A
MINORITY VIEW
BY
WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE:
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 2008, AND THEREAFTER
Problem of Ignorance
I have no
idea of the number of traffic signals in our country, but whatever the number,
how many of my fellow Americans would like the U.S. Congress to be in charge of
their operation? Congress, or a committee they authorize, would determine the
length of time red stays red and green stays green and what hours of the day
they can be flashing red. Or, how many Americans would like Congress to be in
charge deciding what items, in what quantities, your local supermarket has on
its shelves? Right now the average well-stocked supermarket carries somewhere
between 50,000 and 60,000 different items. Do we really need such a choice in
light of the fact that several decades ago Americans made do with just 10,000
different items? Would you also want the government agency that delivers our
mail to also manage delivery of items to supermarkets?
You say,
"Williams, where are you headed with this?" Nobel Laureate Friedrich
Hayek, one of the greatest economists of the 20th century, called it a fatal
conceit for anyone to think that a single mind or a single committee can
somehow do things better than the spontaneous, unstructured, complex and
creative forces of the market. The big problem in any system, whether it's an
economic, biological or ecological system, is information, communication and
control. For congressmen, or a committee they select, to take over control of
the nation's traffic signals requires a massive amount of information that they
cannot possibly possess such as traffic flows at intersections, accident
experiences and changes in peak and low peak traffic patterns.
The same
information problem exists at the supermarket. Consider the challenge we give
supermarket managers. We don't tell them in advance when we're going to shop,
what we're going to buy and how much, but if they don't live up to this
challenge, we're going to fire them by taking our business elsewhere. The
supermarket manager does a fairly good job doing what's necessary to meet that
challenge. You can bet the rent money that Congress couldn't begin to produce
such a satisfactory outcome.
You say,
"C'mon, Williams, nobody's proposing that Congress take over the nation's
traffic signals and supermarkets!" You're right, at least for now, but the
information problem exists in all areas of our lives. Right now Congress tells
each American how much should be set aside out of his weekly paycheck for
retirement. How can they have the information to know what's the best use for
the $70, or so, taken from you and put into Social Security? Might you benefit
more by saving that money to start a business, purchase tutoring lessons for
your children, or putting it in a private retirement plan? Unlike congressional
control of traffic signals and supermarkets, the effects of Social Security
aren't apparent because we don't have the information about what people would
have been able to accomplish if they were able to keep more of their earnings.
You might
argue that saving for retirement is important, but so is saving for a home or
your children's education. Would you want Congress to force us to put money
aside for a home or our children's education?
Oblivious to
the huge information problem in the allocation of resources, the people in
Washington have confidence that they can run our lives better than we can.
Charles Darwin wisely noted over a century and a half ago that "ignorance
more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge." Suggesting that
Congress is ignorant of the fact that knowledge is highly dispersed, and
decisions made locally produce the best outcomes, might be overly generous.
They might know that and just don't give a hoot because it's in their political
interest to centralize decision-making.
Thomas
Jefferson might have had the information problem in mind when he said,
"Were we directed from Washington when to sow, and when to reap, we should
soon want bread."
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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2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.