Crunchy Con

Are we in a Depression?

Tuesday January 13, 2009

Categories: Economics

Economist Tyler Cowen says yes, and offers eight reasons. Meanwhile, Joel Kotkin is cross over what he sees as the government's plans to bail out yuppies, and to attend to yuppie priorities over the working class's. Excerpt:

As such, they may not even qualify for what is best described as a yuppie bailout, poised to extend the welfare state to the highly educated professional set. After all, George Bush's bailout of Wall Street has already set a precedent, using public money to secure the bonuses and nest eggs of some of the nation's most elite professionals. Call it the Paulson principle: In bad times, steer help to those least in need.

A yuppie stimulus differs from the more traditional approach, which aims to get the front-line, blue-collar types back to work. Instead, it would channel public funds away those grouchy construction workers - some 30% of whom may be soon be out of work - to better heeled, and, in their minds, more deserving "creative" professionals. After all, what stake do the netroots have in making things better for Joe the Plumber?

In contrast, the yuppie bailout focuses on a sure-fire Democratic constituency, the well-educated urban professional. One advocate of such an approach, pundit Richard Florida, has urged President-elect Barack Obama to eschew crude investments in traditional production and a renewed housing market in favor of goodies directed to what he calls "the creative industry."

Florida sees any focus on restoring manufacturing and housing as a misguided rescue of the "old industrial economy," in which Americans actually made things and other Americans consumed them. Instead, he suggests, "the first step must be to reduce demand for the core products and lifestyle of the old order."

So let's stop worrying about what happens to Detroit, or the crisis in the housing market. In Florida's view, cars, of course, are demonized as woefully bad for environmental reasons and not particularly friendly to the preferred dense urbanity so attractive to advocates of "hip cool" cities.

Florida even recommends shifting away from the single-family home, which is also, all too often, in the 'burbs. Instead, we should develop what he calls "flexible rental housing," so people can move every time they get new jobs. I think that is what they used to do in Chairman Mao's China, too, albeit without the granite countertops and a Starbucks around the corner.

In a yuppie bailout, what spending takes priority? More jobs for academics and educators. Florida suggests we invest in "individually tailored learning." We assume this means neither home-schooling nor basic skills training but something more like painting and acting classes for tots and advanced "creative" navel-gazing for tweens and adolescents. And, of course, lots and lots of new jobs for well-paid, unionized teachers.

Read the whole thing.

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Comments
Your Name
January 13, 2009 5:44 PM

Derek, I have to disagree on a few points. Tutition has skyrocketed at universities, but NOT public money spent on post-secondary education. It has declined. That is part of the reason tuition is going up. (The other part of that rise, of course, is demand.) States are NOT supporting state universities nearly to the degree that they used to. They are generally one of the first institutions to get their budgets cut when states have to tighten their belts.

As for the excess of professors, that is because of an excess of demand. It is just as true in private universities as in public ones. I know trade school is one of your favorite things to talk about, but we still live in a free country. Whether you want them to or not, a lot more people choose to go into debt to get a universtiy degree rather than go into the trades.

Nate W
January 13, 2009 7:51 PM

Erasmus,

It's a terrible pity that students would choose their college based on aesthetics, and its an even more terrible pity that universities would cater to such stupidity. Perhaps if university administrators had even an ounce of concern for education they'd come together to agree that wasting university resources on such frivolous purposes is something they oughtn't be doing, but apparently they're more interested in dragging the dirty world of big business into academics than they are with actually educating students.

the stupid Chris
January 14, 2009 1:43 AM

Rod,

When I get this:

Thank you for commenting.

Your comment has been received and held for approval by the blog owner.

Return to the original entry.

The comment never appears. What's up with that?

Lord Karth
January 14, 2009 4:49 AM

It means that the blog owner is thirsty and wants you to buy him a beer. Buying him a beer (preferably a locally-made, organically produced beer) will make him mellow and more predisposed towards letting your post go through. ;-)

Your servant,

Lord Karth

Rob Adcox
February 22, 2009 12:22 AM

Of course we're in a depression. The MTV crowd voted for "change".

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About Crunchy Con

Rod Dreher is an editorial columnist for the Dallas Morning News, and author of "Crunchy Cons" (Crown Forum), a nonfiction book about conservatives, most of them religious, whose faith and political convictions sometimes put them at odds with mainstream conservatives. The views expressed in this blog are his own.

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