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October 27, 2005
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| The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth |
Introduction
JOANNE MYERS: Good morning. I'm Joanne Myers, Director of Public Affairs
Programs at the Carnegie Council.
I would like to thank you all for joining us this morning as we welcome Ben
Friedman. He will be discussing his book, The
Moral Consequences of Economic Growth.
In an era of economic punditry, we often find that ideas about ethics or morality
will be left out of the discourse, especially when speaking about matters focusing
on economic growth and globalization. So when a widely acclaimed economist comes
along and presents a moral perspective to the ongoing debate on the effects
of economic growth and globalization, his arguments merit special consideration.
In The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth, Professor Friedman delivers
a major contribution to the discourse on the issue of whether economic growth
actually benefits or harms society. It is his belief that growth has not only
obvious economic benefits, but moral benefits as well. He demonstrates that
in developing countries particularly, where growth, rather than just the level
of living standards occurs in a consistent manner, it encourages political and
social reform, allows for the possibility of economic mobility and fairness,
and provides the substance for democracy.
To support his argument, he draws on examples from the Enlightenment and from
those thinkers whose ideas were both key to the creation of our own country
and have remained central to Western thinking in general. Exploring two centuries
of historical evidence, from income and unemployment data to period novels,
our speaker elucidates connections between economic conditions, social attitudes,
and public policy throughout the world. In general, Professor Friedman illustrates
how economic growth is a basic prerequisite for the creation of a liberal, open
society.
For many years now, our guest has been thinking, writing, and teaching economic
policy. Most of these activities have taken place at Harvard, where he is the
William Joseph Maier Professor of Political Economy and formerly Chairman of
the Department of Economics there. His book, Day
of Reckoning: The Consequences of American Economic Policy Under Reagan
and After, was widely acclaimed for masterfully underscoring the problems with
Reagan's tax cuts. For this writing, he received the George S. Eccles Prize,
which is awarded annually by Columbia University for excellence in writing about
economics. Most recently, the International Honor Society for Economics granted
him the 2005 John R. Commons Award in recognition of achievements in economics
and contributions to the economic profession.
Just as he has challenged and nurtured so many minds with this teaching, today
we welcome him to the Carnegie Council, where he will test our thinking and
provide us with new ideas.
Please join us in welcoming Professor Benjamin Friedman.
Remarks
BENJAMIN FRIEDMAN: Thank you, Joanne, for that lovely introduction.
I would like to outline the principal implications of the hypothesis about economic
growth and its moral consequences that are quite important for our society,
especially here in the United States.
Why do we care so much about economic growth? When we talk about microeconomic
issues in economics, the conversation boils down to efficiency: How can we best
organize economic activity—production, buying, selling, consuming—in
order to keep the economy as close as possible to the frontier that represents
the maximum possible production and satisfaction of the desires of all. Maximizing
the use of our productive capacity dominates the microeconomic side of what
economists do. Then, when we switch to macroeconomics, we are dealing with the
use of government policies, in the first instance, to minimize the effect of
recessions, in which business falls below the productive capacity of the economy,
and then, even more important, to achieve economic growth, expanding that frontier
of production over time.
Whether the economy falls 2 percent below its productive capacity, or 4 percent
is considered a big to-do. Two percent down would be a modest recession; 4 percent
would be a very significant one. Similarly, when we address issues of economic
growth, whether the economy expands at 1 percent per annum so that we will double
our standard of living over the next three-quarters of a century, or whether
we have a 3 percent per annum growth, so that we achieve a doubling of our standard
of living over the next generation, is again considered to be a very major item
of concern.
Why is this so important to us? We have to be careful about who is the "us"
in this question. For roughly three-fourths of the world's population, an answer
would be immediately obvious. In countries where the standard of living is well
below ours, economic growth and moving to a higher standard of living means
that people live longer; they suffer from fewer diseases; they are more likely
to have an adequate roof over their heads; they are more likely to have indoor
plumbing, sanitation; they are more likely to be able to read and write. All
of the very basic life necessities are in play for the majority of the world's
population.
Why, in a society as rich as ours, do we care so much about such matters? After
all, the relationship of standard of living and life expectancy and what diseases
we suffer and whether we can read and write and whether we have indoor plumbing
has played itself out by the time an economy gets to a standard of living, say,
half of ours. For example, the Portuguese or the Koreans have a standard of
living no more than half of ours, yet, on all of these basic life dimensions,
they are just as well off as we are. So why should we care?
We should care for a reason that goes well beyond the material benefits that
economic growth provides. Societies like ours, and specifically including ours,
are more likely to be successful at preserving and enhancing their basic moral
values when the majority of the population has a sense of getting ahead.
By "basic moral values," I mean, for instance, whether the society provides opportunities
to those who are able and willing to take them, whether the society is characterized
by tolerance of people of other races, other religions, and different backgrounds.
I have in mind whether we have a sense of fairness, generosity to those who are
less advantaged, whether we are committed to the preservation and strengthening
of our democratic institutions—in short, the whole range of characteristics
of a society that thinkers since the Enlightenment have considered not only as
explicitly positive characteristics, but also explicitly moral characteristics
of the society.
I picture the average citizen asking himself or herself questions like, "How
am I living compared to how I was doing twenty years ago?" "What's it like at
my house compared to what it was like growing up in my parents' house?" For
young adults, "How is my career starting out compared to what all of my uncles
and aunts had in their day?" For people at a slightly later stage, "What am
I doing in providing for my children compared to how I grew up myself?" For
people at a yet older stage, "What are the career prospects for my children
compared to the prospects that I had as a young man or a young woman starting
out?"
This is not a story about business cycles. This is not a story about people
comparing themselves today to two or three years ago. This is about today versus
ten or fifteen years ago, today versus a generation ago.
When a broad cross-section of the population looks back over those comparisons
and is able to have the sense that they are getting ahead economically, that
is the condition under which societies make progress in tolerance, mobility,
fairness, and democracy. By contrast, when the broad bulk of the population
has the sense of stagnation or, worse yet, falling behind, opportunity and tolerance
erode, fairness falls by the wayside, and democratic institutions are allowed
to wither.
I look back to the Civil War and trace the century and a half of experience
since then and ask, when are the periods when American society made progress,
and when did we fall back?
I also look at the traditional large European democracies—France, Germany,
Britain—again asking, when did these democracies move forward as democracies,
and conversely, when did they fall back?
I examine the experience of the developing world, where life's necessities
are also in play, but I argue that the fairness and democracy of the developing
world is also at stake when we think about economic growth.
There are four important implications of this hypothesis:
1) The first is very optimistic. If it's true that what matters for
such aspects of a society's moral development is not how rich it is in terms
of standard of living, but rather its growth in the sense of whether the average
citizen feels he is getting ahead, then the very optimistic implication is
that those countries in the world where incomes and living standards are far
below ours do not have to wait, and will not have to wait, until they achieve
Western living standards before they begin to democratize. We see evidence
of this all over the world. Half a century ago, there were only about fifty
functioning electoral democracies. Today there are over 100. Many of the new
ones are indeed in what we think of as developing economies.
To take the most
obvious example of a developing economy that is still not a democracy, China:
If the Chinese continue to maintain the very rapid growth rate and increase
in standard of living that they have achieved over the past twenty-five years,
then within our lifetimes, we will see the beginnings of a political liberalization
in China, to go along with the economic liberalization. Today, unlike when
I first visited China twenty-five years ago, most Chinese are free to decide
where they want to work, whether they want to work, whether to start a new
business, whether to hire or fire somebody. But they can't decide on what
form of government they want.
The tension that the Chinese now face between
the increasing liberalization of their economic life versus the continued
rigidity of what is a military dictatorship will be resolved in the direction
of liberalization in the political sphere as well. That doesn't mean that
it has to look like American democracy in every respect, but under conditions
of economic growth, the Chinese will resolve this very fundamental tension
in a positive direction.
This holds true in the developing world as well.
Those developing countries that are able to sustain economic growth such that
the broad majority of the population has a sense of getting ahead will make
progress in these dimensions.
2) The second major implication is a very sobering one. Even in a country
as rich as the United States, if what matters for these purposes is the growth of the
economy rather than the level of people's incomes, then any time the economy
stagnates, our basic democratic values are at risk. Despite a fairly strong
American economy at the moment, the majority of Americans are not doing well.
The Census Bureau reported recently that in 2004, for the fifth year in a row,
the median income in the United States decreased after adjustment for inflation—five years in a row in which the family right at the middle of the American
income distributions saw a decrease in its income and standard of living.
My
argument is not about business cycles, but about longer periods of time, people
thinking back a generation or at least ten or fifteen years. If we arrest this
decline in incomes for the median family in the United States, then five years could
look like a blip. But by contrast, if we remain mired in the current situation,
then the lessons of my book are rather sobering. At times in the past when
our citizens have not had a sense of getting ahead, predictable pathologies
have flourished in American society in ways that we all regret.
Whether we look
at attitudes towards immigrants or race relations or religious prejudice, generosity
to the poor, the ebbing and flowing of the strength of our democracy, the times
like the 1880s and 1890s or like the 1920s or like the period from the OPEC
years right up through the early 1990s, when the majority of American citizens
have been stagnating or falling behind, have not been episodes that we would
like to repeat.
Think about attitudes towards immigrants. A question that I
pose in the book is, why did we have a wave of anti-immigrant violence in the
1850s? Why did it go away after the Civil War? Then in the 1880s and 1890s,
why did we have a wave of ugly anti-immigrant agitation? After the turn of the
twentieth century, why did that give way to a period in which the predominant
attitude was to welcome immigrants, but to Americanize them?
This was the origin
of the high school movement. At the beginning of the twentieth century, there were
almost no public high schools in the United States. The fraction of the American population
that had a high-school education as of 1900 was 3 percent. But the idea was
that if we were to welcome all of these immigrants, we had to Americanize them.
This is also where the Social Studies curriculum came from.
In those days, the
4th of July was called Americanization Day. It even became fashionable for Americans
who were not native-born white Anglo-Saxon Protestants to claim, often falsely,
that they were born on the 4th of July. For example, Samuel Goldwyn always claimed,
falsely, that he had been born on the 4th of July. Louis Armstrong always claimed,
falsely, that he had been born on the 4th of July. It wouldn't occur to someone
of my generation to do that, but for people who were born or arrived in this
country between the turn of the twentieth century and World War I, this was
the thing to do.
Why did this attitude of welcoming immigrants give way in the
1920s to not only the strictest immigration quotas the United States has ever
seen, but the most discriminatory? We had the national origin acts, which not
only placed numerical quotas on immigrants, but discriminated according to which
part of Europe you came from. If you came from northwestern Europe, that was
okay. If you came from the Italy-Greece-Balkans part of Europe, that was bad.
If you came from the Poland-Lithuania-Russia part of Europe, that was very bad.
Why were these quite offensive acts completely thrown out in the 1960s? Why
did we have anti-immigrant agitation that we had in the 1980s and on into the
early 1990s? Then why did it go away again in the latter part of the 1990s,
so that the one candidate who, in the 2000 election, ran on an explicitly anti-immigrant
platform—namely, Pat
Buchanan—got so few votes, even in the Republican primaries, that
he had to change parties? In my book I document how this ebb and flow of the legislative,
the political, and the private behavior of American citizens lines up with the
economics.
In an era in which we are now, for half a decade running, seeing
the average American citizen lose ground economically, this is a very sobering
thought. My late colleague at Harvard, Alexander Gerschenkron, having in mind
not the United States in the twenty-first century, but Germany in the 1930s,
wrote that even a long democratic history does not prevent a nation from becoming
a democracy without democrats There is a risk that we could go that route as
well.
3) The third implication that follows from the argument in the book is
one for economic policy. We frequently hear the argument that the right role
for economic policy is to stand back and let families save however much they
want to save, let businesses invest however much they want to invest; the result
will be a market-determined growth rate, and that, because it comes out of the
market process, will be the right growth rate for our economy. The implication
that follows is that that's wrong. The reason is analogous to the way that the
market mechanism, to cite a standard example, left to its own devices, will
over-provide pollution or noise or congestion. When I drive my car and pump
noxious fumes out the back, the market mechanism doesn't levy any price for
putting out fumes that other people have to breathe. That's why we understand
that there is a role for government policy to superimpose itself on the market
mechanism and limit pollution and noise and congestion.
For reasons that are
exactly analogous to why the market mechanism over-provides pollution, the market
mechanism, left to its own devices, under-provides economic growth. The reason
is that there is no market in which people buy and sell fairness. There is no
price at which we trade tolerance. There is no market where we can have an exchange
for rights to democratic political values. These are all positive byproducts
of the growth process that stand aside from the market mechanism. Because the
market mechanism doesn't price and trade these aspects of our society that we
value, the market mechanism, left to its own devices, under-provides economic
growth, and the right rate of economic growth is more than, is faster than,
what the market, left to its own devices, will provide.
4) The final and perhaps broadest implication is that we need to change
the way in which we talk about economic growth in our public conversation. We
all understand that with economic growth, our standard of living rises, we live
in bigger houses, we put more things in them, we drive bigger cars, we buy more
expensive clothing, and medical care becomes more available. At the same time,
we have become increasingly aware of drawbacks to the economic-growth process,
not just pollution and noise, but, especially, environmental degradation, extinction
of species, and other factors to which we rightly attach a moral overtone.
As a result, our public conversation
about matters of economic growth and, importantly, about policies that either
promote or retard growth, often takes on the flavor of evaluating material benefits
against moral negatives. We think that all of the benefits are material; we
think that all of the drawbacks are moral. Therefore, people are led to believe
that their image of themselves, their placement of themselves on the spectrum
of "Do you care mostly about moral things or do you care mostly about material
things?" somehow maps into, should they be in favor of economic growth and in
favor of policies that promote growth, or should they disapprove of growth and
resist policies that will give us more growth?
But if it's true that growth
delivers these positive moral advantages—the democracy of our society, our
sense of fairness, our tolerance, our willingness to provide opportunity and
mobility—then it isn't true that all of the benefits of growth are material
and that all of the moral considerations are in the other side of the balance.
There are very important moral advantages of growth. Thinking of the growth
debate as material benefits versus moral negatives is a false way to present
the choice.
Similarly, thinking that how we envision ourselves as people who
value either material things or moral things or some combination, thinking that
that somehow maps into what our stance should be in debates over economic growth—that's a false mapping as well. It's important to move away from the false
choice of material benefits versus moral drawbacks, and recognize that growth
has important moral benefits as well.
The importance of the matter lies in our
reluctance to undertake the kinds of economic policies that would lead us back
to an era of sustained economic growth for the majority of our citizens. Most
people understand what we need to do. But we don't take the steps that we need
to take, primarily because we don't understand how important growth is, not
just for the material benefits it brings, but the moral dimensions as well.
The greatest advantage I would like to flow from my book would be to influence
our debate on economic growth in a way so that we could once again return to
the kinds of economic policies that would deliver meaningful growth for the
broad majority of citizens.
JOANNE MYERS: I'd like to open the floor to discussion.
Questions and Answers
QUESTION: While the economic argument is persuasive, and it is a necessary
condition, sometimes it is not a sufficient condition. If you take the United States today,
it is true that over the five-year period, median incomes have not increased.
But at the same time, a very important factor behind some phenomena that may be
in some parts of society is also because of Islamic terrorism, what happened on
9/11, and the government discourse that has followed, the laws that have been
devised to tackle that.
If you look at India, in Hinduism, the Lord says that
"Whosoever comes to me by whatsoever path, I reach him." There is a tradition
of acceptance of religions. There is a democratic tradition.
But at the same time,
if you look at the economic growth, Gujarat recorded very high rates of economic
growth. Incomes were rising. Yet there was colossal anti-Muslim sentiment for
two reasons: one, because of inequality that the economic growth brought about;
and second, because of cross-border terrorism from Pakistan.
In the case of Bihar,
which is a very backward state, you certainly have increased activity by communists,
but you have absolutely no discrimination, no intolerance on ethnic or religious
grounds, largely, again, because of tradition, because of equality, and because
of absence of any cross-border terrorist attempts.
When you apply these criteria to a wider field, there are very important exceptions.
Weimar
Germany, under Stresemann,
made a lot of progress through the Dawes
Plan in economic matters. There are historians who feel that, in spite of
the depression, progress was being made even in the post-Stresemann period in
tackling those effects. But there was absolutely no democratic tradition. Weimar
Germany rested on foreign arms, and when foreign arms were removed, it had to
collapse.
BENJAMIN FRIEDMAN: The overarching aspect of your remarks is that nobody
would think that the economics would be the only factor that matters in such things.
You rightly point to a variety of issues, including war and peace. Military conflict
throughout history has trumped reform tendencies in one economy or one society
after another.
The positive tendencies in the United States—attitudes towards immigrants,
but also race relations and a variety of other matters of American society—were
moving in what, from an Enlightenment perspective, one would clearly think of
as a positive direction in the period under the Republican Roosevelt and the Democrat
Wilson. This was arrested by World War I.
We have seen this frequently. War and
peace is an example, and there are many other factors as well, some of them systemic,
like tradition, and some of them quite idiosyncratic.
I highlight the exceptions
to see what we can learn from them rather than sweep them away. The classic economic
expression is "outlier observations." By identifying something as an outlier,
my colleagues mostly say, "This is off in some other part of the universe. We
don't have to do this."
Again, to return to the American example, in my review
of the 150 years of American history, the outstanding exception is the Great Depression
experience, clearly a time when everybody knew that he or she wasn't getting ahead.
Yet the predominant tendency in American society was in the direction of greater
generosity, tolerance, fairness, and strengthening of institutions. This is an
exception.
I write about the implications of inequality and conditions under which
people are prepared to tolerate inequality widening and under which they are not,
what drives that, and also for how long. We have a lot of experience that leads
us to believe that people in the developing world have a tolerance, albeit limited,
for widening inequality. Maybe this is a warning sign for countries like India,
and China as well, where the inequality has been widening.
The three countries
that now have almost identical degrees of inequality are China, India, and the
United States. By standard measures, all three countries are in almost exactly
the same place on inequality. Twenty years ago, China in particular, but India
as well, would have had less inequality than we do. It's not that we are coming
down; we are drifting up in inequality as well.
QUESTION: Let's take outsourcing today, which is a major concern for most
people and is one of the causes for the lack of growth at the median level in
the United States. This hits not only manufacturing workers but also knowledge
workers. On the other hand, let's take India, where so much of the outsourcing
of the knowledge workers is going. Yet, from a recent article in Fortune,
or many other studies, India, while being more democratic than many countries,
beginning with China, has had difficulties in harnessing its resources for economic
growth.
How would you address the general question of outsourcing and its effect,
both in the United States, where there is a tendency to be negative about other countries,
and the possibilities for generating more economic growth in India and elsewhere?
BENJAMIN FRIEDMAN: What do we think about outsourcing? Parts of what you
said are quite right and I have reservations about on thing you mentioned.
The
part that is quite right is that the outsourcing phenomenon highlights the need
for us to move forward on a range of reforms in our educational system. I'm not
talking about the Harvards or the NYUs of the world. I'm talking about the K-8s
of the world, and I'm talking about before K. We need to move forward on educational
reforms that will make more of our citizens more productive in ways that will
allow them to compete in a world marketplace, where we want our workers to have
a standard of living, and therefore a wage, that is higher than that of other countries.
We therefore need them to be more productive than workers in other countries.
Some of that higher productivity can come from our greater degree of physical
capital that we can give them. The typical worker in the American business sector
now has about $120,000 worth of physical capital behind him or her. That's way
ahead of most countries.
But that isn't enough. If these American workers do not
have adequate human capital to go along with the physical capital, then we know
they will not be productive. It's not a great mystery what we need to do with
the American education system. We know both what is to be done and we know that
it can be very expensive.
It turns out, sadly, that more than 50 percent of the
student-to-student variation in eighth-grade mathematics performance is predictable
on the basis of characteristics of the child that the teacher writes down on the
very first day that the child walks into kindergarten. I pick eighth-grade mathematics
performance because, going forward, we also know that this performance is a very
strong predictor of labor market success and wage trajectory.
It is distressing
to realize that more than 50 percent of the game is over on the first day that
the child walks into kindergarten. Nobody can think that this is because of lack
of effort of the child. If somebody graduates from high school not knowing how
to read or write, you can say, "Well, that's the student's fault." If it comes
down to the first day of kindergarten, who could ever think that this is the child's
fault?
We know that we have programs like Project
Head Start. Project Head Start doesn't raise academic scores, but it does
influence who finishes high school, who goes on to college, which girls get pregnant,
which boys get in trouble with the law, who is likely to have a job, who earns
how much and wage trajectories.
But what we know is that it's expensive. The "let's
get together with the student for a chat every once in a while" approach doesn't
work. Intensive programs like Head Start that start very young do have these demonstrated
effects.
So we need to persuade ourselves that this is a good investment. One
line of argument says that that kind of investment is good strictly on economic
terms. If you think about delinquency, for example, it turns out that our most
expensive social program in the United States is prison. It costs $30,000 a year to keep
somebody in prison. Compared to that, $5,000 a year for Head Start is inexpensive.
I argue that there are moral consequences that follow, and if we don't train people
accordingly, they will not be productive. They will lose their jobs to folks in
other places, their incomes will stagnate, and we will have adverse implications
that I treat in explicit moral terms.
I disagree with what you said on the Indian
issue. The Indians have not been as successful as the Chinese, but their growth
rate is impressive. India began to achieve a very rapid growth rate in the early
to mid-1980s, but it was accomplished in a way that was not sustainable. Therefore,
there was a currency/debt-type crisis, a budget crisis, in the early 1990s, followed
by reforms led by the current prime minister, Manmohan Singh. Since the early
1990s, India has continued with an economic growth rate that is about 5 percent
per annum. Moreover, because of the nature of reforms, the growth is now on a
sustainable basis.
I don't know India as well as China. I've been going to China
for a very long time. But I have spent some time in India in recent years. I'm
persuaded that the Indians are on the right path.
QUESTION: A number of years ago, I was moderating a panel at the city bar
association on the Argentine dictatorship at the time. The issue on the table
was, should there be an economic embargo of Argentina to show our disdain for
their lack of support for democratic institutions? I was a lone wolf saying, "No,
we shouldn't, because that would have an adverse effect on the economic conditions
of the people, and that, in turn, would undermine democratic institutions." I
said, "But this is just anecdotal. I have no proof for this." I was accused of
being sort of a Nazi, because this was the type of philosophy that had been used
in pre-World War II Germany. If I'd had your book and your research to support
me, I wouldn't have lost that debate.
With regard to Latin America, over the last
decade there has been a policy of the Washington consensus, economic liberalization,
privatization, opening of markets. That has fallen into some disrepute, because
people in certain countries have said that it's not working; the poor folks have
suffered more rather than having their economic standards improved. Maybe these
are income-distribution issues.
In the United States, different levels of American society
feel differently about their prospects. For example, well-to-do middle-class people
feel that if they're lucky, their children will do as well as the parents have
done. Other groups feel very optimistic about their opportunities here.
With all
these variations, how can your thesis can be implemented and worked in today's
society, or in Latin America's? Who is articulating the virtues of economic growth?
Who has the platform? If you look at Latin America, certain political leaders
have undermined the Washington consensus. Other political leaders have supported
it. It's a longer-term process, but decisions and policies are made on the basis
of short-term political expediency, rather than these longer-term growth issues.
BENJAMIN FRIEDMAN: First, on your being put in a tight spot, I would not
want to say that there is never any country that we would regard as so opprobrious
that we would refuse to deal with them. There are organizations I would not join.
There are political figures that I would not advise. I deal with political figures
in both parties, but there are some whom I would rather not talk to.
But assuming
that Argentina was not in that category and is not in that category, if we want
to promote democratic evolution in countries that are currently lagging behind,
we want to allow them and encourage them to achieve rising living standards for
their populations.
What I mean by economic growth is rising living standards for
the bulk of the population. In the same way that the mere fact that the economy
as a whole is expanding doesn't mean that the average citizen is expanding—we
only need to look at the United States today to see that contrast—we also have to look
at policies that promote economic growth, and some ways of promoting economic
growth are more likely to lead to advancing prospects for the average citizen
and others are likely to undermine them.
If our reason for wanting to promote
growth is to achieve greater democracy and fairness and mobility and opportunity,
it makes no sense to promote growth through policies that undermine those features
of the society. At the very least, we want to promote growth in ways that are
congruent with those broader features of the society that we are after. If at
all possible, we want to find ways of promoting growth that, even indirectly,
enhance those features of society. That is why I chose Head Start as an example
to address your question. Head Start is a way of enhancing our economic growth,
but it also simultaneously promotes the broadening of opportunity in the society.
As to the constituencies, no one can be surprised that individual constituencies
advocate policies that are in their self-interest. This is like the inspector
in the movie Casablanca who was shocked—shocked!—to discover that there
is gambling going on in this institution. Let's not be shocked that political
constituencies are promoting policies that are in their self-interest. But civil
society has a role to play in a democracy. What lines of argument like the one
in my book do is to inform the participants in civil society and help shape the
conversation that takes place in civil society, in such a way that, despite the
role of self-interested constituencies, a democratic system can move forward in
a way that ultimately proves to be beneficial. That doesn't always happen, but
the object is to strengthen civil society so as to ensure that it has the best
prospect that we can give it.
JOANNE MYERS: Thank you so much for sharing your ideas with us this morning.
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