Every time there is an idealistic vogue toward big government, itâs followed by an inevitable drift back in the other directionâafter the big-government solutions fail.
The latest example is a movement, so far small, of âprogressivesâ who realize they havenât been able to achieve their stated goals because these goals require increases in the labor force and particularly in the economyâs capacity for construction and manufacturing. They require making things and building thingsâand existing progressive policies are getting in the way.
So, to be really progressive, we have to do something counterintuitive: reform big-government regulations and (gasp!) possibly even reduce them. This viewpoint has come to be known as âsupply-side progressivism.â
The cause of smaller government has few friends today, so I welcome any converts, no matter how grudging or belated. But is supply-side progressivism doomed? More specifically, is the âprogressivismâ part incompatible with the âsupply sideâ part?
This is a problem the would-be supply-side progressives are already aware of.
The term âsupply-side progressiveâ was coined by Ezra Klein, who laments that âprogressives are often uninterested in the creation of the goods and services they want everyone to have.â A lot of us have been saying this for years, but itâs a startling admission coming from the inside. The result, Klein continues, is âcost disease socialism,â which he summarizes succinctly: âIf you subsidize the cost of something that there isnât enough of, youâll raise prices or force rationing. You can see the poisoned fruit of those mistakes in higher education and housing.â
Klein has also discovered the problem of overregulation, particularly in construction and housing. In a follow-up New York Times article, he describes the problem:
âThere are so many people who want to have some say over a project,â [construction analyst Ed Zarenski] said. âYou have to meet so many parking spaces, per unit. It needs to be this far back from the sight lines. You have to use this much reclaimed water. You didnât have 30 people sitting in a hearing room for the approval of a permit 40 years ago.â . . .
This, [economist Chad] Syverson said, was closest to his view on the construction slowdown, though he didnât know how to test it against the data. âThere are a million veto points,â he said. âThere are a lot of mouths at the trough that need to be fed to get anything started or done. So many people can gum up the works.â
Kleinâs best effort to get at the central issue, though, is his critique of âeverything-bagel liberalismâ:
You might assume that when faced with a problem of overriding public importance, government would use its awesome might to sweep away the obstacles that stand in its way. But too often, it does the opposite. It adds goalsâmany of them laudableâand in doing so, adds obstacles, expenses and delays. If it can get it all done, then it has done much more. But sometimes it tries to accomplish so much within a single project or policy that it ends up failing to accomplish anything at all.
In other words, every project has to become an everything bagel. It canât achieve just one progressive goal; it has to achieve everything, everywhere, all at once. Kleinâs first example is Californiaâs attempt to subsidize âaffordable housing,â a bagel which has been overloaded with regulations such as a mandate to use small, minority-owned contractorsâa requirement that adds expenses and delays to housing construction. His second example is the Biden administrationâs attempt to subsidize microchip manufacturing in the U.S., onto which the administration has piled mandates for worker child care and other demands.
The progressivesâ mania for achieving every goal through government regulation and mandates prevents them from achieving anything.
The progressive movement did not begin as a call for increased wealth and construction. It began as a backlash against an economy that was already producing rapid growth, abundant innovation, new construction and economic progress. The first great progressive president, Woodrow Wilson, described the movement that brought him to the presidency as a âsober second thoughtâ to the âheedlessâ pursuit of âmaterial greatness.â
More recently, the British historian Eric Hobsbawm, writing in The Guardian, described âthe basis of progressive policyâ as ânot maximizing economic growth and personal incomesâ but rather âredistributing private accumulationâ and reining in the âbourgeois anarchismâ of markets. He repeatedly dismissed the idea that âwhat a country needs is under all circumstances maximum economic growth.â
So, to some extent, an anti-supply-side, âdegrowthâ attitude was part of the basic impetus of progressivism from the very start. And that problem is still smack-dab in the middle of supply-side progressivism. Kleinâs proposals, for example, are mostly about how to make it easier to do a small subset of politically privileged projects. To be worth lightening the burden of regulations, your project has to have a âgreenâ angle or benefit the homeless. We couldnât possibly scrape anything off the everything bagel when it comes to the kind of normal economic activity that is the actual bread and butter of economic progress.
If we followed the supply-side progressivesâ prescriptions, we might become great at building housing for the homeless, but we could still have a thousand restrictions on housing for the middle class. We could complete a wealth of âgreen energyâ projects but still have rolling blackouts because we shut down conventional power plants. We would clear the way for projects that involve properly progressive goals of redistribution, but we would not clear the way for projects that are desirable just because the average person wants to be happy and prosper. Would that really be progress?
Moreover, most of Kleinâs proposals concern what regulators and the government can do and give relatively little consideration to what entrepreneurs and developers require. But the U.S. is not China; our economy is not dominated by state-owned enterprises. (And given the ongoing crack-up in China, we should be grateful for that.) The private sector drives most of our actual economic activity.
Yet Klein isnât really prepared to address this fact. You can see this ambivalence when he begins by deriding free-market economists (the old supply-siders of the 1980s) as peddlers of pseudo-science and haughtily dismissing Ayn Rand and her interest in the nationâs âJohn Galtsââa reference to the heroes of her novels, who are mostly scientists, inventors and industrialists. But if weâre in favor of material and technological progress, shouldnât these people, the fountainheads of innovation and growth, be among our primary concerns? Shouldnât we regard what they do as more important than what bureaucrats and politicians do?
As for Ayn Rand, whose whole body of work was about the needs and motivations of the creators, arenât those needs something we should take seriously if we want a lot of âsupply-sideâ growth to fuel our ambitions for progress?
But the whole point of supply-side progressivism is that Kleinâand others who are carving out a similar ideological niche, such as Noah Smithâhave to begin by loudly disavowing free markets and individualism and private enterprise in order to shore up their progressive credentials. Their progressivism undermines their supply-side aspirations.
This cringingly apologetic approach is what distinguishes the supply-side progressives from previous apostates from the big-government creed. My sense is that decades ago, people who now identify as supply-side progressives would have just moved to the right. They would have followed the path of people like Norman Podhoretz and Irving Kristol, who started as big-government liberalsâor, as in Kristolâs case, socialistsâand then gradually migrated to become âneoconservatives.â
But it seems that such a migration is harder to pull off today, perhaps because the rise of Trumpism has made the right seem toxic, and certainly because of the extreme tribalism of our current politics. The old neoconservatives and other refugees from left-wing orthodoxy may have made a lot of enemies among the left-wing intelligentsia, but their views were more welcome in the broad mainstream of American media and academia. Today, when those fields have become more ideologically uniformâin the case of the media, fragmented into opposing islands, each ideologically uniform within itselfâsuch a transition may seem less inviting. So they have to come up with an approach that maintains a socially respectable veneer of progressivism.
Yet the cost for the would-be supply-side progressives is that they are limited by a set of thoughts they canât mention. They need to be freer, less defensive, less apologetic. Few of us want to be against progress, of courseâbut there is no need to be restricted to one particular dogma that claims a highly implausible monopoly on progress.
These thinkers are beginning to confront what other generations before them have confronted: the limitations of the stateâs coercive power, the destructive fantasies of top-down planning and the creative power of decentralized private initiative. They need to stop feeling the need to tie themselves to the label of âprogressivismâ and be willing to follow this evidence as far as it leads them.
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