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- ESSAY, Page 83Why Is America In a Blue Funk?
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- By Charles Krauthammer
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- Fed chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress last week that
- the economy was not doing all that badly yet consumer
- confidence was weaker than he had ever seen it. In a nation of
- consumers, low consumer confidence is more than an unwillingness
- to buy. It is a loss of faith, a statistical measure of national
- anxiety. As the year ends, a morbid pessimism has settled over
- the nation, a Great Depression not of the economy but of the
- psyche.
-
- It is precisely this disparity between economy and psyche,
- between how bad things really are and how bad we think they are,
- that begs explaining. Obviously, we are in a recession, but by
- any historical standard, a mild one. U.S. GNP has fallen 0.76%
- over the past year. In 1930 it dropped 9.4%; in 1932, 13.4%.
- During the most recent recession, 1981-82, the fall was 2.3%,
- three times the current contraction.
-
- Perhaps this recession has produced more publicized
- malaise than most because it has hit the upper classes more than
- most. White-collar workers usually escape recessions. In
- 1981-82, for example, the white-collar unemployment rate
- increased one-sixth as much as the blue-collar rate. This time
- it has increased fully half as much. The factory worker has the
- ballot box, but he has less access to the national soapbox than
- do the manager and the office worker, the M.B.A. and the
- journalist now on the street looking for work. In part, then,
- this recession has been hyped for the same reason plane crashes
- get far more ink than bus accidents: it hits a lot closer to
- home, and is thus far more interesting, to the chattering
- classes.
-
- Hype is hype, but surely it cannot be the whole story.
- Being told that you are depressed, or ought to be, can be mildly
- depressing. But you have to be reasonably demoralized in the
- first place for such a suggestion to have serious effect.
-
- So where does the original gloom come from? The question
- is all the more puzzling when you consider that historians are
- sure to write of 1991 as America's best year since 1945. (They
- are not deflected from such judgments by GNP declines of
- 0.76%.) The year began, after all, with the most smashing
- military victory this side of Agincourt, a victory that
- demonstrated not just American military prowess but also
- diplomatic skill, technological pre-eminence and national will.
- And the year ended with the collapse, indeed the total
- evaporation of America's most implacable foe, a global giant
- that had vowed to bury us and spent the better part of 45 years
- trying.
-
- A year bookended by such extraordinary triumphs is a year
- whose close finds the nation in a blue funk. Doctor?
-
- The most tempting diagnosis is postpartum depression, the
- paradoxical melancholy that settles in after a supreme act of
- human fulfillment. What follows, Peggy Lee once explained, is
- the "Is that all there is?" syndrome. For two generations we
- lived with the expectation that if we could only end the endless
- twilight struggle with the Soviet Empire, if we could only turn
- from swords to plowshares, if we could only climb down from
- J.F.K.'s ramparts of freedom, life would be rosy. Peace
- dividend. Nuclear tranquillity. National repose. Rewards for all
- the sacrifices endured, for all the gratification deferred for
- 45 years.
-
- We discover instead that life being life, the end of this
- great war no more brings the Edenic revival than did the end of
- World War I or II. The first effect of the peace dividend, we
- learn, is unemployed defense workers. Far from revival, we come
- home to recession.
-
- And maybe not just any recession. General Motors, that
- synonym for American enterprise, sounds a massive retreat with
- unprecedented plant closings and layoffs. Is this a metaphor for
- the American economy, for American destiny? We are seized with
- a sudden fear: maybe the current recession is not just a
- cyclical downturn, which would make it tolerable, but the
- harbinger of long-term decline. Maybe the bill for the cold war
- (or the Decade of Greed or the wages of sin -- pick your poison)
- has come due, and we are now beginning our inexorable descent.
- Maybe this is not America 1945 but Britain 1945: triumphant,
- exhausted and finished.
-
- One cannot prove -- only history can -- that such a
- fevered reading of a shallow recession is unwarranted. But one
- can show that it is not that unusual. America has a deserved
- reputation for optimism, but it does have a tradition of
- pessimism that would do any Middle European nation proud.
-
- Most of us remember Carter's malaise and Kissinger's
- Spenglerian forebodings. We tend not to remember John Adams'
- lament that "democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes,
- exhausts and murders itself."
-
- "When competition and enterprise were rising," wrote the
- distinguished American historian Richard Hofstadter, "men
- thought of the future; when they were flourishing, of the
- present. Now . . . when competition and opportunity have gone
- into decline, men look wistfully back toward a golden age."
- Written in 1948, the very beginning of the great American
- ascendancy.
-
- Today we are experiencing one of those periodic flowerings
- of American pessimism. It is a minute past our "finest hour"
- (December 1941 -- December 1991, when America saved the world,
- twice). The parades are over. Things are tough. America is down.
-
- Fine. We are entitled to a bit of a wallow. But let's be
- realistic. There is not a refugee in the world who does not
- dream of America. Not a newly liberated nation not eager to
- emulate our institutions. Not a country on earth that would not
- trade places with the most economically, militarily and
- politically powerful nation on earth. There are nine years left
- in the American Century, and no nation is in a better position
- to seize the 21st.
-
- Cheer up.
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