Visualizzazione post con etichetta #cowen statalismo. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta #cowen statalismo. Mostra tutti i post

martedì 25 ottobre 2016

Does Technology Drive the Growth of Government? Tyler Cowen

Notebook per
Does Technology Drive the Growth of Government?
Tyler Cowen Bryan Caplan
Citation (APA): Caplan, T. C. B. (2013). Does Technology Drive the Growth of Government? [Kindle Android version]. Retrieved from Amazon.com

Parte introduttiva
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 1
Highlights from "Does Technology Drive the Growth of Government?" Bryan Caplan
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 5
start with what Gordon Tullock (1994) has cal ed the paradox of government growth. Before the late nineteenth century, government was a very smal percentage of gross domestic product in most Western countries, typical y no more than five percent. In most cases this state of affairs had persisted for wel over a century, often for many centuries. The twentieth century, however, saw the growth of governments, across the Western world, to forty or fifty percent of gross domestic product... I'd like to address the key question of why limited government and free markets have so fal en out of favor.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 9
Inadequacies of public choice theories of government growth: Public choice analysis has generated many theories of why government grows and why that growth is inevitable. Special interest groups, voter ignorance, and the pressures of war al are cited in this context. Those theories, however, at best explain the twentieth century, rather than the historical pattern more general y. Until the late nineteenth century, governments were not growing very rapidly.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 14
Inadequacies of ideological theories of government growth: According to this claim, the philosophy of classical liberalism declined in the mid- to late nineteenth century. This may be attributed to the rise of socialist doctrine, internal contradictions in the classical liberal position, the rise of democracy, or perhaps the rise of a professional intel ectual class. While the ideology hypothesis has merit, it is unlikely to provide a final answer to the Tullock paradox.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 54
Does Technology Drive The Growth of Government? Tyler Cowen
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 59
I. Introduction
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 59
Why is government so large in the Western world?
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 60
start with what Gordon Tullock (1994) has called the paradox of government growth.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 61
Before the late nineteenth century, government was a very small percentage of gross domestic product
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 62
no more than five percent.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 63
The twentieth century, however, saw the growth of governments,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 63
to forty or fifty percent
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 64
regulatory burden,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 68
Extant hypotheses
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 69
historically contingent explanations fail
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 70
Western
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 70
Japan.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 71
complements, not substitutes.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 71
Public choice analysis
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 72
Special interest groups, voter ignorance,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 73
Those theories, however, at best explain the twentieth 2 century, rather than the historical pattern more generally. Until the late nineteenth century, governments were not growing very rapidly. The standard public choice accounts do not contain enough institutional differentiation to account for no government growth in one period and rapid government growth in another period. Some structural shift occurred in the late nineteenth
Nota - Posizione 74
CARENZA PC
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 77
inquiry focuses on ideology
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 77
intellectual climate.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 78
philosophy of classical liberalism declined
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 79
rise of socialist doctrine,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 79
rise of a professional intellectual class.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 81
Ideologies changed, in part, because intellectuals perceived a benefit to promoting ideas of larger government, rather than promoting classical liberalism. It remains necessary to identify the change in social conditions that drove this trend.1
Nota - Posizione 83
INADEGUATEZZA IP. IDEOLOGIA: XCHÈ SI AFFERMANO NUOVE IDEOLOGIE
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 83
Some authors attribute the rapid governmental growth of the twentieth century to war,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 84
international conflict,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 84
crisis more generally.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 84
Robert Higgs
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 84
Crisis in Leviathan,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 85
ratchet effect.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 85
For instance, state activity invariably expands in wartime, if only to fight the war. Taxes increase, resources are conscripted, and economic controls are implemented. When the war is over, some of these extensions of state power remain in place. The twentieth century, of course, has seen the two bloodiest and most costly wars in history, the two World Wars.
Nota - Posizione 86
ESEMPIO
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 88
intellectuals
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 88
Many changed their minds sincerely,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 89
objective conditions caused socialists to win larger audiences
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 92
The example of Sweden is instructive. Sweden avoided both World Wars, and had a relatively mild depression in the 1930s, but has one of the largest governments, relative to the size of its economy, in the developed world. The war hypothesis also does not explain all of the chronology of observed growth. Many Western countries were well on a path towards larger government before the First World War. And the 1970s were a significant period for government growth in many nations, despite the prosperity and relative calm of the 1960s.
Nota - Posizione 96
SVEZIA E CRONOLOGIA. I PUNTI DEBOLI
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 96
third answer
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 96
expansion of the voter franchise.
Nota - Posizione 97
SUFFRAGIO UNIVERSALE
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 97
In the early nineteenth century,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 97
rights typically were restricted
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 97
wealthy male landowners.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 100
Under this hypothesis, widespread voting was the central force behind the move to larger government. The small governments of the early nineteenth century are portrayed as the tools of ruling elites. But once the franchise was extended, the new voters demanded welfare state programs, which account for the bulk of government expenditure.2
Nota - Posizione 102
L IPOTESI DEL SUFFRAGIO
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 103
First, non-democratic regimes, such as Franco's Spain, illustrate similar patterns of government 2 Along these lines, Husted and Kenny (1997a), looking at data from state governments, find that the elimination of poll taxes and literacy tests leads to higher turnout and higher welfare spending. Lott and Kenny (1999) find that women’s suffrage had some role in promoting greater government expenditures.
Nota - Posizione 106
IPOTESI VON PROBLEMI
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 108
Second, much of the Western world was fully democratized by the 1920s. Most governmental growth comes well after that date, and some of it, such as Bismarck’s Germany, comes well before that time. Third, and most fundamentally, white male property owners today do not favor extremely small government, though they do tend to be more economically conservative than female voters.
Nota - Posizione 110
c
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 112
there clearly must be something to the voter hypothesis.
Nota - Posizione 113
IL VOLERE DEL POPOLO CMQ CONTA
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 113
If all or most voters, circa 2009, wanted their government to be five percent of gross domestic product, some candidate would run on that platform and win.
Nota - Posizione 114
SE LO VUOI LO FAI
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 116
Democratic government cannot grow large, and stay large, against the express wishes of a substantial majority of the population.
Nota - Posizione 117
c
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 117
I therefore start with the notion of an ongoing demand for big government,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 118
I then consider why twentieth century technology might have changed supply-side factors
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 120
I do not consider this technology hypothesis to be a monocausal theory
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 121
the missing element
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 122
II. The Role of Technology
Nota - Posizione 122
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 123
The late nineteenth century and early twentieth century saw a fundamental change in the production technology for large government,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 124
communications, organization, and coordination.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 129
Western countries all have had access to (roughly) the same technologies, and at roughly the same points in time.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 130
Which technology?
Nota - Posizione 130
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 132
period from 1880 to 1940
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 133
electricity, automobiles, airplanes, household appliances, the telephone, vastly cheaper power, industrialism, mass production, and radio,
Nota - Posizione 134
LISTA
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 134
railroad was not new but expanded greatly
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 134
A bit later the 1950s brought television
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 135
The historian S.E. Finer (1997a, 1997b) first suggested that technology was behind the rise of big government, though he did not consider this claim in the context of public choice issues. Bradford DeLong’s unpublished manuscript, “Slouching Towards Utopia,” sometimes available on the web in various parts, appears to cover related themes.
Nota - Posizione 137
PRECURSORI
Nota - Posizione 140
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 140
Transportation
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 140
Transportation has made it possible to extend the reach of modern bureaucracy across geographic space. The railroad allowed the North to defeat the South in the Civil War. More generally, cheap transportation increased the reach and power of a central Federal government. Federal employees, police, and armies can travel to all parts of the country with relative ease. Transportation allows published bureaucratic dictates to be distributed and shipped at relatively low expense.
Nota - Posizione 141
TRASPORTI
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 145
organized groups to lobby Washington more easily.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 145
Individuals could now go to Washington,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 147
increased national consciousness
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 147
think in terms of a large national government
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 148
Telegraphs and Telephones
Nota - Posizione 148
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 149
possible for a political center to communicate with a periphery at much lower cost,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 150
"knit the nation together,"
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 151
Industrial capital and mass production
Nota - Posizione 151
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 153
Factories, smokestacks, power plants, and assembly lines are difficult to move,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 153
large and immobile assets provided a tempting target for taxation and regulation.
Nota - Posizione 154
TASSE E REGOLE
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 155
When most of the population lives from small-scale subsistence farming, and takes income in-kind, it is much harder both to levy taxes and put the in-kind revenue to good use.
Nota - Posizione 156
AUTONOMI
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 161
Radio and television
Nota - Posizione 161
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 162
opportunity to hear their leaders
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 163
tap into the human desire for stories and myths.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 163
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 164
totalitarian movements of the twentieth century could not have mobilized
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 168
Television entered American homes in the 1950s.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 169
consumer protection movement,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 169
environmental movement.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 170
politics based around simple and emotional issues
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 170
discourages analysis, and discourages an emphasis on unseen “opportunity costs”
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 171
focus on national rather than local
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 172
Communications and management
Nota - Posizione 173
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 173
large-scale bureaucracy
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 174
advances in recording, processing, manipulating, and communicating
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 175
Welfare states could not have arisen unless central governments had means of identifying, tracking, and monitoring potential recipients.
Nota - Posizione 175
WELFARE
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 176
doctrines of "scientific management"
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 177
We take the practices of modern bureaucracy for granted, but most of them are quite recent.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 179
British government did not organize its paper records in terms of "files" until 1868 (Finer 1997b, p.1617).
Nota - Posizione 180
GB GOV
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 182
Tax-collecting technologies
Nota - Posizione 182
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 183
Most of the technological advances described above make it easier for governments to collect taxes,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 185
a wealthier economy will have many citizens working at legitimate, regular businesses with a distinct physical locale.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 186
methods of accounting and reporting.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 186
The growth of the publicly owned, limited liability corporation, also helped create the systematic records that make corporate taxation possible. Collecting taxes is easier in an economically advanced environment.
Nota - Posizione 187
SOC ANONIME
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 188
Growing wealth
Nota - Posizione 188
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 188
Government is to some extent a luxury good.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 189
Wealth above subsistence allows people to vote to assuage their consciences, even if the collective result of such votes destroys wealth and opportunity (Brennan and Lomasky 1993).
Nota - Posizione 190
ILLUSIONE DI VONTRIBUIRE. OGNUNO VUOL DIRE LA SUA
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 190
disproportionately greater demand for government
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 191
because they can afford them.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 193
thought experiment.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 193
Assume that we had no cars, no trucks, no planes, no telephones, no TV or radio, and no rail network. Of course we would all be much poorer. But how large could government be? Government might take on more characteristics of a petty tyrant, but we would not expect to find the modern administrative state, commanding forty to fifty percent of gross domestic product in the developed nations, and reaching into the lives of every individual daily.
Nota - Posizione 196
ESPERIMENTO. ZERO TECH
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 196
timing of these innovations.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 196
The lag between technology and governmental growth is not a very long one. The technologies discussed above all had 10 slightly different rates of arrival and dissemination, but came clustered in the same general period. With the exception of the railroads and the telegraph (both coming into widespread use in the mid-nineteenth century), none predated the late nineteenth century, exactly the time when governmental growth gets underway in most parts of the West.
Nota - Posizione 200
TIMING
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 200
1920s and 1930s,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 203
The corporate analogy
Nota - Posizione 203
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 203
hypothesis predicts that other organizations
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 204
comparable expansion
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 205
This is exactly what we observe. Prior to the American railroads, which arose in the middle of the nineteenth century, private business corporations were not typically very large. The costs of control and large-scale organization were simply too high and no single business had a truly national reach.
Nota - Posizione 207
CORP
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 210
Following the railroads, large corporations arose in steel, oil, and later automobiles, to name a few examples. The United States Steel Corporation was the largest of the new behemoths. The J.P. Morgan banking syndicate created the company in 1901, through a 4 On the rail numbers, see Warren (1996, p.2). On the growth of large rail companies, see Chandler (1965). 11 merger of numerous smaller firms. The new company owned 156 major factories and employed 168,000 workers. The capitalization was $1.4 billion, an immense sum for the time,
Nota - Posizione 214
c
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 218
Merger waves
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 218
Other very large companies followed, including General Electric, National Biscuit Company (Nabisco), American Can Company, Eastman Kodak, U.S. Rubber (later Uniroyal), and AT&T, among others.
Nota - Posizione 219
FUSIONI
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 221
Large corporations and large governments have common technological roots.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 226
corporations grow large before government
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 227
private firms are more adept at adopting new technologies
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 227
History of governments
Nota - Posizione 227
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 229
The technology hypothesis also finds support from a broader swathe of human history.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 230
Consider a society of hunter-gatherers, as we still find in the Pygmies of Central Africa. Under some interpretations Pygmy society has a kind of anarchy. The reason for this state of affairs is obvious. It is not due to the Pygmy electoral system, Pygmy ideology, or the infrequency of Pygmy war. The Pygmies simply do not have any large-scale formal institutions of any kind. A typical Pygmy family (at least those who continue to live a traditional Pygmy existence; there are migrants to other cultures) will not own any more than its members can carry on their collective backs, when moving from hunting camp to hunting camp. Given this low level of technology, big government, for the Pygmies, simply is not an option.
Nota - Posizione 235
PIGMEI. NO TECH NO GOV
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 235
advent of writing, arithmetic,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 236
large-scale cities
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 236
Sumerians,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 236
3500 B.C.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 237
Bureaucracy suddenly became possible,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 237
Sumerian bureaucracy made extensive use of files, records, and archives,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 240
The Persian Empire
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 241
Herodotus cited it as an example of tyranny, relative to the liberty of the Greek city-states.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 242
technology limited its daily control over the lives
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 243
It took a traveler 67.5 days to cross the empire,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 244
The Persians therefore governed through a simple formula, as explained by Finer (1997a, pp.297-8): “[They] set themselves the most limited objectives possible, short of losing control: in brief, to 13 provide an overarching structure of authority throughout the entire territory which confined itself to two aims only: tribute and obedience. Otherwise nothing.”
Nota - Posizione 246
COME TIRANNEGGIARE SENZA TECH
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 246
Egyptian
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 247
most totalitarian
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 247
relied heavily on bureaucracy, formal taxation, and centralized record keeping.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 248
Nile ran through most of the Egyptian kingdoms and served as a highway,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 250
the best communications system of the ancient world,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 251
strongest tyrannies.6
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 252
"For thousands of years mankind had no large-scale empires or bureaucracies. Suddenly government became much larger in Sumeria, Egypt, and other locales, and has stayed large." While our historical understanding of this period is incomplete, new technologies appear to have been central to the growth of empire in that time. The same advances that boosted living standards also boosted centralized rule.
Nota - Posizione 255
SOMMARIO
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 255
centuries to follow
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 255
many tyrannies
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 256
none of these regimes had the technology
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 257
Historian Jean Dunbabin
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 257
"nobody was governed before the late nineteenth Century."
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 258
Imperial China
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 258
ideology was highly statist
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 259
Finer (1997a, pp.73-4)
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 259
“In principle the emperor knew no substantive or procedural limits to his authority, and the localities, down to the 14 villages, were supposedly completely controlled and directed from his palace.” In reality, however, the reach of the emperor was quite modest. Finer (1997a, p.73) tells us that in Imperial China “the scope of the central government was, of course, very much narrower than in our own day.”
Nota - Posizione 260
TIRANNI SENZA POTERE
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 263
Greek city-states, were small-scale tyrannies.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 264
The ruling party or parties would control many aspects of city life, political, economic, or otherwise, but only on a small scale. In other words, the rule of government could be highly intensive, but it was not typically very extensive.
Nota - Posizione 265
VOTARE COI PIEDI
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 265
Larger-scale empires were mechanisms for extracting tribute rather than well-honed sources of detailed rule.
Nota - Posizione 266
TASSE PIÙ CHE REGOLE
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 266
central set of rulers
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 267
Mongol or Aztec
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 267
the reach of those central rulers was limited by modern standards.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 268
Troops were sent when tribute was not paid,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 270
They could not issue, communicate, and enforce the kind of detailed laws and regulations that emanate from Western governments today. So for much of recorded human history we had a combination of oppressive local governments, on a small scale geographically, combined with the payment of tribute to an external central ruler.7
Nota - Posizione 271
LIMITI
Nota - Posizione 272
SOMMARIO
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 273
American
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 273
slavery is the greatest tyranny we find,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 273
This institution came before the advent of big government.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 276
primary enforcement mechanism was local,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 276
Government sanctioned a system of private violence and oppression, but the government of that time did not have the reach or the machinery to run a full-scale slave economy.
Nota - Posizione 277
x
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 278
Today’s low-technology countries, the poorer ones,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 278
These governments may be highly corrupt and destructive, but they do not typically command
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 279
do not exercise direct and daily control
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 280
Haiti,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 281
Per capita income ranges around $400, literacy rates run about fifteen percent, and life expectancy barely exceeds forty. The rate of malaria infection is almost one hundred percent.
Nota - Posizione 282
x
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 282
Haitian government, if that word can even be used, is little more than a group of thugs.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 283
twenty percentage
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 284
Haitian politicians are brutal and corrupt, but they do not have the power to control most of the country.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 285
low level of technology.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 285
Most parts of the country have neither electricity nor running water.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 286
Few people have cars.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 286
“oral culture,”
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 287
relies very little on newspapers
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 287
Haitian countryside lives in a state of virtual anarchy
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 288
Botswana
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 288
Unlike most African polities, which stand closer to Haiti, Botswana has democratic government, a semblance of rule of law, and a developed market economy.
Nota - Posizione 289
x
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 289
government that stands at about forty percent of measured gross domestic product,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 294
III. Implications for reform
Nota - Posizione 294
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 295
Is large government inevitable in the developed countries?
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 296
immediate reasons why big government is hard to reverse,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 297
We could make government smaller by throwing away modern technology, but that is hardly a desirable
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 298
technology hypothesis
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 299
necessary conditions rather than sufficient conditions.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 314
Those technologies made mass culture possible and in the realm of politics that mass culture translated into fascism. Only after bitter experience did fascist ideas become less popular and social and political norms subsequently evolved to protect electorates against the fascist temptation. In any case, these examples raise the question of whether we might see a subsequent evolution of institutions today, reversing how mass media and technology have shaped our politics.
Nota - Posizione 317
COSÌ COME SIAMO ARRETRATI DASL FASC COSÌ POSSIAMO ARRETRARE DA BIG SAM
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 318
Earlier times probably had no greater love of liberty than does the present.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 320
we should be skeptical of plans to recreate the historical or intellectual conditions behind "classical liberalism,"
Nota - Posizione 321
NN TORNRRANNO I BEI TEMPI. LA GENTE NN LI VIOLE
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 324
when we examine the broader historical picture, big government has been one result of a more general increase in wealth and freedom.
Nota - Posizione 325
BIG GOV E LIBRRTÀ VGANNO INSIEME
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 325
a simplistic “liberty vs. power” story is unlikely to mirror reality
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 326
brought us both more liberty and more power
Nota - Posizione 327
TECH
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 328
recent job growth has been concentrated in the sectors of health care, education, and government itself.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 329
“government-intensive”
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 332
Future technologies?
Nota - Posizione 332
T
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 332
often hear it argued that new technologies will bring about greater possibilities for freedom.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 333
on-line anonymity,
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 333
genetic engineering
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 335
Others argue that greater competition across governments has brought greater freedom
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 338
how freer capital movements impose discipline on governments and force them to institute better policies.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 340
Such hypotheses, however, do not find support in the data.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 340
small open economies tend to be more interventionist rather than freer (Rodrik 1998).
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 341
The more open the economy, the more risk that individuals face from the perturbations of larger world markets. These citizens then tend to favor more government intervention, not less, to protect themselves against those risks.
Nota - Posizione 343
x
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 343
Global markets have punished many poorer countries, such as Argentina or Indonesia, for their bad interventionist policies. Often the end result is more government intervention, not less.
Nota - Posizione 344
c
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 345
Canada is a more “open” economy than is the United States, yet it typically has greater government intervention and higher levels of government spending.
Evidenzia (giallo) - Posizione 346
Nordic economies are both very open and have lots of government spending,