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  THE SUBMERGED STATE 
 HOW INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT POLICIES UNDERMINE AMERICAN DEMOCRACY 
 By SUZANNE METTLER 
 The University of Chicago Press 
 Copyright © 2011   The University of Chicago 
All right reserved.
 ISBN: 978-0-226-52165-7 
    Chapter One 
  GOVERNANCE UNSEEN    
  When Senator Mary Landrieu held a town hall meeting in Louisiana in  the summer of 2009 in order to hear her constituents' views on health care  reform, she encountered a boisterous crowd. One man stood up, waving a  copy of the U.S. Constitution, and asked, "Where does the federal government  get any right to stick its hands anywhere in the health care system?"  Members of Congress heard similar sentiments expressed at such meetings  across the nation. Meanwhile, letters to the editor in newspapers  throughout the country contained protestations like that voiced by Ohio  resident Ray Brown, who wrote to the Columbia Dispatch: "There are no  circumstances on this Earth under which we should let our government  have anything at all to do with our excellent health-care system." In each  case, opponents of reform implied that the U.S. health care system as we  know it was borne and persists sui generis, a natural development that has  been nurtured only by the market economy.  
     Such characterizations are, quite simply, wrong. As Senator Landrieu  explained patiently to the man who questioned her, "Some aspects of  our system are nationalized," noting that government programs such as  Medicare and Medicaid cover a significant portion of the population,  nearly one in three people. She could have explained, further, that the so-called  "private" insurance plans provided by employers, through which  59 percent of Americans under age sixty- five receive insurance, are subsidized  by government, which privileges them with tax- exempt status.  She might have added that the construction of vast numbers of the nation's  hospitals was funded by a federal policy enacted in 1948, signed  into law by President Harry Truman. Or that a significant portion of  students in the nation's medical and nursing schools are funded by federal  scholarships.  
     In fact, the health care system experienced by Americans of the early  twenty-first century has been fostered by public policy and highly subsidized  by government spending for three- quarters of a century. It is fairly  well known that the United States spends more per capita on health care  than any other nation; in 2009 this amounted to $2.5 trillion, or 17.6 percent  of GDP. Less commonly known is the fact that government itself  foots most of the bill—some estimate 56 percent, amounting to more  than in any other country. Remarkably, however, many Americans have  been largely unaware of government's substantial role in health care, and  therefore reform legislation in 2009–10 appeared to them to be a startling  new and foreign intervention into a system that belonged mostly if not  entirely to the private sector.  
     The misunderstanding that many people possess about health care policy  is unsurprising, however, because much of it—like other areas of contemporary  social provision—is embedded within the submerged state.  When most people think of government programs, they likely envision  cavernous, austere buildings located in the vicinity of Washington, D.C.,  filled with bureaucrats sitting in cubicles who directly oversee the delivery  of goods and services to citizens, as exemplified by Social Security. Many  would also acknowledge that states and local governments oft en play the  role of "supporting actors," carrying out much of the day-to-day work of the  federal government by following its mandates and dispensing its funds, for  example, in unemployment insurance or welfare offices. But, in fact, much  of the activity financed by the federal government today fits neither of those  standard descriptions. Rather, it disguises or subverts government's role,  making the real actors appear to be those in the market or private sector—whether  individuals, households, organizations, or businesses. The mechanisms  or tools through which such activities occur have proliferated to  include a great variety, such as loans subsidized and guaranteed by government  but offered through private banks and government-sponsored enterprises;  social benefits in the form of tax incentives and tax breaks for those  engaging in activities that government wishes to reward; and benefits and  services provided by nonprofits and private third-party organizations that  are subsidized or "contracted out" by government.  
     Take student loans, for example. Several years ago, while teaching an  undergraduate course on public policy, I included student loans among  a list of government social programs. One student objected, saying, "But  student loans shouldn't be called a social program! I'm paying for my tuition  with student loans and I got them through a bank—not a government  agency. And I have to pay them back after I graduate, with interest."  Another student quickly countered the first, saying, "But if any of us just  went to a bank ourselves and applied for a regular loan—not a student  loan guaranteed by government—they probably wouldn't be willing to  lend to us. At our age, we don't look like very safe bets for paying back  what we borrow. And even if they did lend to us, the loan would cost us a  good deal more than it does with government's help." A lively discussion  ensued, reflecting different understandings of how student loans operate  and different views of the characteristics that define public policies.  
     These disparities in perceptions owe to the fact that student loans, like  much of U.S. health care policy, have long operated primarily by subsidizing  private actors to provide social benefits. In the 1960s, policymakers  sought means to make college affordable for more students. Banks were  typically reluctant to loan to students, considering them a bad risk, and  when they did, they imposed high interest rates, typically ranging from 11  to 14 percent and above. The Higher Education Act of 1965, signed into  law by Johnson, established the Guaranteed Student Loan Program, giving  banks incentives to lend to students at lower rates of interest. It did  so by offering that the federal government would pay half the interest on  such loans and would guarantee them, promising to repay them entirely  if a borrower defaulted. In 1972 policymakers provided further impetus to  student lending by creating the Student Loan Marketing Association (SLM,  otherwise known as "Sallie Mae"), a "government- sponsored enterprise,"  meaning that while being privately owned and operated, it would enjoy  special privileges—flowing from tax benefits and special regulatory treatment—unavailable  to any competitor. In the decades since, student lending  became a lucrative business, attracting many banks to participate.  
     The amounts borrowed annually through these government-subsidized  and government-guaranteed loans, renamed as Family Federal Education  Loans (FFEL), escalated rapidly, as shown in figure 1.1. Even after Clinton's  reform effort in 1993 led to the beginnings of "direct lending," in which  government itself made loans using federal capital rather than subsidizing  lenders to do so, the well-established bank-based system still continued  to predominate, making 80 percent of all loans until the credit crisis hit  in 2008. The banks and Sallie Mae possessed marketing power lacked  by the U.S. Department of Education, granting them greater leverage in  promoting their products to students. In addition, their ability to offer  perks and benefits to financial aid offices on college campuses in many  cases helped them to secure the privileged status of "preferred lenders," a  practice eventually curtailed after an investigation by New York Attorney  General Andrew Cuomo.  
     Not surprisingly, then, even many student loan beneficiaries themselves  perceived the program to be private rather than public. A 2008  survey asked such individuals, "Do you think of student loans primarily  as a public program—that is, belonging to government—or as a private  program, that is, belonging to lenders, banks, or academic institutions?"  Half of respondents—50 percent—reported that they viewed the program  as private, only 43 percent described it as public, and the remainder  volunteered that it was both, equally. Despite the fact that such loans  would not be available without government—which took the initiative to  encourage lending, provided generous subsidies to lenders, and bore the  risk of defaults—most users did not perceive its role. These citizens, like  my undergraduate recipients of such loans, had the quintessential experience  of the submerged state: it benefited them, providing opportunities  and relieving financial burdens, without them even knowing it.  
     Several of our most expensive federal social policies today are situated  within the income tax system. "Social tax expenditures," as they have been  termed formally in federal budgeting parlance since 1969, or "tax breaks"  or "tax loopholes," as they are more commonly known, permit particular  households to pay less in taxes because they are either involved in some  kind of activity or they belong to a class of persons that policymakers  deem worthy of public support. Rather than government sending checks  to people, as is the case for Social Security or Temporary Assistance for  Needy Families, instead families or individuals receive social benefits either  in the form of smaller tax bills or refunds from the Internal Revenue  Service. Today, as seen in figure 1.2, the largest social tax expenditure emanates  from the nontaxable nature of health insurance benefit provided  by employers, which is expected to cost $177 billion in 2011; it is followed  by the Home Mortgage Interest Deduction, $104.5 billion; and the exclusion  from taxes of employer-provided retirement benefits, $67.1 billion.  The number of such tax breaks continues to grow, and their purposes  are varied, assisting Americans with everything from paying college tuition  to purchasing energy-efficient windows and appliances to paying  for child care. Their costs are substantial: on net, as of 2008, the amount  lost in federal revenues due to social tax breaks was equivalent to 7.4 percent  of GDP, up from 4.2 percent in 1976. To put this in perspective, "visible  governance," meaning total direct federal spending—on all domestic  programs, the military, and interest on the debt—amounts to approximately  18 percent of GDP, making social tax expenditures comparable to  between one-third and one-half as much.  
     From an accounting perspective, direct social benefits and tax breaks  both have the same effect: they impose costs on the federal budget, whether  incurred in the form of obligations or lost revenues. As southern Democrat  Russell Long, chair of the Senate Finance Committee from 1966 to  1981, said of the term "tax expenditures": "That label don't bother me....  I've never been confused about it. I've always known that what we're doing  was giving government money away." But for most beneficiaries, the  experience is starkly different: those who receive direct benefits such as  unemployment insurance or food stamps usually recognize that a government  program assisted them, whereas few equate their lowered tax  bills with comparable aid. Many Americans are unaware of how tax expenditures  function, or even that they exist. For example, a poll in 2008,  referring to what has become our most expensive social tax break, queried  respondents about whether workers are required to pay taxes on the  amounts their employers contribute to their health insurance benefits or  not. Only half of the respondents, 50 percent, answered correctly by saying  "no"; 29 percent mistakenly believed that people were required to pay  such taxes, and 21 percent simply said they did not know. In short, it is  unsurprising that the energy Obama generated as a candidate evaporated  once he turned to governance, for the agenda he pursued sought to transform  policies that Americans barely know exist, and to create some new  policies that they are unable to see.  
  
  Considering Governance from Citizens' Perspective  
  By Reagan's second term in office, scholars began to notice that traditional  ways of thinking about government programs no longer reflected  much of how public policies were actually designed and administered.  In 1988 Donald Kettl depicted the new reality as "government by proxy,"  meaning "the provision of government goods and services through proxies  such as contractors, grantees, and recipients of government tax breaks  and loans." In the years since, several scholars have elucidated these new  forms of governance. Brinton Milward described the "hollow state," highlighting  the "contracting out" of government services to nonprofits and  for- profits; Christopher Howard revealed the political development of the  "hidden welfare state" of tax expenditures; Jacob Hacker explained how  government came to regulate and subsidize social benefits provided by  private employers; Paul Light pointed to the "shadow of government,"  which emerges from the sum of these types of mechanisms; and Andrea  Campbell and Kimberly Morgan detailed the workings of "delegated governance,"  meaning the allocation of authority for social welfare policy to  nonstate actors. Combined, these works and others make plain that increasingly  government does not directly provide goods and services but  operates instead through a variety of indirect mechanisms that permeate  and structure aspects of the economy.  
     We have yet to learn, however, what ordinary Americans think of or  even know about these ascendant forms of governance. We lack under  standing of whether citizens support or oppose such policies, or—at a  more basic level—whether they are aware of their existence and are thus  able to form meaningful opinions about them. To the extent that such policies  lack citizens' consent or approval, they may represent a fundamentally  undemocratic development. We do not know how benefiting from  them shapes citizens' views of government, of its legitimacy or of their  obligations toward it. Neither do we know whether they prompt or discourage  civic engagement, enabling citizens to mobilize and express their  views to their representatives in the political system. A few scholars have  theorized briefly that such policies are likely obscured from the view of  most people, and thus probably fail to prompt citizens to take political  action in relation to them. Empirical evidence for or exploration of such  claims, however, has yet to be offered.  
     Considering such policies from citizens' perspective, I have identified  them, collectively, as the "submerged state," because that image conveys  what amounts to their stealth presence in the lives of most Americans. The  aim of this book is to investigate citizens' awareness and experiences of  the submerged state, or their lack thereof; to explain the implications for  reform efforts; and to consider how policymakers and citizens alike could  take action to change these circumstances and to revitalize democracy.  
     The parameters of the concept of the submerged state deserve some  clarification. The American propensity to place substantial amounts of  government activity "out of sight," as historian Brian Balogh terms it, is not  new; it has roots that run deep into the nineteenth century. Over time,  numerous social policies have been designed or altered to contain at least  some submerged features or characteristics. Take Medicare, for instance:  since the 1970s, Medicare beneficiaries have had the option of receiving  their benefits through a private health insurance plan, and as of 2010,  24 percent of Medicare beneficiaries—11.1 million people—interacted not  with government directly but rather with an insurance company, gaining  benefits through what is called "Medicare Advantage." The obvious confusion  of the town meeting participant who told his congressman to "keep  your government hands off my Medicare" may be less absurd than it appears  if it emanated from the experience of public benefits that were actually  delivered by the private sector. In fact, in the United States, social  programs in which benefits or services are provided directly by a government  institution or agency are extremely rare. Consider, for example, that  we do not require food stamps beneficiaries to shop at government-run  food pantries, or Medicare patients to visit doctors only at government-run  health clinics. It is appropriate, then, to think of all social programs as existing  on a continuum from those that are most visible to those that are  most submerged. The programs of the submerged state are distinctly clustered  at one end of that spectrum, being especially camouflaged by their  unique designs. Whereas some other policies possess features that may  slightly obscure government's role, the policies of the submerged state do  so far more completely, either by their placement in the tax code, through  the subsidies or contracts with private organizations that deliver them, or  both. It is these policies that are my focus here.  
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 Excerpted from THE SUBMERGED STATE by SUZANNE METTLER  Copyright © 2011   by The University of Chicago.   Excerpted by permission of The University of Chicago Press. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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