Reihan Salam has a provocative reply to a standard boilerplate claim of fans of big government: that money spent on the U.S. highway system and the moon race represent clearly succesful examples of gigantic public investment programs:
A shockingly large number of people, including Obama, seem to believe that had the federal government not stepped up to the plate in the postwar era and invested vast sums in highways and putting a man on the moon, the United States would have wound up an economic backwater. But perhaps not building a huge network of highways would have kept American families in more compact, walkable neighborhoods. Instead of sprawling suburbs and SUVs, we’d have more high-rises and bike lanes. The Interstate Highways helped supersize America’s government, by centralizing authority in D.C., and our waistlines, by encouraging us to drive and to fatten up on fast food. It’s not obvious to me that we’re better off as a nation plagued by high taxes and heart disease.
As for Sputnik, it led to a huge increase in federal funding for scientific research and K-12 education. Had we allowed the Russians to beat us to the moon, American families and firms might have kept more of their own money. Our state universities might have devoted themselves to churning out job-ready graduates instead of chasing federal grants. While the Soviets built enormous cities on the moon and Mars, financed by forced labor, we’d have devoted ourselves to becoming a richer, freer, more creative country. I love Neil Armstrong as much as the next guy, but I’d take that trade in a heartbeat.
I think the latter argument, in particular, should appeal to progressives who tend to be pro urbanization and density.

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Saturday ~ April 16th, 2011 at 11:47 am
Hyena
The biggest risk presented by not pursuing the space program was probably nuclear war launched by an increasingly jittery West. Being the first to the Moon may have been a necessary condition of détente and possibly even the withdrawal from Vietnam and world-changing opening of China.
It’s a hard counterfactual to assess but I think it’s important to think about it in a context where a large segment of the country had bomb shelters and we still actively considered the possibility of “limited nuclear war” in proxy conflicts.
Saturday ~ April 16th, 2011 at 12:53 pm
Lord
I think Poland tried that strategy prior to WWII.
Saturday ~ April 16th, 2011 at 12:56 pm
geaugailluminati
both programs were primarily military, not civilian…
Wednesday ~ April 20th, 2011 at 10:51 am
Vínculos marginales XVII « Notas marginales
[...] Imaginen un mundo sin carrera espacial. [...]