---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Wed, 9 Sep 1998 00:12:30 -0700 (PDT) From: MichaelP <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "unlikely.suspects": ; Subject: J K Galbraith piece in the GUARDIAN-"The rich drive by" The rich drive by Forty years after the Affluent Society, the difference between rich and poor has grown far greater By J K Galbraith The Guardian (london) Wednesday September 9, 1998 It is now 40 years, and something more, since I surveyed the scene in the economically advanced countries, especially the United States, and wrote The Affluent Society. In a much-quoted passage, that I thought at the time was perhaps too extravagant, I told of the family that took its modern, highly-styled automobile out for a holiday. They went through streets and countryside made hideous by commercial activity and commercial art. They spent their evening in a public park replete with refuse and disorder, and dined on delicately packaged food from an expensive, portable refrigerator. So it seemed 40 years ago; in the time that has elapsed the contrast between needed public services and affluent private consumption has become much greater. Every day the press, radio and television proclaim the abundant production of goods and the need for more money for education, public works and the desolate condition of the poor in the great cities. Clearly affluence in the advanced countries is still a highly unequal thing. All this, were I writing now, I would still emphasise. I would especially stress the continuing unhappy position of the poor. This, if anything, is more evident now. Then in the United States it was the problem of southern plantation agriculture and the hills and hollows of the rural Appalachian Plateau. Now it is the problem of the great metropolis. There is another contrast. Were I writing now, I would give emphasis to the depressing difference in well-being between the affluent world and the less fortunate countries - mainly the post-colonial world. The rich countries have their rich and poor. The world has its rich and poor nations. The problem is not economics; it goes back to a far deeper part of human nature. As people become fortunate in their personal well-being, and as countries become similarly fortunate, there is a common tendency to ignore the poor, or to develop some rationalisation for the good fortune of the fortunate. Responsibility is assigned to the poor themselves. Given their personal disposition and moral tone, they are meant to be poor. Poverty is both inevitable and, in some measure, deserved. The fortunate individuals and countries enjoy their well-being without the burden of conscience, without a troublesome sense of responsibility. This is something I did not recognise 40 years ago; it is a habit of mind to which I would now attribute major responsibility. This is not, of course, the full story. After the Second World War decolonisation, an admirable step, nonetheless left a number of countries without effective self-government. Nothing is so important for economic development and the human condition as stable, reliable, competent and honest government. This, in important parts of the world, is still lacking. Nothing is so accepted in our times as respect for sovereignty; nothing, on occasion so protects disorder, poverty and hardship. Here I'm not suggesting an independent role for any one country and certainly not for the United States. I do believe we need a much stronger role for international action, including the United Nations. We need to have a much larger sense of common responsibility for those suffering from the weakness, corruption, disorder and cruelty of bad government or none at all. Sovereignty, though it has something close to religious status in modern political thought, must not protect human despair. This may not be a popular point; popularity is not always a test of needed intelligence. So I take leave of my work of 40 years ago. I am not entirely dissatisfied with it, but I do not exaggerate its role. Books may be of some service to human understanding and action in their time. There remains the possibility, even the probability, that they do more for the self-esteem of the author than for the fate of the world. Extracted from the 1998 UNDP Human Development report, published today. ** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. ** -- For MAI-not (un)subscription information, posting guidelines and links to other MAI sites please see http://mai.flora.org/