No, we can’t bring back postwar America, however great our nostalgia

It’s always interesting, and sometimes gratifying, when you see that another writer has, obviously independently, come to the same conclusion as you have yourself. In my most recent Washington Examiner column, I argued that we cannot resurrect the postwar America that, in different ways, inspires nostalgia in both liberals and conservatives. “Postwar America,” I wrote, “was the result of unique circumstances — economic dominance when competitor nations were devastated, cultural uniformity that followed from a universal popular culture and the common experience of military service (16 million Americans served in the wartime military; the proportional equivalent today would be 38 million).”

Today, thanks to a link from Marginal Revolution economics superblogger Tyler Cowen, I ran across another economics blogger, Branko Milanovic, who makes a similar observation. “I am skeptical that ‘the happy days of the 1960s’ will ever come back. This is the idea that I somewhat jokingly called ‘Make America Denmark Again.’ That world made sense with the technology and the policy as it was in the 1960s but not today. The world of large-scale manufacturing, homogeneous working class, trade unions, capital controls and a quasi-closed economy (U.S. exports and imports combined were less than 10 percent of American GDP in the 1960s; they are more than 30 percent today) is over.” Sounds pretty smart, eh? Or at least I thought so.

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