A Critique of Government That Liberals Need to Hear
Government is a bureaucratic, slow-moving institution. Itās too easily captured by special interests. Itās often incapable of acting at the speed and scale our problems demand. And when it does act, it can make things worse. Look no further than the Food and Drug Administrationās slowness to approve rapid coronavirus tests or major citiesā inability to build new housing and public transit or Congressās failure to pass basic voting rights legislation.
This criticism is typically weaponized as an argument for shrinking government and outsourcing its responsibilities to the market. But the past two years have revealed the hollowness of that approach. A pandemic is a problem the private sector simply cannot solve. The same is true for other major challenges of the 21st century, such as climate change and technology-driven inequality. Ours is an age in which government needs to be able to do big things, solve big problems and deliver where the market cannot or will not.
Alex Tabarrok is an economist at George Mason University, a blogger at Marginal Revolution and for years has been one of the sharpest libertarian critics of big government. But the experience of the pandemic has changed his thinking in key ways. āNinety-nine years out of 100, Iām a libertarian,ā he told me last year. āBut then thereās that one year out of 100.ā
So this conversation is about the central tension that Tabarrok and I are grappling with right now: Government failure has never been more apparent ā and yet we need government more than ever.
We discuss (and debate) the public choice theory of government failure, why itās so damn hard to build things in America, how reforms intended to weaken special interests often empower them, why the American right is responsible for much of the government dysfunction it criticizes, the case for state capacity libertarianism, the appropriate size of the welfare state, the political importance of massive economic inequality and how the crypto worldās pursuit of decentralization could backfire.