1st Edition

The Rise of Big Government How Egalitarianism Conquered America

By Sven Larson Copyright 2018
    146 Pages 17 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    146 Pages 17 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Americans tend to believe that their country is very different from Europe. Yet over the past half century they have imported and embraced the most transformative social idea of modern Scandinavia: egalitarianism. Today, the United States is more like Sweden than it is different, dedicated to economic redistribution and to vigorously defending its big government. What price, morally and economically, are today’s Americans willing to pay to preserve their egalitarian welfare state? Are they willing to turn life into a fiscal cost item? Will they sacrifice their children’s future prosperity to defend their entitlements?

    The Rise of Big Government: How Egalitarianism Conquered America pursues the answer to these questions by going back to the ideological origins of the modern, egalitarian welfare state. Specifically, the book asks why this unity has been able to set such deep roots in the United States, a country that is often perceived as fundamentally different when it comes to the role of government in the economy. It is shown that there are more similarities than differences between the welfare state in the United States and its Swedish "template."

    This book is essential reading for anyone interested in understanding how the egalitarian ideology conquered the United States, and who seeks to gain a deeper understanding of its strength, its resiliency, and the problems it faces in the future.

    Acknowledgments

    1. The Problem 

    2. Where it all Started 

    3. The Swedish Roots of the American Welfare State 

    4. Exporting Egalitarianism to America 

    5. Problem 1: Fiscal Eugenics 

    6. Problem 2: Slow Growth 

    7. Problem 3: Government Debt 

    8. Conclusion

    Reference List

    Index

    Biography

    Sven R. Larson is an American political economist and policy analyst. His research, which is published in peer-review journals and by free-market think tanks, covers fiscal policy, the welfare state and the application of economic freedom. He is the author of Industrial Poverty (Gower, 2014) about the role of the welfare state in the European economic crisis.