Rep. Paul Ryan during a speech at Georgetown University in Washington April 26 (CNS photo/Bob Roller)
“Look, it is rare
in American politics to arrive at a moment in which the debate revolves around
the fundamental nature of America democracy and the social contract. But that
is exactly where we are today.”
Congressman
Paul Ryan, Whittington Lecture, Georgetown University, April 26, 2012.
I.
Plato often spoke
of the dire consequences when a society becomes divided in its own mind between
rich and poor. The social order becomes a war of sorts between the two factions
of the same polity, each side blaming the other for the predicament of
everyone. The American founders were especially concerned that this division
should not arise in the new nation. This division usually represents a
breakdown of any sense of common union or common good that recognizes individuals’
necessary differences in contribution, intelligence, good will, and willingness
to bear burdens in the society. “Civil public dialogue goes to the heart of
solidarity, the virtue that does not divide society into classes and groups but
builds on the common good of all,” Paul Ryan remarked in his notable lecture at
Georgetown University on April 26. We associate the term “solidarity” with John
Paul II and the Polish labor movement. But Ryan’s definition of it is as good
as any I have seen.
Like Plato’s
specialization principle, solidarity recognizes that not everyone is the same,
or wants to be, or can be. The fact that not everyone can (or wants to) do
everything constitutes the foundation of the very richness of society and the
meaning of the common good. This approach is the opposite of a society charged
through with envy, in which any distinction of wealth or honor is taken to be
unwarranted. Envy is a much more pervasive and spiritually dangerous social
vice than we realize. It is almost never recognized for what it is: a refusal
to admit and acknowledge what is good and worthy in others. Envy as a spiritual
disorder of the soul is much more dangerous and undermining to a society than
greed ever was, even though both are vices. We often call “greed” what is
really envy.
The Ryan Lecture
had many points that were matters of judgment. He commented on the budget, on
how social thought was applied to concrete issues, on the failures of many of
President Obama’s policies, on Medicare, the growing debt, and Europe’s more
advanced welfare crisis. In a graphic phrase, Ryan worried that ours may well
be the first generation of Americans to leave their children poorer than their
parents left them. “We face a struggling economy and the probability of greater
turmoil ahead.” These are sober words.
In the lecture,
Ryan cited his mentor, Congressman Jack Kemp: “You can’t help America’s poor by
making America poor.” This proposition went hand and hand with Ryan’s earlier
comment on Lincoln: “We needed a solution to restore the American ideaan
opportunity society, in which government’s role is not to rig the rules and aim
for equal outcomes butin the words of Abraham Lincoln‘to clear the paths of
laudable pursuit for all,’ so that all may have an equal opportunity to rise
and freely pursue their happiness.” Sometimes we call this “American
exceptionalism,” as Ryan does, but its broader scope is the nature of the
common good itself. The phrase “opportunity society,” in this context, is a
rich one.
The Kemp
proposition is crucial to understand. If we think of government as primarily an
agency whose main function is to redistribute whatever wealth is produced to
the poorhowever “the poor” are politically definedwe will inevitably bankrupt
everyone. The poor have most at stake in a struggling economy. In Scripture, we
find little discussion of the poor helping the poor. It is always the rich who
are called on. But the same Scripture gives little guidance on the issue of how
and why wealth is produced. There are a few, of course. The parable of the
talents suggests that wealth is to be gained, that not to make any effort to
increase one’s wealth is reprehensible. Paul’s famous “he who does not work,
neither let him eat” is always jarring to the ideologue.
II.
But wealth needs
to be produced. And before this can happen, it must be envisioned. The ultimate
wealth is not land or goods but human intelligence and ingenuity. Government,
for all its importance, is probably the least efficient agency to take this
function of producing wealth to itself. Ryan was right to point out the
tendency of the present administration to assume more and more control of the
nation’s wealth and how it is distributed. This accumulation of wealth gives
government huge power over citizens who are increasingly dependent on it. They
are increasingly afraid to oppose its growth for fear that they will be cut out
of societal benefits. Indeed, there is considerable speculation that this
growing dependence of more and more citizens on the government is precisely
what many politicians, bureaucrats, and other interested parties want. This
leaves a mass of voters who do not dare oppose the state but who demand more
and more for themselves.
“We need to
restore the principle that those who seek to reap the gains in our economy also
bear the full risk of the losses,” says Paul Ryan. The other side of this
proposition is also true. Those who receive benefits from the society must seek
to make themselves independent of this support. Generations of welfare
recipients suggest that we only make things worse by not facing this principle.
We have gotten into a situation where “charity” is perceived as something the
government does under various guises.
It is very
tempting for a government, moreover, to understand itself as the primary savior
of society. The poor become a constituency bound to the government, which sees
its primary obligation as supporting more and more “poor.” The help of the poor
has become a primary justification of political power. Instead of seeking ways
to make citizens independent of this political power by enabling wealth to be
produced by citizens, the service state sees itself as taking from the rich and
giving to the poor, with the small exchange of votes and political support.
III.
The central
thesis of the Ryan Lecture, as I understand it, is that the primary purpose of
any public policy is to help people help themselves. This approach meant
restoring, through tax policies, monies to the peoplemonies that originally
belonged to themto allow them to become independent. The alternative, usually
posed in the name of “care of the poor,” had the effect of undermining the
incentive and work ethic of the poor. It made them more and more dependent on
the state. The debate is not about whether some people need help, but whether a
good percentage of society needs government to do its bidding. The
disincentives to economic growth imposed by the tax burdens needed to pay for
huge increases of dependency in turn further undermine the productive and
incentive sectors of society. These areas are largely responsible for growth
itself. To penalize them is to penalize everyone.
In addition to
this problem, we have the presence of large anti-growth ideology coming from
various sources, including anti-population growth groups. These often restrict
the very possibility of finding ways to solve our problems. They increase
stagnation through governmental dependency and control. The political overtones
of this position are found in those sentiments that the president often
expresses, of America’s withdrawing from any major role in the world. There
seems to be a connection between this foreign policy agenda and the anti-growth
and government-control factors at the domestic level.
“Government is
one word for things we do together,” Ryan observed. “But it is not the only
word. We are a nation that prides itself on looking out for one anotherand
government has an important role to play in that. But relying on distant
government bureaucracies to lead this effort just hasn’t worked.” We need an
“opportunity society,” not a dependent one, not one that thinks of America in the
same terms as European welfare states, which are finding that their own welfare
policies are financially breaking and ruining their societies.
E.F. Schumacher
once remarked there is really no “economic” problem. We know how to clothe,
feed, and shelter. What we lack is the political will to acknowledge that
government is at most a balance, a forum, not the producer and distributor of
our goods. We often do not see the connection between jobs and high taxes. We
think that increasing taxes will help the poor. Instead, it will make them not
only poorer but dependent on a government willing to control every side of
their lives, includingas we now knowthe religious
side. Jack Kemp had it right, as Paul Ryan said. “You cannot help America’s
poor [or anyone else’s] by making America poor.”
The poor are not
poor because the rich are rich. The only way for the poor to hope to increase
their wealth is for the economy itself to grow as a result of their own
endeavors. This is the classic notion that we must allow reward and incentive
to flourish. If we take these away, no one will do anything to help himself.
Everyone will become more dependent on a government increasingly willing to
claim that it is itself the solution. Americans once knew this approach of the
all-caring government was, to put it mildly, counter-productive and even
dangerous.
The heart of the Ryan Lecture was an awareness
that we have reached a crossroads. Either we can finally give up and call on a
government ever-more willing to control more and more of our lives, or we can
begin to return power to individuals and other units of society. We need to
face the fact that our greatest political problem today is a government that no
longer sees itself as limited and bound to principles protecting religion,
economics, the poor, and the vast majority who are willing and capable of
helping themselvesif they are allowed to do so.