A MINORITY VIEW
BY WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 2007, AND
THEREAFTER
Economic Thinking
Historical costs, sometimes called sunk costs, are irrelevant to
decision-making because they are costs that have already been incurred. That's
something that's not intuitively obvious, even for some trained economists. On
a couple of occasions, I've recommended to a graduate student, having
difficulty with his Ph.D. dissertation, that it might be wise to start all over
again with a different topic. The response:
"Professor Williams, but I've spent so much time on the
dissertation so far." I reminded the student that the time already spent
should have nothing to do with his decision to either stick with his chosen
topic or choose another one. His question should be: Which choice, sticking
with the chosen topic or choosing another, will more readily lead to successful
completion of his doctorate?
When Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast, gasoline prices
started rising immediately. Some people couldn't understand why prices rose for
gasoline already in the pipeline long before Katrina struck. The fact that
prices for gasoline produced before the disaster rose led to charges of price
gouging. Many people believed that historical costs, what a retailer paid for
it, should determine price.
That's patently wrong, and a simple example will demonstrate it.
Say you've been selling me coffee from your large inventory for $4 a pound. A
crop disaster in Brazil spikes the world coffee price to $10 a pound. What will
you charge me now? If you said at least $10, go to the head of the class. Why?
Because the opportunity cost, or replacement cost, of coffee is now $10. What
coffee cost before the disaster is irrelevant.
You say, "Williams, I'm not greedy. I'd sell it to you for $4
until I ran out." That's great. I'd buy it from you for $4 and resell it
for the world price of $10.
At the time of Katrina, gasoline retailers couldn't replace their
gasoline at yesterday's prices. In other words, gasoline prices, coffee prices
and any other price reflect conditions in the market today, not yesterday.
Today's debate over the Iraq War is so often discussed in terms of
whether it should have been initiated in the first place, our faulty
intelligence about Hussein's possession of weapons of mass destruction, and
whether the Bush administration lied to the American people. Whether these
observations and charges are true or false should in no way be a part of
today's decision-making, for history is one of those immutable facts of life.
We can change the future, but we cannot change the past, though we can learn
from it.
The only costs relevant to decision-making are what economists
call marginal or incremental cost; that's the change in costs as a result of
doing something. That cost should be compared to the expected benefit. Think
about pollution. Getting rid of pollution is a no-brainer. All that the
authorities of, say, Los Angeles would have to do is to mandate that all
pollution-emitting sources shut down. That would mean no driving, no
manufacturing, no airplanes, no power generation and no lawn mowing. Angelenos would have perfectly clean air, but I doubt
whether they'd agree that it's worth the costs. That means perfectly clean air
is non-optimal, and so is perfectly dirty air. The question is, how much clean
air do we want and at what cost? In other words, we should compare the
additional benefit of cleaner air to the additional costs of getting it.
The idea of weighing the costs of doing
something against its benefits are part and parcel of intelligent
decision-making. If we only look to benefits, we'll do darn near anything
because everything has some kind of benefit.
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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