Adrian Wooldridge, Columnist

How Has the 21st Century Gone So Wrong?

The first quarter of this century will soon be behind us. The record is grim.

Bill Clinton carries the message from his State of the Union address to the people of Qunicy, Illinois on 28 January 2000.

Photographer: TIM SLOAN/AFP
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“Never before has our nation enjoyed, at once, so much prosperity and social progress with so little internal crisis and so few external threats,” Bill Clinton exulted in his last State of the Union address, on Jan. 27, 2000. The Nasdaq had reached 4,000, a nearly sixfold increase in seven years. Unemployment had shrunk to 3%, the lowest in more than a generation. Having borne the burden of the Cold War, the American people were now reaping the peace dividend. The Republicans’ champion, George W. Bush, offered “compassionate conservatism” as an alternative to Democrats’ “compassionate liberalism.”

Abroad, the news was equally bright. The Europeans had introduced both a single market and a single currency and were well on their way to becoming a “United States of Europe.” The once mighty Communist international had dwindled to Cuba, North Korea and a few university departments. World trade in manufactured goods had doubled in the 1990s and would double again in the 2000s. Global poverty was receding faster than ever before.