This.Pointedstick wrote: It's not just government that causes the rise in useless managerial/clerical work; the modern mega-corporation seemingly requires an extensive bureaucratic apparatus to function, and most of the people who make up this hierarchy are dead weight, producing no products and supporting the production of no products, but rather telling the actual producers and support personnel how to do their jobs and jerking them around.
But these jobs are hardly destroying the middle class. If anything, i'd say they're increasingly the bread and butter of the middle class, whose members have been socially conditioned to scorn blue-collar work but aren't bright enough for the high-paying industries.
And this gets to a level of analysis of government activity that, while somewhat valid, I've felt for a while now is flawed in a couple senses...
That of "government bureaucracy." There are a lot of reasons to dislike government involvement, but to me, the "bureaucracy sucks" argument only carries so much weight.
Firstly, bureaucracy happens whenever you have a task that requires multiple people working together and having to design organized systems through which they operate and communicate (this is the moda-definition... not Websters). Even in sole proprieterships, you have to build in some self-bureaucracy to organize your business processes. Government, by its very nature, is BIG, with lots of people doing things together. You are simply GOING to have lots of bureaucracy, even if these functions were all privatized.
Secondly, and in some ways more importantly, the important aspects of our government structure for purposes of disseminating power and increasing accountability DEMAND bureaucracy. If you ever look at what it takes to pass a law, enforce a law, or interpret a law in court and think "holy hell this could be SO much easier?" I know I have. It COULD be easier. It's called a f'kin' dictatorship. Do you think Hitler ever had to worry about forms to sign or congressional approval? Did Genghis Kahn have to understand terms like cloture, super-majority, etc? No. The Constitution's crowning achievement is essentially a bureaucratic framework that essentially turns our government into a Mexican Standoff, where everyone is internally motivated to check someone else in government, and everyone is being checked BY someone else. This requires a f*kton of bureaucracy. Add in state and local government delegation, and you've just added a ton more.
Bureaucracy isn't just about organization. It's about risk management and accountability. I know I oftentimes equate all forms of government with each other to point out that "it's all force." But from a utilitarian perspective, there is a massive difference between a government whose actions are subject to oversight and some bureaucratic formalities than one that "costs less" to administer because it doesn't have transparency/balance mechanisms within its structure.