Anyone following the political
scene over the past year of so will have noticed rumblings that Capitalism, as
we know it, is not working for the betterment of the country and, for that
matter, the world. The wealth disparity
in American has been well documented. Every
day we are fed an endless stream of examples of how economically miserable so
many Americans are. Republicans—at least
those trying to be somewhat realistic—are using phrases like “re-branding the
party’s image,” “reaching out to minorities and women,” etc. I am waiting for someone to resurrect the old
Republican oxymoron, “compassionate conservatism.” As long as Capitalism
functions only to make the rich richer and keep the poor economically stagnant
or worse, the free enterprise system is no longer working in our so-called “democracy.”
Now before you conclude this is just left-wing
griping, read this op-ed piece written by Arthur C. Brooks, president of the right wing American Enterprise
Institute.
Capitalism and
the Dalai Lama
By Arthur C.
Brooks, a contributing opinion writer, is the president of the American
Enterprise Institute.
APRIL 17, 2014
WHAT can
Washington, D.C., learn from a Buddhist monk?
In early 2013,
I traveled with two colleagues to Dharamsala, India, to meet with the Dalai
Lama. His Holiness has lived there since being driven from his Tibetan homeland
by the Chinese government in 1959. From his outpost in the Himalayan foothills,
he anchored the Tibetan government until 2011 and continues to serve as a
spiritual shepherd for hundreds of millions of people, Buddhists and
non-Buddhists alike.
Very early one
morning during the visit, I was invited to meditate with the monks. About an
hour had passed when hunger pangs began, but I worked hard to ignore them. It
seemed to me that such earthly concerns had no place in the superconscious
atmosphere of the monastery.
Incorrect. Not
a minute later, a basket of freshly baked bread made its way down the silent
line, followed by a jar of peanut butter with a single knife. We ate breakfast
in silence, and resumed our meditation. This, I soon learned, is the Dalai Lama
in a nutshell: transcendence and pragmatism together. Higher consciousness and
utter practicality rolled into one.
That same
duality was on display in February when the Dalai Lama joined a two-day
summit at my institution, the American Enterprise Institute. At
first, his visit caused confusion. Some people couldn’t imagine why he would
visit us; as Vanity Fair asked in a headline, “Why Was the
Dalai Lama Hanging Out with the Right-Wing American Enterprise Institute?”
There was no dissonance,
though, because the Dalai Lama’s teaching defies freighted ideological labels.
During our discussions, he returned over and over to two practical yet
transcendent points. First, his secret to human flourishing is the development
of every individual. In his own words: “Where does a happy world start? From
government? No. From United Nations? No. From individual.”
But his second
message made it abundantly clear that he did not advocate an
every-man-for-himself economy. He insisted that while free enterprise could be
a blessing, it was not guaranteed to be so. Markets are instrumental, not
intrinsic, for human flourishing. As with any tool, wielding capitalism for
good requires deep moral awareness. Only activities motivated by a concern for
others’ well-being, he declared, could be truly “constructive.”
Tibetan
Buddhists actually count wealth among the four factors in a happy life, along
with worldly satisfaction, spirituality and enlightenment. Money per se is not
evil. For the Dalai Lama, the key question is whether “we utilize our favorable
circumstances, such as our good health or wealth, in positive ways, in helping
others.” There is much for Americans to absorb here. Advocates of free
enterprise must remember that the system’s moral core is neither profits nor
efficiency. It is creating opportunity for individuals who need it the most.
Historically,
free enterprise has done this to astonishing effect. In a remarkable paper, Maxim Pinkovskiy of M.I.T.
and Xavier Sala-i-Martin of Columbia University calculate that the fraction of
the world’s population living on a dollar a day — after adjusting for inflation
— plummeted by 80 percent between 1970 and 2006. This is history’s greatest
antipoverty achievement.
But while free
enterprise keeps expanding globally, its success may be faltering in the United
States. According to research from Pew’s Economic Mobility Project,
men in their 30s in 2004 were earning 12 percent less in real terms than their
fathers’ generation at the same point in their lives. That was before the
financial crisis, the Great Recession, and years of federal policies that have
done a great deal for the wealthy and well-connected but little to lift up the
bottom half.
The solution
does not lie in the dubious “fair share” class-baiting of politicians. We need
to combine an effective, reliable safety net for the poor with a hard look at
modern barriers to upward mobility. That means attacking cronyism that protects
the well-connected. It means lifting poor children out of ineffective schools
that leave them unable to compete. It entails pruning back outmoded licensing
laws that restrain low-income entrepreneurs. And it means creating real
solutions — not just proposing market distortions — for people who cannot find
jobs that pay enough to support their families.
In other words,
Washington needs to be more like the Dalai Lama. Without abandoning principles,
we need practical policies based on moral empathy. Tackling these issues may
offend entrenched interests, but this is immaterial. It must be done. And
temporary political discomfort pales in comparison with the suffering that
vulnerable people bear every day.
At one point in
our summit, I deviated from the suffering of the poor and queried the Dalai
Lama about discomfort in his own life. “Your Holiness,” I asked, “what gives
you suffering?” I expected something quotably profound, perhaps about the loss
of his homeland. Instead, he thought for a moment, loosened his maroon robe
slightly, and once again married the practical with the rhapsodic. “Right now,”
he said, “I am a little hot
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