The Failure of
Democracy and the Rise of the Welfare State
Are political
regimes fated to decay and die away, as everything in nature is?
Back in the
eighteenth century, men in England, France, and the United States conceived of
a new type of regime that would prevent the tyranny of the absolutist
monarchies that reigned at the time. They put their hopes in a balance of power
between various institutions of government, and in the periodical recourse to
election to purge the system of excessive corruption and entrenched power. The
democratic form of government established on those principles would work
wonders for over two centuries.
But now, in its
third century of existence, it is producing dysfunctional and potentially self-destructive
forms of governance. The United States has been deadlocked in the monumental
issue of its budget deficit and entitlements, unable to cut spending or raise
taxes. Europe as a whole is no less fiscally bankrupt, and measures to restore
its public finances are throwing the continent into economic depression and
political upheaval.
This is not the
first test for democracies that, over the last 200 and some years, have
weathered countless political crises. Throughout that period, democracies were
able to mobilize so many resources, human and financial, that they won epochal
wars against other regimes and were emulated on all continents. Yet, the
diagnostic today is severe: with age, the democratic welfare state as we know
it suffers from morbid obesity, and while the remedy is not hard to
conceive—rebalancing the relationship between the public to private sector—it
seems impossible to administer.
The etiology of
the crisis points at the very design of the regime: the patient will not take
the cure, voting out any government trying to cut public spending. Foreign
donors who bail out bankrupt governments are often slapped in the face by the
citizens of those countries. The recent woes of Greece and Cyprus show how the
people can lack responsibility and gratitude.
Political
theorists of ancient Greece were ambivalent about democracy. The Greek elite
liked to rule its own affairs but, as a privileged minority in an expanding
society, it had much to lose if a populist tyrant were to leverage the power of
the masses. Accommodations were made with monarchy, hoping for a king powerful
enough to keep the mob in check, and wise enough to protect the propertied
classes.



















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