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Deception, delusion and abuse

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Chinese construction workers build scaffolding on the grounds of a new construction site in Beijing on June 03, 2010. China's manufacturing expanded at a slower pace than estimated last month, prompting stock declines across Asia on concern growth of the world's third-largest economy may slow. UPI/Stephen Shaver 
Published: June 8, 2010 at 9:41 AM
By PETER MORICI, UPI Outside View Commentator

COLLEGE PARK, Md., June 8 (UPI) -- Democratic capitalism is in eclipse. From Berlin to Tokyo, governments struggle to instigate enough growth to pay their bills and gainfully employ workers, meanwhile China enjoys breakneck progress.

Democratic capitalism isn't flawed. Rather, government policymakers are destroying a system that took mankind from dark feudal superstitions to cracking the secrets of life with deceptions, delusions and abuse.

From Athens to Sacramento politicians have deceived voters by telling them pension systems can be constructed allowing retirement at ages 55 or 60. Whether funded by savings and investments or taxes, no solvent pension system is possible that permits educated professionals, unionized workers and government employees, who get most of the income and benefits, to work 30 or 35 years and retire for another 20 or 25 years.

In the United States, President Barack Obama has convinced American families earning less than $250,000 a year they can have guaranteed healthcare that costs 50 percent more than what Germans and Canadians pay and double what the British shell out, without paying a dime in additional health insurance premiums and taxes.

To make that work, he will have to start selling shares in the Brooklyn Bridge -- thankfully New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg owns it.

Sadly, after Greece defaults the dominos won't stop in Berlin but rather Washington.

Politicians have deluded themselves into believing an education system that encourages young people to "find themselves," instead of "finding something productive" will give society enough scientists and engineers to solve the tough problems needed to perpetuate growth. They have deluded themselves into thinking that professors spending six hours a week or less teaching and the rest thinking great thoughts, or verbally pistol-whipping the society that supports them, is somehow wealth-creating.

Finally, free markets can't be wholly free but from Tokyo to Berlin national leaders have peculiar notions about who should compete, who should be regulated and how.

Most national leaders having been educated in squeaky clean environs like Harvard, Oxford and the University of Tokyo believe anything created by hand, other than an exquisite meal or with a computer keystroke, is somehow unworthy of Western post-industrial society.

Hence, they have granted virtually free access to Western markets for manufacturers from China. For its part, China maintains high tariffs and other arcane import barriers on western products, subsidizes exports through an undervalued currency and offers other inducements to keep Chinese products artificially cheap on world markets. China grows at 10 percent a year and the West sheds millions of "unworthy" manufacturing jobs and stagnates.

Meanwhile, in New York, London and elsewhere 30-year-old MBAs pull down bonuses of $1 million, $10 million or $20 million year for trading securities that really don't exist, and creating havoc that have cost U.S. and European governments upward of $4 trillion to clean up.

Simply, on Harvard Square and at Kings College, where tenured professors supported by the wealth of dead people inbreed and define our values -- remember where Barack Obama learned about law and economics -- the intelligentsia has decided Information Technology entrepreneurs, financiers and Hollywood stars should be paid more than God.

The rest of us, suffering this abuse, should be satisfied with low pay, unemployment benefits and subsidized healthcare, all paid for borrowing from the Chinese.

From Barack Obama to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the system is suffering from delusions of grandeur, self-deception and good old fashioned abuse by leaders who address the world as Ivy League intellectuals think it should, rather than how the facts of physics, demography and economics define it.

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(Peter Morici is a professor at the Smith School of Business, University of Maryland School, and former chief economist at the U.S. International Trade Commission.)

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(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)

© 2010 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

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