe. The only three nations close to us include Norway, which has the good fortune of major oil fields, and Luxembourg and Switzerland, which have the advantage of being tax havens.
By the way, I also shared that data series last year, and you can also see some older AIC data in this 2010 post. But it doesnt matter how you slice the numbers or when you look at the numbers, the United States has a big lead.
And that lead is now getting larger over time. Heck, the Europeans apparently think any growth even anemic growth of less than 1 percent is worth celebrating. Talk about low expectations!
This is why we dont want to copy Europe. If higher living standards are a good idea (and they are!), then we should copy Hong Kong and Singapore, not France and Italy.
P.S. Ive always thought that this comparison of the per-capita income of Swedes in Sweden and the per-capita income of folks of Swedish ancestry in the United States is very persuasive.
P.P.S. Leszek Balcerowicz has the honor of being named this years winner of the Cato Institutes Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty. Hell receive his award at a very nice black-tie dinner in New York City on May 21.
P.P.P.S. Speaking of swanky black-tie events, the PotL and I got dressed up last Thursday for the annual CIFA dinner in Monaco.
Shes a lucky girl, huh?
I’d be delighted if all we tried to copy WAS Europe. We seem to be bound and determined to copy the Soviet Union, and toss in a little Nazi Germany for good measure.
Same is true of almost all ethnic groups.
Also true of education. We hear all the time about how US education is horrible compared to other countries.
We never hear that Japanese here outperform their cousins in Japan, Chinese-American outperform Chinese, German-Americans outperform Germans, etc., etc.
AFAIK the only ethnic group for which this is NOT true is the Finns, where those in Finland slightly outperform those in America.
Don’t forget a bit of WWII Italian fascism, too.
how does that stack up comparing those from Carribean, Latino, and African countries?
I suspect that the U.S. pouring billions in aid to war ravaged Europe after the war had something to do with that.
My remembrance is that it does, but the data is weak from those countries.
For more detail on how a state (or nation) can outperform another in every ethnic category while doing more poorly overall, may I recommend this classic from the great Iowahawk?
http://iowahawk.typepad.com/iowahawk/2011/03/longhorns-17-badgers-1.html
My dear friend just returned from her beloved India. She said the traffic with the constant blaring horns was horrible, and the pollution made her sick.
For the Eurowannabees..... I just tell them about the closet tax.
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