Miles to Go: A Personal History of Social Policy.

AuthorYarmolinsky, Adam

OVER MORE THAN I three decades in public life, Pat Moynihan I has had a disturbing habit of calling attention to problems we have lived to regret ignoring, and of offering I sound advice that we have lived to regret not taking. It began with his 1964 report on the disintegration of the black family, for which he was generally vilified. His welfare reform proposal of the 1970s, the Family Assistance Plan, which could have made a modest beginning on a now almost impossible task, was rejected by an unholy alliance of right and left, which also rejected his proposed Family Support Act of 1995. And his recent prophecy that turning welfare over to the states without adequate resources or federal safeguards will leave thousands of children sleeping on grates has apparently gone unheeded, to our possible future discomfiture.

Moynihan's pronouncements are prescient, but he is also willing to revise them in the light of experience--and of his remarkably persistent study of social science literature. They make this compact volume, a pastiche of previously published articles and speeches stitched together with new commentary, a valuable and lively re-examination of issues that are both fundamental and very much alive today.

The book explores a range of current public policy issues, from full employment budgets and the foolishness of the proposed balanced budget amendment to the newly discovered worldwide increase in illegitimacy rates and the forgotten history of the drug wars. But the consistent principal theme tying all these issues together is the impact of postindustrial society. Here Moynihan raises new, troublesome and imperfectly understood questions. On the old questions, he points out, we could at least look to European models. But new problems of family structure and ethnic and race relations are arising first in American society, so that now we are exposed to the risks and challenges of being pioneers.

For a major political figure, Moynihan is refreshingly aware of how much he--and we--don't know; in the face of our ignorance he presses for the Hippocratic principle: "First, do no harm" He is particularly persuasive on the folly of turning over to the states the problem of long-term welfare dependency, arguing that it is "so large a problem that the state governments where...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT