Defeated
Murphy is clearly on to something: Moderate Democrats such as former Gov.
But what about the first part of Murphy’s prescription: What does it mean, in concrete terms, to be an "economically populist party"?
Murphy elaborates in a long profile in the
This is true to a point. But insofar as they are saying that the US should care less about economic growth and efficiency, the predistributionists are wrong.
One of the conceits of the so-called "post-neoliberalism" movement — sorry for all the prefixes and abstract nouns, that’s just where Democratic politics is right now — is that neoliberalism itself is a "free-market, anti-government, growth-at-all-costs approach to economic and social policy" that has outlived its usefulness. So
This is not a new idea. The term "predistribution" was coined in 2011, and the economic policies of President Joe Biden’s administration have mostly been post-neoliberal. Biden appointed antitrust regulators who were critical of the consumer-welfare standard in favor of anti-Bigness. He moved away from Barack Obama’s support for charter schools and the
Not coincidentally, Democrats’ reputation for economic stewardship suffered as the country endured its worst dose of inflation in decades. This was a largely global phenomenon, of course, driven by COVID unwinding and the fallout of the war in
The idea that doubling down on this approach will save the party seems questionable.
Land-use reform to allow more homebuilding, for example, is a positive-sum move that grows the overall economic pie. But it helps relatively downscale renters and first-time homebuyers more than it helps relatively affluent homeowners. Similarly, certificate-of-need laws and quantitative restrictions on training new doctors make the country as a whole poorer while enriching a small number of insiders.
Indeed, despite their blue-collar vibes, most of the aforementioned union giveaways advantage people earning above-average incomes while raising costs for the poor. Tariffs on
All of which is to say, to bring this back to
But what matters most is actually succeeding in raising living standards. In this sense, the best "populist" policies are often just neoliberal ones: eliminating barriers to economic growth that serve only to protect narrow political interests. Sometimes, as the post-neoliberals would have it, these interests are big corporations; other times, as neoliberals would point out, they are labor unions.
The best strategy is to stand up to these interests when they run counter to the public interest — and not be ashamed to stand up for the safety net, either. After all, no amount of predistribution could possibly take care of the elderly, the sick, the disabled or poor children. American voters have long looked to
Matthew Yglesias writes the Slow Boring blog and newsletter. A co-founder of Vox and a former columnist for Slate, he is also host of "The Weeds" podcast and is the author, most recently, of "One Billion Americans."
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Previously:
• 09/25/24: Harris' most important plan is unknowable
• 09/09/24: Why even a Harris transition would be challenging
• 04/04/24: In Baltimore, Biden can show how to build back faster
• 03/27/24: Raising the retirement age won't help anyone
• 03/13/24: Now Biden needs to show his moderate side
• 02/27/24: Will Dems ever embrace charter schools again?
• 10/19/23: Federal budget deficit: From freakout to eff you
• 10/05/23: Ramaswamy likes one of Jimma Carter's worst ideas
• 09/13/23: What happens when renewable energy isn't so cheap?
• 08/09/23: Is Bidenomics working? Ask your waiter
• 08/03/23: America's colleges are also facing a housing crisis
• 07/18/23: Bidenomics' became a doctrine by accident
• 06/20/23: America can fix its highways much faster, if it wants
• 06/07/23: The debt-limit crisis is over. Now on to the debt crisis
• 05/31/23: America needs more housing, but NOT more public housing
• 05/09/23: Football stadiums belong in the suburbs
• 05/02/23: Only Mitch McConnell can save the US from default
• 02/15/23: Biden's building boom will be needlessly expensive
• 01/25/23: Manchin's plan to avert a debt crisis just might work
• 01/10/23: George Santos doesn't deserve to be kicked out of Congress
• 10/03/22 Ron DeSantis and the rise of free-lunch conservatism
• 09/07/22 A debate over the deficit is just what America needs
• 09/03/22 College tuition is too high, but it isn't actually rising
• 08/02/22 Dems need more Manchins
• 06/30/22 Biden 2024? America needs to know now
• 05/30/22 The flaw in the progressive stance on guns
• 05/18/22 Biden can do much more to fight inflation
• 04/05/22 We'll miss globalization when it's gone
• 12/27/21 How 2021 could have been different for Biden
• 11/09/21 Where have you gone, Joe Biden of the primaries?
• 10/05/21What Dems need: More short-term thinking
• 06/02/21
Shh, Congress IS working