When Did Risk Become a Bad Word in the US?

If the US ceases to be the world’s economic leader, it can only blame itself.

In the last few weeks international institutions and prominent economists have warned that the global economy, especially the US, is facing the prospect of lower growth — not just a recession, but low growth for a decade or longer. Some of it will be caused by an aging population, but we are also choosing policies that will hobble our economy. You might think this would raise alarm bells and growth would become a priority, but instead it’s been met with a collective shrug — or even a doubling down on low-growth policies.

Explaining why economic growth is important used to be an unnecessary and trite bromide, like explaining the benefits of living longer or why it’s good to be nice to people. Today, economic growth requires defending.

Even if it isn’t equally shared, growth is why we all live better, longer, more comfortable lives than we did 60, 40 or even 25 years ago. Rising prosperity also makes people happier. It’s stagnation, not inequality, that breeds discontent and populism. Growth is also our best solution to climate change because productivity-driven growth is how we use fewer resources to get more output.

It’s tempting to say we are rich enough, why do we need more? Someone probably asked that question in 1800, thinking about how much better things already were than in 1700. But what if someone in 1800 had had the power to stop growth? All future generations would have been cheated out of what, in 1800, would have seemed like unimaginable comfort — including counting on their children living to adulthood.