商家名称 | 信用等级 | 购买信息 | 订购本书 |
Clintonomics: How Bill Clinton Reengineered the Reagan Revolution | |||
Clintonomics: How Bill Clinton Reengineered the Reagan Revolution |
Clintonomics is the first book to go beyond the colorful biographical details to thoughtfully and meticulously analyze the powerful blend of liberal/conservative thinking that defined Clinton’s presidency—and preserve his legacy. By merging the best ideas from both the left and the right, Clinton was able to accomplish what his Republican predecessors had not: balancing the budget, reducing federal bureaucracy, reforming the economy, and positioning the country to compete in a global economy, while avoiding the cynical “government is the problem” attitude of the conservative movement. He even achieved pet GOP goals, such as reforming welfare and reducing government regulation, while still actively ensuring a level playing field and empowering all citizens to fulfill their potential.
Packed with original research and steeped in a rich historical perspective, this insightful book explores how Clinton’s presidency marked the return of fiscal discipline and the end of big government, and thus served as a logical corollary to the Reagan Revolution. It traces the evolution of Clinton’s political thinking and governing philosophy from his years as governor of Arkansas to his eight-year tenure as U.S. President, including chapters that:
• Set the stage by outlining the ideas of the major political economists of the past centuries, from Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” to Friedrich Hayek’s ideas on limited government to John Kenneth Galbraith’s writings on the social balance.
• Review the legacy of the Reagan years, with its emphasis on lower taxes, reduced spending for social services, minimal government regulation of the economy, and major increases in military spending—all of which built a false prosperity on a mountain of debt.
• Examine Clinton’s “Third-Way” principles, including pro-growth economic policy that fosters close ties to the private sector; a balanced budget with a smaller, less bureaucratic federal government; and reduction of economic inequality through investments in education and technology.
• Look at specific ways that Clinton set out to solve looming challenges, including healthcare, immigration, welfare, trade, and education—challenges that continue to demand our attention and national will to resolve.
Clinton transcended the simplistic idea that liberals want to expand government and conservatives want to starve it to death. His “Third Way” is a political hybrid of right/left thinking that embraced the complexities and opportunities of a globalized, interlocked world. Clintonomics serves as a blueprint of potentially successful strategies for the twenty-first century, and a model for future administrations to study and emulate.
Jack Godwin, Ph.D. (Sacramento, CA) is a political scientist with extensive experience in business and government spanning more than two decades and dozens of countries. He currently serves as Chief International Officer at California State University.
"well-researched...Mr. Godwin is onto something..." -- Washington Times
"Barack Obama does have something to learn from Bill Clinton and 'Clintonomics.'” --Newsmax magazine
“This book is a must read for those struggling to figure out the present economic crisis. As the author makes clear, the key contribution of the Clinton presidency was to reposition the American economy for the 21st century. The failure to adhere to lessons of fiscal responsibility, limited government, investments in people and global leadership has badly weakened our economy and our stature in the world.”
—Leon E. Panetta, former Chief of Staff to President Clinton
“Reading Clintonomics is like going on a journey to rediscover the great ideas and great principles that have guided us for more than two hundred years. It is not a nostalgic look at the nineties, but a governing philosophy for the global era.”
— From the Foreword by John Garamendi, Lt. Governor of California
Though many insisted Bill Clinton’s politics were the polar opposite of Ronald Reagan’s, and Clinton himself declared Clintonomics to be the antidote to Reaganomics, political scientist Jack Godwin argues otherwise. His book Clintonomics explores the intriguing idea that Clinton’s governing philosophy was the logical extension of the Reagan Revolution, and provides compelling evidence of how Clinton transformed classic conservative ideas, such as welfare reform, into his own hybrid, Third-Way policies.
Clintonomics rejects the frequent complaint that Clinton failed to formulate a coherent political ideology—and thus failed to earn a place in the pantheon of presidential greats. Instead, the book argues that Clinton’s political ideas were clearly articulated and firmly grounded in the realities of globalism, and that his relentless pursuit of fiscal discipline and a smaller, more efficient bureaucracy brought him the kind of success not achieved by Reagan.
Controversial and insightful, Clintonomics will redefine how we see the legacies of these two leaders—and the forces that helped define their influence on the world.
Contents
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1
Part One: Political Economy
1. The Purpose of Politics 15
The Old Dogmas 19
The Stormy Present 28
2. The Philosophical Foundation 32
John Locke: The Labor Theory of Value 34
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: The Social Contract 35
Adam Smith: The Invisible Hand 36
Jeremy Bentham: The Greatest Good 38
David Ricardo: Free Trade 39
Friedrich List: Limits of Free Trade 40
Henry Charles Carey: Benefits of Fair Trade 42
John Stuart Mill: The National Debt 43
Karl Marx: The Capitalist System 44
John Maynard Keynes: Deficit Spending 45
Joseph Schumpeter: Entrepreneurship 48
Friedrich Hayek: Limited Government 50
John Kenneth Galbraith: The Social Balance 52
3. The Reagan Legacy 56
The Genealogy of Reaganomics 61
Public Versus Private Ownership 67
Civil Rights and Social Issues 73
The Conservative Deficit 76
4. The Global System 85
The Laws of Complexity 90
A Web of Mutuality 94
5. Reflections on Change 104
Typology of Change 105
Future Preference 121
Part Two: Public Policy
6. The Role of Government (A) 129
The End of Big Government 134
The New Covenant 145
7. The Role of Government (B) 151
The Third Way 153
The Two Friedmans 159
New Federalism 171
8. Theory of Constraints 181
Budgeting 185
Healthcare 198
Welfare 204
Diversity 208
Education 217
Immigration 224
Trade 230
Defense 240
9. Bridge to the Future 248
select Bibliography 257
Notes 263
Index 285
Introduction
I wasn’t a great communicator, but I communicated great things, and they didn’t spring full bloom from my brow, they came from the heart of a great nation—from our experience, our wisdom, and our belief in the principles that have guided us for two centuries. They called it the Reagan revolution.1
—Ronald Reagan, 1989
On September 11, 2001, I awoke early at my home in Sacramento. As usual, I made coffee, retrieved the newspaper from the front porch, and turned on the Music of Your Life, the station that plays Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, and Tony Bennett. It was a picture-perfect September morning, sixty degrees and not a cloud in the sky. I was reading the newspaper when the radio announced a second plane had hit the World Trade Center. I thought for a moment: a second plane? Then I put down the paper and turned on the television.
In the days that followed, I supported George W. Bush, particularly when he stood on the rubble of the World Trade Center and put his arm around that retired firefighter. When Bush visited the Islamic Center in Washington and read from the Koran, I thought it put the American commitment to freedom of religion in the best possible light. His speech to Congress at the end of September was not bad. Rescue workers were still digging through the rubble, but we were all beginning to recover from the shock. British Prime Minister Tony Blair was in the gallery, and it moved me when Bush said America had no truer friend than Great Britain.
When the Taliban refused to hand over Osama bin Laden, I supported the invasion of Afghanistan—but then we failed to capture him. When
……