How socialism won at South by Southwest

3/13/19
 
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from This Week,
3/11/19:

Capitalism took a beating this weekend at the South by Southwest Conference in Austin, Texas.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was cheered. Howard Schultz was, well, not exactly booed, but he did produce a few groans for criticizing socialism. And overall, panels at the conference shed light on how democratic socialism has won over many young voters, while the free market’s once-sterling reputation has taken a beating.

Somewhere, the spirit of Milton Friedman is shedding a tear.

As if capitalism — and capitalists — needed more bad news, Axios over the weekend reported on a new Harris Poll suggesting that young Americans are much happier than their elders to give socialism a try. They’re more likely to believe government should provide universal health care and tuition-free college, don’t believe that high earnings are the result of free enterprise, and are less likely to hope that government continue to allow private insurance.

Oh, and there’s this little detail: Those young, socialist-friendly voters will make up 37 percent of the electorate in 2020.

The divide, it’s clear, isn’t just ideological — it’s generational. Older voters might be confused, and reasonably so: Didn’t the end of the Cold War prove once and for all that free markets are superior to the alternatives? Maybe. But a whole generation of voters has come of age with a difference set of experiences. And for these younger Americans, “socialism” isn’t a dirty word.

Millennials and the young adults coming up behind them might reasonably ask what capitalism has done for them lately. Their formative economic experience wasn’t the boom years of the Reagan or Clinton administrations, but the Great Recession that, for a short time in 2007, appeared poised to wipe out the world economy. Young adults have hit the job market in an era of stagnating wages, rising student debt, and soaring housing costs. One study shows they’ll struggle to find good jobs and accumulate wealth as compared with their parents, despite being more highly trained.

It’s hard to blame young Americans if they think American capitalism is fraught with unfairness and hypocrisy. Democratic socialists like Ocasio-Cortez at least offer ideas that address concerns about how to pay for things like college and medical bills. Republicans, meanwhile, keep offering tax cuts aimed mostly at the rich. No wonder democratic socialism has become tempting.

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