Thomas Friedman on “I’ll Be Gone, You’ll Be Gone” Economics

friedman-at-davos

Thomas Friedman at Davos Economic Forum

According to Pulitzer Prize winning columnist Thomas Friedman, our problems in California are just a preview of the problems that the rest of the country will face. Friedman sees U.S. problems as stemming from the following:

  • too much money in politics
  • gerrymandering of political districts
  • Internet use which “at its worst provides a home for every extreme view and spawns digital lynch mobs from across the political spectrum that attack anyone who departs from their specific orthodoxy.” He also states that “at its best, [Internet use] provides a check on elites and establishments and opens the way for new voices.”
  • a permanent presidential campaign
  • U.S. business community that has become so global that the business community does not feel  a commitment to local areas or even the U.S. as a whole

Friedman has also stated that much of our problems come from the failure of our leaders–and the public–to think and act for the long term. He calls this our “I’ll be gone, you’ll be gone” attitude toward the economy and the environment. According to Friedman, we have been using accounting practices for both our financial system and the environment that under price risk, privatize gain, and socialize losses.

For video interviews with Thomas Friedman, see Friedman’s New York Times webpage.

Sources: Thomas Friedman, “Advice from Grandma“; The New York Times; Charlie Rose