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Is Big Government an Endangered Species?


Article # : 11282 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 5 / 1986  1,143 Words
Author : Yearn Hong Choi
Raised in Korea and now a Virginia resident, Yearn Hong Choi is a visiting professor at Seoul City University Graduate School of Urban Administration for 1996-97. Choi was formerly president of the Korean Poets and Writers Group in the Washington area.

       I felt a chill go through me when listening to President Reagan's first inaugural address. Our problems, he said, are not problems government can solve; rather, government is the problem. Indeed, we do have problems for which government has no solution, and even some it has caused. But if government itself is the "problem," then, suggests Dwight Waldo, a Syracuse professor emeritus and former editor in chief of Public Administration Review, the problem is solved by abolishing government.
       
        I have listened many more Reagan speeches since the inauguration in 1981. Luckily, we still have the government, and he is the chief executive of the government, although if Reagan is succeeded by another Reaganite, the government may become an extinct species. Shall we then enact a law for the protection of the government? How about the Endangered Government Act?
       
        The 1973 Endangered Species Act does not cover the human institution. It covers animals and plants, yet government is surely more precious than snail darters (a species of three-inch, tannish-colored perch), or any other endangered life form currently under the protection of law.
       
        Alfred Marshall, a noted economist, remarked that government is the most precious of human possessions, and that no effort can be too great when spent in enabling government to do its work in the best way. Through most of the history of civilization, political administration, not private or business administration has been at center stage. I don't know whether or not future times will place private or business administration over the affairs of state, but whatever the future holds, the role of government will doubtless ... (2000 of 7471 Characters)
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