There’s an article in Foreign Affairs that discusses this question from a 
perspective that mirrors very many dimensions of what I have come to think is 
right over the years:
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2020-10-02/capitalism-after-covid-19-pandemic
 
<https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2020-10-02/capitalism-after-covid-19-pandemic>
Shame if there weren’t anybody to whom I could forward it.  

To talk about big or little state as an abstraction seems to lead to unhelpful 
conversation.  But an operational study of what jobs need doing, who can do 
them, and how they are being done wrongly now, grounds that discussion much 
better. 

I am struck that she uses several after-the-fact evaluations of what would be 
good to do, which I think reflect a quite distributed effort by investigative 
journalists, academics, lawyers and agencies.  To have made those decisions 
correctly on the input end looks very knowledge-intensive.  But it is knowledge 
of a kind we actually have, and this list likes to envision using.  The 
limiting factor really has been coordination among the many sectors that would 
need to interact to support really good decision-making by a state.  
Envisioning what that might look like, and how it could be built, sounds 
worth-while.

Eric


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