A MINORITY VIEW
BY WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2007,
AND THEREAFTER
Stupid, Ignorant or
Biased?
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's closest adviser and architect of
the New Deal, Harry Hopkins, advised, "Tax and tax, spend and spend, elect
and elect, because the people are too damn dumb to know the difference."
Professor Bryan Caplan, my colleague at George Mason University, sheds some
light on Hopkins' observation in his new book, "The Myth of the Rational
Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies."
Caplan is far more generous than Hopkins. Instead, he says people
harbor economic biases, several of which he discusses. There's the anti-market
bias, the failure to believe that market forces determine prices. Many believe
that prices are a function of a CEO's intentions and conspiracies. If a CEO
wakes up feeling greedy, he'll raise prices. They also believe that profits are
undeserving gifts. They fail to see that, at least in open markets, profits are
incentives for firms to satisfy customers, find least-cost production methods
and move resources from low-valued to high-valued uses.
Then there's the make-work bias, where many believe that labor is
better to use than conserve. Thus, the destruction of jobs is seen as a danger.
Technology, as well as outsourcing, throws some people out of work. Caplan
reminds us that in 1800 it took nearly 95 of every 100 Americans, working on
farms, to feed the nation. In 1900, it took 40. Today, it takes three. Workers
no longer needed to farm became available to produce homes, cars,
pharmaceuticals, computers and thousands of other goods. Caplan doesn't make
the equation, but outsourcing, just as technological innovation, frees up labor
to produce other things as well.
Next is the anti-foreign bias. Caplan explains that there are two
methods for Americans to have cars. One is to get a bunch of workers into
Detroit factories. Another is to grow a lot of wheat in Iowa. You harvest the
wheat, load it on ships sailing westward on the Pacific Ocean, and a few months
later the ships reappear loaded down with Toyotas. We have cars as if we
produced them. In other words, exchange is an alternative method of production.
Added to the anti-foreign bias is the balance-of-trade fallacy.
Caplan says that nobody loses sleep over whether there's a trade balance
between California and Nevada, or between him and iTunes.
Trade balance fears arise only when another country is involved. The fallacy is
not treating all purchases as a cost but only foreign purchases as a cost.
There might be another bias as well. Caplan reports that, according to an
opinion survey, 28 percent of Americans admitted they dislike Japan but only 8
percent dislike England and a scant 3 percent dislike Canada.
People have a pessimistic bias where they believe economic
conditions are not as good as they really are and things are going from bad to
worse. This is the message of doomsayers, but the reality is quite different.
By any measure of well-being, Americans at the start of this century are far
better off than Americans at the beginning of the last century. Perennial
doom-and-gloom predictions about resource depletion, overpopulation and
environmental quality are exaggerated and often the opposite of the truth.
Preaching doom and gloom has been beneficial to the political class. They use
it to gain more power and control.
Caplan is one of George Mason University Economics Department's
up-and-coming young scholars. In fact, I'm proud to say, he was hired during my
department chairmanship. "The Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies
Choose Bad Policies" is a highly readable and interesting
political-economic discussion of why we choose bad policies. Those policies are
harmful to the general public but beneficial to particular interest groups who
gain from restrictions on peaceable, voluntary exchange. Maybe that's why our
founders loathed a democracy and gave us a republic -- which we've lost.
Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason
University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by
other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.creators.com.
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2007 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.