Skip to content
Home » TRANSCRIPT: Niall Ferguson at ARC Australia – “Are We The Soviets Now?”

TRANSCRIPT: Niall Ferguson at ARC Australia – “Are We The Soviets Now?”

Read the full transcript of British historian Niall Ferguson’s talk titled “Are We The Soviets Now?” at ARC Australia conference 2024.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

NIALL FERGUSON: Well, thank you very much indeed. I’m now about to do something rather counterintuitive. Having just listened to that video about the foundations of economic growth, you’re probably thinking if only we could all be like the United States and achieve the extraordinarily strong growth that we now see there. How counterintuitive of me to argue that we are actually staring at late Soviet America.

When I published this particular piece, “We’re All Soviets Now”, for Bari Weiss’s Free Press, I think you could say I got a reaction. And most people’s reaction was how Jesus Ferguson has finally jumped the shark. Because it’s profoundly counterintuitive that there could be any resemblance between the United States in the 2020s and the Soviet Union in the 1980s. It’s a bit like that sketch that you may remember. Are we the baddies? Dude, are we the Soviets?

Let me try and explain what motivated me to write that piece, and to persuade you that there is a problem, and it’s a problem that is masked by rapid economic growth. A problem that’s masked by an economy that is essentially running on fiscal and monetary steroids.

Gerontocracy in American Politics

Of course, before the coup d’etat that overthrew President Biden as the nominee for the Democratic Party, the case was easy to make that, like the Soviet Union in its final phase, American politics is gerontocratic. The President of the United States is still Joe Biden. I know you’ve kind of forgotten that. I’m not sure he’s entirely aware of it. But that is the situation we’re in, and he will be 82 when his term ends. And the likely next President of the United States, Donald Trump, will be 82 when his term ends. The advent of Vice President Harris as the Democratic nominee doesn’t radically alter the fact that American politics is geriatric.

If you look at the chart on the other side of this slide, the United States is a real outlier, because its legislators are also substantially older than those of peer countries. So the point about gerontocracy doesn’t apply only to presidential candidates, and the advent of Kamala Harris as candidate doesn’t alter the fact that American politics is, by the standards of the rest of the developed world, somewhat geriatric.

The Soft Budget Constraint

The Soviet Union’s economy was characterized by the soft budget constraint, which meant that state-owned enterprises were under almost no pressure to be economically efficient. That’s in fact true of the U.S. federal government, too. I spend a lot of my time thinking about U.S. fiscal policy. It’s really shocking to observe that this year, for the first time, the United States federal government will spend more on interest payments on the federal debt than on defense.

And in this chart, I try to sum up what I call Ferguson’s Law, which states that when a great power is spending more on debt service than on defense, it won’t be great for much longer. It’s a law because it’s been true of all the great powers through history. It was true of the Dutch Republic. It was true of Habsburg, Spain. It was true of Bourbon, France. It was true of the Ottomans in the 19th century. It was true of the British in the 20th century.

That’s the other resemblance. The soft budget constraint applies in the United States, too. And much of the economic growth that we’ve seen since 2021, and I would be crying, too, if I were a little younger, that economic growth is the result of fiscal stimulus up the wazoo, to use a technical term. If you’re running a deficit of more than 6% of GDP in two concurrent years when you’re at full employment, you have a soft budget constraint.

ALSO READ:  On Being Wrong: Kathryn Schulz (Transcript)

Rising Cynicism and Declining Belief in the System

A characteristic feature of the late Soviet Union, anybody remember it? Anybody apart from me actually go to the Soviet Union in the 1980s? One. So, you will remember one of the striking features of life in 1980s Soviet Russia was that nobody believed in the system anymore. The level of cynicism was staggering. But that is increasingly true of the United States.

Look at these charts here. The Wall Street Journal ran a poll recently that showed a dramatic decline in the percentage of Americans who think that patriotism was very important to them, or religion was very important to them, or having children was very important to them. And if you look at national confidence in key institutions, it is at historic lows in almost every case. Public confidence in the US Congress, which according to the Constitution is the most important branch of the federal government, is in single digits. There too I think there’s a resemblance.

The Public Health Crisis

But, it’s the public health data that clinches. And this is where we need to look past gross domestic product, to look at well-being in a more meaningful sense. Fact. As many Americans have died of suicide or drug overdoses in the last 10 years as died of COVID-19. 1.2 million. If you include the deaths from alcohol abuse, deaths of despair killed more people in the past 10 years in the United States than COVID did.

Some of you will be aware of the mental health epidemic, or ill health epidemic, that young Americans suffer from. But in a way, it’s less concerning to me than the excess mortality that we see amongst older Americans. I’ve put a couple of charts on the right-hand side here from the work of Angus Deaton and others, showing what an extraordinary increase there has been in deaths of despair from suicide, alcohol poisoning, or drug overdoses. And if you compare the United States with comparable countries, including Australia, which is in the lower chart, dotted blue line, you see that the United States has a completely unique trend.