"THE greatest nation on earth—the greatest nation on earth—cannot keep
conducting its business by drifting from one manufactured crisis to the
next. We can’t do it,” fulminated Barack Obama last month. The crisis
of the moment, the “sequester” (a package of budget cuts designed to be
so ghastly that Congress would pass a better version), duly came into
effect on March 1st. Unless Congress agrees on an extension to its
budget, the government will start to shut down on March 28th. In May the
greatest nation will hit its debt ceiling; unless it is raised, Uncle
Sam will soon start defaulting on his bills.
This is the America that China’s leaders laugh at, and the rest of
the democratic world despairs of. Its debt is rising, its population is
ageing in a budget-threatening way, its schools are mediocre by
international standards, its infrastructure rickety, its regulations
dense, its tax code byzantine, its immigration system hare-brained—and
it has fallen from first position in the World Economic Forum’s
competitiveness rankings to seventh in just four years. Last year both
Mr Obama and his election opponent, Mitt Romney, complained about the
American dream slipping away. Today, the country’s main businesses sit
on nearly $2 trillion in cash, afraid to invest in part because
corporate bosses cannot imagine any of Washington’s feuding partisans
fixing anything.
READ MORE: http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21573544-luckily-dysfunction-washington-only-one-side-americas-story-america-works
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