A
friend in Britain clipped and sent on to us a couple of related “American” pieces
from The Economist of 1/24/15 (“An Hereditary Meritocracy” and the editorial “America’s New Aristocracy.) It is easy to satisfy his curiosity about our assessment of
them. They are excellent, and even
more spot-on than most of that excellent journal’s coverage of the American
scene. The theme of “Aristocracy”
is one that surely has troubled any sentient American who has at all meditated
upon the degradation of the democratic dogma. It is quite plausible that in the next presidential election
of this country of three hundred and fifteen million, teeming with intelligence
and talent, the contenders will be (1) the wife of a former president, and (2) the
son of a former president and the brother of another. But this pathetic evidence of our national imagination gap
must await another occasion. The “Hereditary
Meritocracy” essay addresses inequality
in terms I have rarely seen clarified in this country.
Our
empirical experience of human inequality is so overwhelming that we seek some
tool of transcendental redress.
The old theology, which held that every human being was created in the
image and likeness of God, bestowed upon human beings a radical equality that
in theory trumped the actual social hierarchy. But that was in theory. The old favorite hymn “All Things
Bright and Beautiful” includes a stanza frequently omitted from modern hymnals:
The
rich man in his castle,
The poor man at his gate,
He made them, high or lowly,
And ordered their estate.
The poor man at his gate,
He made them, high or lowly,
And ordered their estate.
The theory probably always sounded more plausible to castle-
than to gate-dwellers, as is suggested by the distich popular among John Ball’s
revolutionaries in the fourteenth century: “When
Adam delved, and Eva span—who was then the gentle-man?” By the eighteenth century American and
French revolutionaries chucked the theory entirely. They did not, of course, chuck equality itself--“All men are
created equal”, liberté, egalité, and all that—but equality’s
basis (human law and politics) was now only semi-transcendent.
Such
is the context of the current discussions of economic “equality.” So great are the disparities in income and wealth
accumulation among American citizens that the question now arises as to whether
in terms of practical effect the newer political theory of equality is any
better than the older theological one.
I will not use the term middle
class in this essay, because I no longer have much idea what it means, but
I can nonetheless put the matter in personal and anecdotal terms. If my only income were gained from
working at a minimum-wage job, eight hours a day, five days a week, fifty-two
weeks a year, I would earn just not quite enough to pay my property taxes on a
house valued a little below the Zillow median for the town in which I live. That is if I didn’t spend a penny of my
earnings on anything else.
Surely
there are some issues here—beyond the exorbitance of my local taxes or the
attractions of moving back to Arkansas.
One is the “level playing
field”. Conservatives like to say
that our aim should be to maintain equality of opportunity rather than jigger
about in the quixotic pursuit of equality of outcomes. We should aim for a “level playing
field”. I have always found the
idea of the “level playing field” a curious one, since if a football field is
full of snags and furrows it is full of snags and furrows for both teams. However I can use it, at least in a
variant form: that of a finely planed and finished chessboard.
level playing field
I
prefer the chessboard to the football field. In the future, it seems probable, jobs with sufficient
remuneration to allow one to pay one’s taxes are more likely to require a
supple intelligence than supple abs.
Nothing could be more level, regular, standard, uniform or—if you
like—“equal opportunity” than a chessboard. When two players face off against each other across it, they
do so in “equality”. There
is no lobbyist on K Street who can arrange a special “economic incentive” or
“targeted tax break” that will advantage white with three preliminary moves or
black with a couple of extra rooks.
But
does this fact make any two players equal
in terms of the outcome of their match? To ask the question is to expose its absurdity. The Economist’s
cleverly entitled essay on “An hereditary meritocracy” has the following
summary heading: “The children of the [American] rich and powerful are
increasingly well suited to earning wealth and power themselves. That’s a problem.”
With
the aid of a few nifty charts and graphs of the kind at which it excels The Economist lays out some of the tautologies
of social capital linking economic success with quality of education, especially
early education, and the effectiveness and stability of family structures. We may want to laugh out loud at
the spectacle of the Upper West Side MBA couple sweating their toddler’s application
to the “right” playgroup, but when it comes to chess, twenty years hence, that
kid is likely to have the edge on her contemporary raised by an unmarried
high-school dropout and a television set.
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