NY Times, Sept. 18 2014
Scotland’s Independence Vote Shows a Global Crisis of the Elites
by Neil Irwin

When you get past the details of the Scottish independence referendum 
Thursday, there is a broader story underway, one that is also playing 
out in other advanced nations.

It is a crisis of the elites. Scotland’s push for independence is driven 
by a conviction — one not ungrounded in reality — that the British 
ruling class has blundered through the last couple of decades. The same 
discontent applies to varying degrees in the United States and, 
especially, the eurozone. It is, in many ways, a defining feature of our 
time.

The rise of Catalan would-be secessionists in Spain, the rise of parties 
of the far right in European countries as diverse as Greece and Sweden, 
and the Tea Party in the United States are all rooted in a sense that, 
having been granted vast control over the levers of power, the political 
elite across the advanced world have made a mess of things.

The details of Scotland’s grievances are almost the diametrical opposite 
of those of, say, the Tea Party or Swedish right-wingers. They want more 
social welfare spending rather than less, and have a strongly pro-green, 
antinuclear environmental streak. (Scotland’s threatened secession is 
less the equivalent of Texas pulling out of the United States, in that 
sense, than of Massachusetts or Oregon doing the same.) But there are 
always people who have disagreements with the direction of policy in 
their nation; the whole point of a state is to have an apparatus that 
channels disparate preferences into one sound set of policy choices.

What distinguishes the current moment is that discontent with the way 
things have been going is so high as to test many people's tolerance for 
the governing institutions as they currently exist.

The details are, of course, different in each country.

In the case of Britain, a Labor government led by a Scottish prime 
minister (Gordon Brown) and his Scottish finance minister (Alistair 
Darling) supported the financialization of the British economy, with the 
rise of global mega-banks in an increasingly cosmopolitan London as the 
center of the economic strategy.

Then, in 2008, the banks nearly collapsed and were bailed out, and the 
British economy hasn’t been the same. Their failures ushered in a 
conservative government in 2010 that is even less aligned with the 
Scots’ preferred policies, bringing an age of austerity when the Scots 
would prefer to widen the social safety net.

In the United States, we watched a bipartisan push toward financial 
deregulation in the 1990s and 2000s lay the groundwork for the 2008 
crisis. The inability of the Bush or Obama administration to contain the 
damage (and indeed to fight it with financial bailouts) ushered in a Tea 
Party in 2010 elections that is beyond the control of elder statesmen of 
the Republican Party.

It is in continental Europe that the consequences of bungling by 
mainstream elites are perhaps the most damaging. The decades-long march 
toward a united continent, led by the parties of the center-right and 
center-left, created a Western Europe in which there was a single 
currency and monetary authority but without the political, fiscal and 
banking union that would make it possible for imbalances between those 
countries to work themselves out without the benefit of currency 
fluctuations. When it all came to a head from 2008 to 2012, national 
leaders were sufficiently alarmed by the risks of budget deficits that 
they responded by cutting spending and raising taxes.

As such, the imbalances that built up over the years in Europe are now 
working themselves out through astronomical unemployment and falling 
wages in countries including Spain and Greece. Even the northern 
European economies, including Germany, are experiencing little or no 
growth. As Paul Krugman noted this week, while the Great Depression of 
the 1930s was a sharper contraction in economic activity initially, the 
European economy is performing worse six years after the 2008 crisis 
than it was at the comparable point in the 1930s.

The details of the policy mistakes are different, as are the political 
movements that have arisen in protest. But together they are a reminder 
that no matter how entrenched our government institutions may seem, they 
rest on a bedrock assumption: that the leaders entrusted with power will 
deliver the goods.

Power is not a right; it is a responsibility. The choice that the Scots 
are making on Thursday is about whether the men and women who rule 
Britain messed things up so badly that they would rather go it alone. 
And so the results will ripple through world capitals from Athens to 
Washington: People don’t think the way things are going is good enough, 
and voters are getting angry enough to want to do something about it.
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