A Liberal Manifesto in a Time of Inequality and Climate Change

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- It’s hard being a liberal these days. The world seems to want to go in the opposite direction. Authoritarianism is on the rise in China, mercantilism in the U.S., populism everywhere from Brazil to the Philippines, and an oxymoronic “illiberal democracy” in Hungary and Poland.

Liberals seem particularly irrelevant in the two biggest debates of our time: about inequality and global warming. The first has left-wing demagogues baying once again to soak the rich in a new round of class warfare. The second has spooked the loony right into denying the problem (and indeed science) and the loony left into flight-shaming, SUV-shaming and just shaming generally, reminiscent of France’s Jacobins in 1793 or China’s Red Guards in 1966.

What’s become almost inaudible in these two controversies is an older and more dignified voice: liberalism. By this I don’t mean its risible (and opposite) caricatures in the U.S. and Europe. In American usage, a liberal is a big-government lefty who sees society through the lens of identity politics. In left-wing European parlance, a liberal (or, worse, “neoliberal”) is a free-market fundamentalist.

Liberalism is neither. It’s a broad and flexible philosophy that values individual freedom. (Liber is Latin for free). That’s why liberals distrust concentrations of power that might oppress us. Often such power is found in the state, which is why liberals prefer limited government; other times, it’s found in companies, mafias or mobs, in which case liberals oppose those, with regulation and laws. But liberals are a pragmatic bunch too, rising to the new challenges of each era.

The liberal approach to inequality

It’s in fact liberals who’ve grappled at the highest intellectual level with inequality. If you want to think deeply about “justice as fairness,” you could do worse than open the book of that title by John Rawls. If you want the best answer to Rawls, read Robert Nozick, his former colleague and sparring partner down the hallway at Harvard University.

What liberals since John Locke, the patriarch of the tradition, have agreed on is that you need property to be free. Invariably, some people will end up with more than others. Rawls would say that’s fine as long as everybody benefits, including the worst off. Nozick would respond that it’s fine even if they don’t, as long as those who get more have earned it legitimately.

It’s a mistake, moreover, to look at the distribution of wealth or income only at one point in time. Yesterday’s haves could turn into tomorrow’s have-nots and vice versa, all as a result of life choices, luck, skill or effort. Inequality becomes problematic only when the same people, or the same families across generations, keep ending up at the top or bottom no matter what they do.