Greco: Why I Disagree with Hinckley's Approach to Economic Recovery

Gregory Greco, GoLocalProv Guest MINDSETTER™

Greco: Why I Disagree with Hinckley's Approach to Economic Recovery

Gregory Greco
As a lifelong Rhode Island resident and someone who cares deeply about the future of our state, I always welcome ideas about how to best move our state forward. And as almost anyone who has spent even a scant amount of time in this state knows, we need a lot of ideas.

Aside from having the highest unemployment rate in the country, Rhode Island ranks well below its New England neighbors in many quality of life factors. Clearly, we need new, innovative ideas on how to move our state forward. This is why Barry Hinckley’s column, emblematic of so much of conservative thought these days, is so frustrating and disappointing.

Read Barry Hinckley's Column: 4 Things RI’s Government Can Do to Improve the Economy, But Won’t

To understand, however, why Mr. Hinckley’s 4 Things RI’s Government Can Do To Improve The Economy, But Won’t are not the answer. One needs to look at conservative ideas over the past forty years. In the 1970s there were a variety of problems the country faced. After forty years of new deal prosperity, the country began to decline is some key areas. There was a general feeling that inflation, crime, and taxes were too high and that we needed a vigorous defense against the iron curtain. Conservatives came up with a variety of solutions to these problems that led to electoral and (to a lesser extent) policy success.

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The problem, however, is that while many of these concerns have dissipated over the past forty years and new concerns have arisen (rising health care costs, income inequality, immigration, education, an out of control financial sector, and a turbulent and ever changing world), conservative ideas have failed to address these growing problems in any meaningful way. They are still addressing problems that the country had forty years ago. This is why many conservatives are confused when words like high taxes, government spending and regulation do not carry the same outrage today than they did in the 1970s. It is also why millennials are rejecting conservative ideology in droves, as the most recent Pew poll demonstrates.

The solutions Barry Hinckley points us towards (lower taxes on the wealthy, tort reform, vouchers and school choice) are not new ideas. They are the same ideas that conservatives have been trumpeting for the past forty years. In fact, in addition to deregulation, starting wars, drilling for oil, and building a border fence, they are pretty much the ONLY ideas conservatives have provided over the past forty years. This would be fine, of course, if these ideas had a proven record of success.

The last two decades have told us that they don’t. All these ideas were implemented during George W. Bush’s eight years in office, and proved to be an unmitigated disaster. We doubled the national debt, increased income inequality, fought an unnecessary and unpopular war, and crashed the economy. Bush had a 25% approval rating the day Obama was elected. Barry Hinckley’s ideas would bankrupt the state, decimate the safety net that Bush’s reckless fiscal policies have made necessary, and provide little boost to the economy. These policies are nothing more than the same trickle down economic policies that have proven to expand income inequality and crush our already tenuous state budget. They do not address Rhode Island’s concerns. The state needs real ingenuity and creativity; not discredited ideas that have failed us in the past.

Although my political leanings are unquestionably progressive, I believe that we need both market and government solutions to solve the myriad of problems we have on the state and national level. The conservative movement’s failure to address the issues facing us today, choosing to cling to the failed policies of the past, has done both this state and this country a disservice. All Barry Hinckley’s column does is put an exclamation point on it.

Greg Greco has been a teacher for sixteen years, and is active member of the Religious Society of Bell Street Chapel and a progressive activist. Greg has been a lifelong resident of Rhode Island and is deeply invested in the future of the Ocean State.


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