http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/14/opinion/sunday/Cohen-age-of-outrage.html?_
r=2
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/14/opinion/sunday/Cohen-age-of-outrage.html?
_r=2&hp> &hp

 


The Age of Outrage


By Roger Cohen

NY Times Op-Ed: August 13, 2011

 

Paris

 

AUGUST was once a time for dreaming, wandering the empty streets of this
city, reading silly-season newspaper stories after a leisurely lunch washed
down with Sancerre, gazing at squares where fountains plashed and the
pregnant or the old chatted on benches at dusk. Then something happened. 

The world speeded up. Stress levels soared. Idle moments evaporated. Egos
expanded. Devices became hand-held. Money outpaced politics. Rage surged. As
Leonard Cohen put it: "The poor stay poor. The rich get rich. That's how it
goes. Everybody knows." 

Except that everybody is at a loss. When David Cameron rushes back from
Tuscany (a k a Chiantishire) to riot-ravaged London, and Nicolas Sarkozy
hustles home from the Riviera to a Paris debt crisis, and the summer
vacation void vanishes in Europe (once so long the Germans coined a word for
"free-time angst"), all bets are off. 

August aborted this year. It morphed into the serious season. The beach lost
out to the barricades. A time of outrage is upon us. 

The fury in British cities follows huge social protests this year in Greece,
where violence also flared, and in Spain, where tens of thousands have
camped out from Madrid to Barcelona. Other nations, including Portugal, have
seen a diffuse anger rooted in a shared conviction: things can't go on like
this. This European malaise is no stranger to a United States of high
unemployment, economic bafflement, ideological radicalization and political
pettiness. 

Numbers tell part of the story. Youth unemployment in the 27-nation European
Union stands at just over 20 percent, ranging as high as 45.7 percent in
Spain. In Britain youth unemployment has risen from 14 percent in the first
quarter of 2008 to 20 percent. About one in every five young Europeans and
young Americans is wondering how to get any sort of working life on track.
Britain's NEETS (not in education, employment or training) meet U.S.
boomerang kids in the anxiety of waiting. 

The anxiety grows when governments are slashing benefits and pushing back
retirement ages in an attempt to deal with spiraling deficits. A working
gerontocracy hardly helps the young. Brits from Tottenham to Teesside have
watched the most patrician cabinet since Macmillan cutting everything from
libraries to youth counseling services. Theirs is a "No Future" revolt. 

A feeling has grown in Western societies that uncontrollable forces are at
work shrinking possibility. History has never seen a global power shift as
radical as the current one that managed to be peaceful. 

The united Europe of today is built on the ashes of successive empires -
from the Roman to the British - that ended in one form or other of violent
convulsion. Now the American quasi-imperium, and more generally the dominion
of the West, is ending, not rapidly but steadily. 

Growth, jobs, expansion, excitement - and, yes, possibility - lie in the
great non-Western arc from China through India to South Africa and Brazil.
Go South! Go East! That's the dictum of the age but not always practicable
in Peckham or Peoria. The world has been turned upside-down. What we are
witnessing is how shaken Western societies are by such inversion. 

As new powers emerge, globalization has altered the relationship between
capital and labor in the former's favor. Many more cheap workers have become
available outside the West as technology has eliminated distance. Returns on
capital have proved higher relative to wages. That's the story of the
post-cold-war period. The gap between rich and poor has become a gulf. 

The only people who walked away unscathed from the great financial binge
that preceded this mess were its main architects and greatest beneficiaries:
bankers, financiers and hedge-fund honchos. 

This, too, is fueling a time of outrage that has left Western politicians
chasing shadows. 

Perhaps the society dealing best with these dilemmas is Germany. It has
invested in a highly educated work force. It has matched workers' skills to
jobs. It has continued to make precision machinery others can't make. It has
fostered cooperation between labor unions and employers and between
industrialists and the government in defense of German jobs. The youth
unemployment rate is under 10 percent. 

It has not tried to race to the bottom to compete with China, or imagined
that financial and other services could sustain a society, or shirked on
training, or tried to dismember unions, or believed that markets held all
the answers. Past cataclysm has contributed to Germany's ability to see past
ego to the common good needed for stability. 

Alas, Germany is also involved in a fit of navel-gazing. It is tired of
others' problems. It is sick of bailing out the Greeks. Surveys suggest 50
percent of Germans now have little or no faith in the European Union, the
country's postwar route to rehabilitation. German leadership has become an
oxymoron just when needed. 

The United States and Western Europe saved Germany. Perhaps it's time to
return a little of the favor - not with money alone, but ideas. 

You can follow Roger Cohen on Twitter at
<http://twitter.com/#!/nytimescohen> twitter.com/nytimescohen.

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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