Published: April 15, 2005, page
A19
OP-ED, NYTimes
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
One of the things that I can't
figure out about the Bush team is why an administration that is so focused on
projecting U.S. military strength abroad has taken such little interest in
America's economic competitiveness at home - the underlying engine of our
strength. At a time when the global economic playing field is being flattened -
enabling young Indians and Chinese to collaborate and compete with Americans
more than ever before - this administration is off on an ideological jag. It is
trying to take apart the New Deal by privatizing Social Security, when what we
really need most today is a New New Deal to make more Americans employable in
21st-century jobs.
We have a Treasury secretary from
the railroad industry. We have an administration that won't lift a finger to
prevent the expensing of stock options, which is going to inhibit the ability
of U.S. high-tech firms to attract talent - at a time when China encourages its
start-ups to grant stock options to young innovators. And we have movie
theaters in certain U.S. towns afraid to show science films because they are
based on evolution and not creationism.
The Bush team is proposing cutting
the Pentagon's budget for basic science and technology research by 20 percent
next year - after President Bush and the Republican Congress already slashed
the 2005 budget of the National Science Foundation by $100 million.
When the National Innovation
Initiative, a bipartisan study by the country's leading technologists and
industrialists about how to re-energize U.S. competitiveness, was unveiled last
December, it was virtually ignored by the White House. Did you hear about it?
Probably not, because the president preferred to focus all attention on
privatizing Social Security.
It's as if we have an
industrial-age presidency, catering to a pre-industrial ideological base, in a
post-industrial era.
Thomas Bleha, a former U.S.
Foreign Service officer in Japan, has a fascinating piece in the May-June issue
of Foreign Affairs that begins like this: "In the first three years of the
Bush administration, the United States dropped from 4th to 13th place in global
rankings of broadband Internet usage. Today, most U.S. homes can access only
'basic' broadband, among the slowest, most expensive and least reliable in the
developed world, and the United States has fallen even further behind in
mobile-phone-based Internet access. The lag is arguably the result of the Bush
administration's failure to make a priority of developing these networks. In
fact, the United States is the only industrialized state without an explicit
national policy for promoting broadband."
Since it took over in 2001, the
Bush team has made it clear that its priorities are tax cuts, missile defense
and the war on terrorism - not keeping the U.S. at the forefront of Internet
innovation. In the administration's first three years, President Bush barely
uttered the word "broadband," Mr. Bleha notes, but when America
"dropped the Internet leadership baton, Japan picked it up. In 2001, Japan
was well behind the United States in the broadband race. But thanks to
top-level political leadership and ambitious goals, it soon began to move
ahead.
"By May 2003, a higher percentage
of homes in Japan than the United States had broadband. ...
"Today, nearly all Japanese
have access to 'high-speed' broadband, with an average connection time 16 times
faster than in the United States - for only about $22 a month. ... And that is to
say nothing of Internet access through mobile phones, an area in which Japan is
even further ahead of the United States. It is now clear that Japan and its
neighbors will lead the charge in high-speed broadband over the next several
years."
South Korea, which has the world's
greatest percentage of broadband users, and urban China, which last year
surpassed the U.S. in the number of broadband users, are keeping pace with
Japan - not us. By investing heavily in these new technologies, Mr. Bleha
notes, these nations will be the first to reap their benefits - from increased
productivity to stronger platforms for technological innovation; new kinds of
jobs, services and content; and rising standards of living.
Economics is not like war. It can
be win-win. But you need to be at a certain level to be able to claim your
share of a global pie that is both expanding and becoming more complex. Tax
cuts can't solve every problem. This administration - which often seems more
interested in indulging creationism than spurring creativity - is doing a very
poor job of preparing the country for that next level.