I am heartened to see that centrists are still trying.

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Centroids
Sent: Sunday, December 23, 2018 10:09 AM
To: Centroids Discussions <[email protected]>
Subject: [RC] The (Radical) Center Can Hold: Public Policy for an Age of 
Extremes - Niskanen Center

 

The Center Can Hold: Public Policy for an Age of Extremes - Niskanen Center
https://niskanencenter.org/blog/the-center-can-hold-public-policy-for-an-age-of-extremes/
(via Instapaper <http://www.instapaper.com/> )

  _____  

December 18, 2018 


The Center Can Hold: Public Policy for an Age of Extremes


, Will Wilkinson  <https://niskanencenter.org/blog/staff/will-wilkinson/> , 
Steve Teles  <https://niskanencenter.org/blog/staff/senior-fellow/> , Samuel 
Hammond  <https://niskanencenter.org/blog/staff/3319/> 

 
<https://niskanencenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Niskanen-vision-paper-final-PDF.pdf>
 

 
<https://niskanencenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Niskanen-vision-paper-final-PDF.pdf>
 Download paper

—

American liberal democracy is experiencing a crisis of legitimacy, which began 
with Donald Trump’s victory in the Republican primary and was underscored by 
his elevation to the presidency. Neither event could have occurred in a 
healthy, stable, well-governed polity.

In this paper, we contend that new governing approaches are needed to resolve 
the crisis. The best way to quiet populist distemper and restore faith in 
democratic institutions is for those institutions to deliver effective 
governance. Failures of governance got us into this mess and public confidence 
will return only when government merits confidence by successfully solving real 
problems.

To succeed in this effort, we need a whole new way of thinking about policy. 
The center can hold, but it must be fortified with new convictions. Our 
political system has failed to address the mounting problems and 
dissatisfactions of the 21st century for many reasons. One important but 
neglected factor is that our prevailing ideological lenses, left and right, 
have gaping blind spots that render the most promising path forward invisible.

Conflict over economic policy fight has long been a clash between the 
“pro-government” left and “pro-market” right. However, overcoming our present 
malaise requires bold moves in both directions at once. We need greater 
reliance on market competition and expanded, more robust, and better-crafted 
social insurance. We need active government to enhance opportunity and less 
corrupt and more law-like governance. To clearly see these needs and how best 
to answer them, we need a new ideological lens that sees government and market 
as complements rather than antagonists.

Our hybrid vision rejects the false dichotomy between “big” and “small” 
government and combines the best aspects of the “pro-market” right and the 
“pro-government” left. Neither well-functioning market economies nor 
well-functioning representative democracies are self-creating, self-executing, 
or self-sustaining. The performance of markets and democracy depend on their 
structures, which are always substantially politically crafted and maintained. 
The right structures produce good results, while the wrong structures can cause 
disaster. Simply leaving markets alone doesn’t make them work well, nor does 
indiscriminately transferring private power and resources to government enhance 
the performance of democracy.

To restore flagging economic dynamism, we advocate far-reaching regulatory 
reforms to unwind distorted rules that favor privileged insiders at the expense 
of everyone else. At the same time, we need to bolster social insurance 
programs to address dislocations caused by creative destruction and maintain 
political support for robust market competition.

Our policy vision represents a sharp break from the prevailing orthodoxies of 
left and right, and is therefore hard to pin down with a handy, reductive 
label. Although we make the case for bold reforms, we believe the essential 
spirit of our project is one of moderation. The goal of the moderate is not to 
achieve perfection according to a single, unbending standard, but to strike a 
rough and workable balance among a variety of valid yet competing and perhaps 
irreconcilable objectives. In these disordered times, restoring balance will 
require major policy changes, and we do not shrink from the challenge. Yet our 
goal is not to make the world conform to some abstract, rationalistic schema. 
Rather, it is to work successfully and effectively within the world as it 
actually is, with all its messiness and confusion.

In the spirit of moderation, we have attempted to incorporate what is best in 
competing ideological traditions. We hope that the new synthesis we offer can 
help move our divided society toward the best version of itself and away from 
the toxic tribalism that afflicts us today.

—

Download paper 
<https://niskanencenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Niskanen-vision-paper-final-PDF.pdf>
 

  _____  

 

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