America
The great seduction
Industrious, ambitious, frugal, these institutions that
built this great nation are eroding. IHT comment.
Jun 11, 2008
By David
Brooks
The people who created the United States built a moral structure
around money. The Puritan legacy inhibited luxury and self-indulgence.
Benjamin
Franklin spread a practical gospel that emphasised hard
work, temperance and frugality. Millions of parents, preachers,
newspaper editors and teachers expounded the message. The
result was quite remarkable.
The
United States has been an affluent nation since its founding.
But the country was, by and large, not corrupted by wealth.
For centuries, it remained industrious, ambitious and frugal.
Over
the past 30 years, much of that has been shredded. The social
norms and institutions that encouraged frugality and spending
what you earn have been undermined.
The
institutions that encourage debt and living for the moment
have been strengthened.
The
country's moral guardians are forever looking for decadence
out of Hollywood and reality TV. But the most rampant decadence
today is financial decadence, the trampling of decent norms
about how to use and harness money.
Sixty-two
scholars have signed on to a report by the Institute for
American Values and other think tanks called, "For
a New Thrift: Confronting the Debt Culture," examining
the results of all this.
This
may be damning with faint praise, but it's one of the most
important think-tank reports you'll read this year.
The
deterioration of financial mores has meant two things. First,
it's meant an explosion of debt that inhibits social mobility
and ruins lives. Between 1989 and 2001, credit-card debt
nearly tripled, soaring from US$238b-$692b.
By last
year, it was up to $937b, the report said.
Second,
the transformation has led to a stark financial polarisation.
On the
one hand, there is what the report calls the investor class.
It has tax-deferred savings plans, as well as an army of
financial advisers.
On the
other hand, there is the lottery class, people with little
access to 401(k)'s or financial planning but plenty of access
to payday lenders, credit cards and lottery agents.
The
loosening of financial inhibition has meant more options
for the well-educated but more temptation and chaos for
the most vulnerable. Social norms, the invisible threads
that guide behavior, have deteriorated.
Over
the past years, Americans have been more socially conscious
about protecting the environment and inhaling tobacco. They
have become less socially conscious about money and debt.
Gambling
The
agents of destruction are many. State governments have played
a role. They aggressively hawk their lottery products, which
some people call a tax on stupidity.
Twenty
percent of Americans are frequent players, spending about
US$60b a year. The spending is starkly regressive.
A household
with income under $13,000 spends, on average, $645 a year
on lottery tickets, about 9 percent of all income.
Aside
from the financial toll, the moral toll is comprehensive.
Here is the government, the guardian of order, telling people
that they don't have to work to build for the future. They
can strike it rich for nothing.
Payday
lenders have also played a role. They seductively offer
fast cash - at absurd interest rates - to 15 million people
every month.
Credit
card companies have played a role. Instead of targeting
the financially astute, who pay off their debts, they've
found that they can make money off the young and vulnerable.
Fifty-six
percent of students in their final year of college carry
four or more credit cards.
Congress
and the White House have played a role. The nation's leaders
have always had an incentive to shove costs for current
promises onto the backs of future generations. It's only
now become respectable to do so.
Wall
Street has played a role. Bill Gates built a socially useful
product to make his fortune. But what message do the compensation
packages that hedge fund managers get send across the country?
The
list could go on. But the report, which is nicely summarized
by Barbara Dafoe Whitehead in The American Interest (available
free online), also has some recommendations.
First,
raise public consciousness about debt the way the anti-smoking
activists did with their campaign.
Second,
create institutions that encourage thrift.
Foundations
and churches could issue short-term loans to cut into the
payday lenders' business. Public and private programs could
give the poor and middle class access to financial planners.
Usury
laws could be enforced and strengthened. Colleges could
reduce credit card advertising on campus. KidSave accounts
would encourage savings from a young age.
The
tax code should tax consumption, not income, and in the
meantime, it should do more to encourage savings up and
down the income ladder.
There
are dozens of things that could be done. But the most important
is to shift values.
Franklin
made it prestigious to embrace certain bourgeois virtues.
Now it's socially acceptable to undermine those virtues.
It's
considered normal to play the debt game and imagine that
decisions made today will have no consequences for the future.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/06/10/opinion/edbrooks.php