This repository has been archived on 2017-04-03. You can view files and clone it, but cannot push or open issues/pull-requests.
blog_post_tests/20021204023400.blog

38 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext

Demographics and the Dustbin of History
<p>Karl Zinsmeister&#8217;s essay <a href="http://www.taemag.com/issues/articleid.17386/article_detail.asp">Old and In The Way</a> presents a startling &mdash; but all too plausible &mdash; forecast of Europe&#8217;s future. To the now-familiar evidence of European insularity, reflexive anti-Americanism, muddle, and geopolitical impotence, Zinsmeister adds a hard look at European demographic trends.</p>
<p>What Zinsmeister sees coming is not pretty. European populations are not having children at replacement levels. The population of Europe is headed for collapse, and for an age profile heavily skewed towards older people and retirees. Europe&#8217;s Gross Domestic Product per capita (roughly, the amount of wealth the average person produces) is already only two-thirds of America&#8217;s, and the ratio is going to fall, not rise.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the U.S population continues to rise &mdash; and the U.S. economy is growing three times as fast as Europe&#8217;s even though the U.S. is in the middle of a bust! Since 1970 the U.S. has been more than ten times as successful at creating new jobs. But most importantly, the U.S.&#8217;s population is still growing even as Europe&#8217;s is shrinking &mdash; which means the gap in population, productivity, and economic output is going to <em>increase</em>. By 2030, the U.S will have a larger population than all of Europe &mdash; and the median age in the U.S. will be 30, but the median age in Europe will be over 50.</p>
<p>Steven den Beste is probably correct to <a href="http://www.denbeste.nu/cd_log_entries/2002/12/EuropeanDecline.shtml"> diagnose</a> the steady weakening of Europe as the underlying cause of the increasing rift the U.S. and Europe&#8217;s elites noted in Robert Kagan&#8217;s essay <a href="http://denbeste.nu/external/Kagan01.html">Power and Weakness</a> (also recommended reading). But Kagan (focusing on diplomacy and geopolitics), Zinsmeister (focusing on demographic and economic decline) and den Beste (focusing on the lassitude of Europe&#8217;s technology sector and the resulting brain drain to the U.S.) all miss something more fundamental.</p>
<p>Zinsmeister comes near it when he writes &#8220;Europe&#8217;s disinterest in childbearing is a crisis of confidence and optimism.&#8221;. Europeans are demonstrating in their behavior that they don&#8217;t believe the future will be good for children.</p>
<p>Back to that in a bit, but first a look on what the demographic collapse will mean for European domestic politics. Zinsmeister makes the following pertinent observations:</p>
<ol>
<li>Percentage of GDP represented by government spending is also diverging. In the U.S. it is roughly 19% and falling. In the EU countries it is 30-40% and rising.</li>
<li>The ratio of state clients to wealth-generating workers is also rising. By 2030, Zinsmeister notes, every single worker in the EU will have his own elderly person 65 or older to provide for through the public pension system.</li>
<li>Chronic unemployment is at 9-10% (twice the U.S.&#8217;s) and rising.</li>
<li>Long-term unemployment and drone status is far more common in Europe than here. In Europe, 40% of unemployed have been out of work for over a year. Un the U.S. the corresponding figure is 6%.</li>
</ol>
<p>Zinsmeister doesn&#8217;t state the obvious conclusion; Euro-socialism is unsustainable. It&#8217;s headed for the dustbin of history.</p>
<p>Forget ideological collapse; the <em>numbers</em> don&#8217;t work. The statistics above actually understate the magnitude of the problem, because as more and more of the population become wards of the state, a larger percentage of the able will be occupied simply with running the income-redistribution system. The rules they make will depress per-capita productivity further (for a recent example see France&#8217;s mandated 35-hour workweek).</p>
<p>Unless several of the key trends undergo a rapid and extreme reversal, rather soon (as in 20 years at the outside) there won&#8217;t be enough productive people left to keep the gears of the income-redistribution machine turning. Economic strains sufficient to destroy the political system will become apparent much sooner. We may be seeing the beginnings of the destruction now as Chancellor Schr&ouml;der&#8217;s legitimacy evaporates in Germany, burned away by the dismal economic news.</p>
<p>We know what this future will probably look like, because we&#8217;ve seen the same dismal combination of economic/demographic collapse play out in Russia in the 1980s and 1990s. Progressively more impotent governments losing their popular legitimacy, increasing corruption, redistributionism sliding into gangsterism. Slow-motion collapse.</p>
<p>But there are worse possibilities that are quite plausible. The EU hase two major advantages the Soviets did not &mdash; a better tech and infrastructure base, and a functioning civil society (e.g. one in which wealth and information flow through a lot of legal grassroots connections and voluntary organizations). But they have one major disadvantage &mdash; large, angry, totally unassimilated immigrant populations that are reproducing faster than the natives. This is an especially severe problem in France, where housing developments in the ring zones around all the major cities have become places the police dare not go without heavy weapons.</p>
<p>We&#8217;ve already gotten a foretaste of what that might mean for European domestic politics. At its most benign, we get Pim Fortuyn in Holland. But J&ouml;rg Haider in Austria is a more ominous indicator, and Jean-Marie Le Pen&#8217;s startling success in the last French presidential elections was downright frightening. Far-right populism with a racialist/nativist/anti-Semitic tinge is on the rise, an inevitable consequence of the demographic collapse of native populations.</p>
<p>As if that isn&#8217;t bad enough, al-Qaeda and other Islamist organizations are suspected on strong evidence to be recruiting heavily among the North African, Turkish, and Levantine populations that now predominate in European immigrant quarters. The legions of rootless, causeless, unemployed and angry young men among Muslim immigrants may in fact actually be on their way to reifying the worst nightmares of native-European racists.</p>
<p>One way or another, the cozy Euro-socialist welfare state is doomed by the demographic collapse. Best case: it will grind to a shambolic halt as the ratio of worker bees to drones goes below critical. Worst case: it will blow itself apart in a welter of sectarian, ethnic, and class violence. Watch the frequency trend curve of synagogue-trashings and anti-Jewish hate crimes; that&#8217;s bound to be a leading indicator.</p>
<p>The only possible way for Europe to avoid one of these fates would be for it to reverse either the decline in per-capita productivity or its population decline. And reversing the per-capita productivity decline would only be a temporary fix unless it could be made to rise faster than the drone-to-worker ratio &mdash; forever.</p>
<p>Was this foredoomed? Can it be that all national populations lose their will to have children when they get sufficiently comfortable? Do economies inevitably grow old and sclerotic? Is Europe simply aging into the end stages of a natural civilizational senescence?</p>
<p>That theory would be appealing to a lot of big-picture historians, and to religious anti-materialists like al-Qaeda. And if we didn&#8217;t have the U.S.&#8217;s counterexample to look at, we might be tempted to conclude that this trap is bound to claim any industrial society past a certain stage of development.</p>
<p>But that won&#8217;t wash. The U.S. is wealthier, both in aggregate and per-capita, than Europe. A pro-market political party in Sweden recently pointed out that by American standards of purchasing power, most Swedes now live in what U.S. citizens would consider poverty. If wealth caused decline, the U.S. would be further down the tubes than the EU right now. But we&#8217;re still growing.</p>
<p>A clue to the real problem lies in the differing degrees to which social stability depends on income transfer. In the U.S., redistributionism is on the decline; we abolished federal welfare nearly a decade ago, national health insurance was defeated, and new entitlements are an increasingly tough political sell to a population that has broadly bought into conservative arguments against them. In fact, one of the major disputes everyone knows won&#8217;t be avoidable much longer is over privatizing Social Security &mdash; and opponents are on the defensive.</p>
<p>In Europe, on the other hand, merely failing to raise state pensions on schedule can cause nationwide riots. The dependent population there is much larger, much longer-term, and has much stronger claims on the other players in the political system. The 5%/10% difference in structural unemployment &mdash; and, even more, the 6%/40% difference in <em>permanant</em> unemployment &mdash; tells the story.</p>
<p>So what happened?</p>
<p>Essentially, Euro-socialism told the people that the State would buy as much poverty and dependency as they cared to produce. Then it made wealth creation difficult by keeping capital expensive, business formation difficult, and labor markets rigid and regulated. Finally, it taxed the bejesus out of the people who stayed off the dole and made it through the redistributionist rat-maze, and used the proceeds to buy more poverty and alienation.</p>
<p>Europeans responded to this set of incentives by not having children. This isn&#8217;t surprising. The same thing happened in Soviet Russia, much sooner. There&#8217;s a reason Stalin handed out medals to women who raised big families.</p>
<p>Human birth rates rise under two circumstances. One is when people think they need to have a lot of kids for any of them to survive. The other is when human beings think their children will have it better than they do. (The reasons for this pattern should be obvious; if they aren&#8217;t, go read about evolutionary biology until you get it.)</p>
<p>Europe&#8217;s experiment with redistributionism has been running for about a hundred and fifty years now (the beginnings of the modern welfare state date to Prussian state-pension schemes in the 1840s). Until recently, it was sustained by the long-term population and productivity boom that followed the Industrial Revolution. There were always more employed young people than old people and unemployed people and sick people and indigents, so subsidizing the latter was economically possible.</p>
<p>Until fairly recently, Euro-socialist governments couldn&#8217;t suck wealth out of the productive economy and into the redistribution network fast enough to counter the effects of the long boom. Peoples&#8217; estimate of the prospects for their children kept improving and they kept breeding. In France they now call the late end of that period <i>les trentes glorieuses</i>, the thirty glorious years from 1945 to 1975. But as the productivity gains from industrialization tailed off, the demographic collapse began, not just in France but Europe-wide.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the U.S. was not only rejecting socialism, but domestic politics actually moved <em>away</em> from redistributionism and economic intervention after Nixon&#8217;s wage/price control experiment failed in 1971. The U.S, famously had its period of &#8220;malaise&#8221; in the 1970s after the oil-price shock ended our <i>trentes glorieuses</i>&mdash; but while in Europe the socialists consolidated their grip on public thinking during those years, our &#8220;democratic socialists&#8221; didn&#8217;t &mdash; and never recovered from Ronald Reagan&#8217;s two-term presidency after 1980.</p>
<p>The fall of the Soviet Union happened fifteen years after the critical branch point. Until then, Westerners had no way to know that the Soviets, too, had been in demographic decline for some time. Communist myth successfully portrayed the Soviet Union as an industrial and military powerhouse, but the reality was a hollow shell with a failing population &mdash; a third-world pesthole with a space program. Had that been clearer thirty years sooner, perhaps Europe might have avoided the trap.</p>
<p>Now the millennium has turned and it looks like the experiment will finally have to end. It won&#8217;t be philosophy or rhetoric or the march of armies that kills it, but rather the accumulated poisons of redistributionism necrotizing not just the economy but the demographics of Europe. Euro-socialism, in a quite Marxian turn of events, will have been destroyed by its own internal contradictions.</p>
<p><a href="http://enetation.co.uk/comments.php?user=esr&amp;commentid=85370632">Blogspot comments</a></p>