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- <text id=91TT1585>
- <title>
- July 15, 1991: A Grand Bargain For America Too?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 15, 1991 Misleading Labels
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 76
- A Grand Bargain For America Too?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kinsley
- </p>
- <p> Up at Harvard, economists from East and West have been
- concocting a so-called Grand Bargain between the Western
- nations, led by the U.S., and the Soviet Union. The details are
- still secret, but the basic idea is simple: Western aid to the
- prostrate Soviet economy in exchange for a commitment to radical
- political and economic change. The numbers being bandied about
- are $20 billion or $30 billion a year, three or four billion of
- that from the U.S., for five years. "The strategy," write Graham
- Allison and Robert Blackwill of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School
- of Government in the current Foreign Affairs, is to "create
- incentives for leaders...to choose a future consistent with
- our mutual best interest by promising real assistance for real
- reform."
- </p>
- <p> Critics of aid to the Soviet Union ask, If reform is in
- the Soviets' best interest, as it surely is, why should they
- have to be bribed to do it? For an answer, the critics might
- look to the U.S. Listen to the New York Times lecturing Soviet
- leaders: "First, Moscow would have to balance its budget..."
- Wait a minute, this is beginning to sound familiar.
- </p>
- <p> Every outsider looking at the U.S. economy writes the same
- prescription: cut the government deficit, increase the savings
- rate, end wasteful subsidies of coddled industries like
- agriculture, increase investment in infrastructure and
- education. Just last month the Bank for International
- Settlements--the central bank of the world's central banks--weighed in with precisely this advice. BIS noted that the U.S.
- net savings rate was 4% of GNP in the 1980s, compared with 20.9%
- in Japan. American public investment on roads, bridges, airports
- and so on is down to 0.25% of GNP, compared with 5.7% in Japan.
- And by no coincidence, our standard of living--as the popular
- culture is suddenly starting to realize--has been stagnating,
- by some measures, for two decades now.
- </p>
- <p> America's economic problems are obviously far less extreme
- than the Soviet Union's. So are the steps needed to correct
- them. Yet America seems equally paralyzed. More so, in a way:
- the Soviet crisis is partly one of transition from a
- half-abandoned old system. The U.S. has no such excuse.
- </p>
- <p> The problem, in both cases, is the same. Economic reform,
- though beneficial in the long run, requires sacrifice in the
- short run. Although the Soviet Union is not yet a democracy, its
- leaders must nevertheless fear the consequences of popular
- wrath. One school of thought holds that for this reason the best
- route to reform is based on the dictatorship model of Chile and
- Singapore: bring capitalism, and hope democracy will follow. But
- most skeptics about aid to the Soviet Union want democracy
- simultaneously or even as a precondition. The pious hope that
- democracy can ease and legitimate sacrifice for the national
- good is not exactly vindicated by current American experience.
- </p>
- <p> Maybe the U.S., like the Soviet Union, needs a little push
- to do the right thing. But who will offer America a Grand
- Bargain? The candidate is obvious: Japan. As a matter of fact,
- the Japanese are already subsidizing the American economy to the
- tune of many billions of dollars a year. One measure is the U.S.
- current-account deficit with Japan: $32.3 billion in 1990. That
- means, in essence, that the Japanese sold $32 billion more of
- goods and services to Americans than Americans sold to the
- Japanese. The excess represents a loan to the American economy,
- which takes various concrete forms. For example, an estimated
- 20% to 40% of new U.S. Government bonds are now purchased by
- Japanese interests. (Opponents of U.S. aid to the Soviet Union
- complain that it would amount to passing money from Tokyo
- through Washington and Moscow on its way to Havana.)
- </p>
- <p> Allison and Blackwill say Grand Bargain money sent to the
- Soviet Union should go for "general balance of payments support,
- project support for key items of infrastructure...and the
- maintenance of an adequate safety net." That's more or less what
- the Japanese money invested in U.S. Government bonds is already
- going for. It would not require instructions from the Kennedy
- School of Government at Harvard for the Japanese to say, "Look,
- if you want us to keep financing your economy, you've got to do
- x, y and z."
- </p>
- <p> As it happens, Japan is already asking the U.S. to cut its
- government deficit, spend more on education and so on, in a
- trade negotiation known as the Structural Impediments
- Initiative. Leslie Gelb of the New York Times points out that
- these are "the very steps any American with half a brain knows
- we ought to be taking in our own self-interest." Trouble is, the
- Structural Impediments negotiations are halfhearted on both
- sides (America is asking that the Japanese do things like stop
- working on Saturdays). In a notorious 1989 book titled The Japan
- That Can Say No, a popular Japanese legislator named Shintaro
- Ishihara declared, "No other nation will pay attention to Japan
- if Japan cannot say `no' to the United States." Well, here is
- Japan's chance. Just say no, for America's own good.
- </p>
- <p> At present the Japanese subsidy of the U.S. economy
- creates no incentive at all for sensible reform. Quite the
- opposite: it permits America to luxuriate in its decadent ways
- and put off the necessary changes. Here, too, there is an echo
- of the debate over aid to the Soviet Union. Aid supporters say
- Western money is necessary to grease the wheels of change and
- ease the pain of transition. Skeptics argue that any financial
- support from the West would have the effect of shoring up the
- crumbling old system rather than helping build a new one.
- Pouring money into an unreformed economic system without
- demanding radical changes as a condition is what you would do
- if you actually wanted to see that economy slip farther and
- farther into the morass.
- </p>
- <p> Hmmmm...
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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