A
MINORITY VIEW
BY
WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE:
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2008, AND THEREAFTER
Economic Myths
By taking a
couple of courses in economic theory, we could immunize ourselves from nonsense
spouted by politicians and pundits, but in the meantime check out Professor
John R. Lott's "Freedomnomics: Why the Free Market Works."
His first
chapter is "Are You Being Ripped Off?" It addresses myths about
predation where it's sometimes alleged that corporations will charge below-cost
prices to bankrupt their rivals and then charge unconscionable prices. There's
little or no evidence that corporations would choose predation as strategy;
there are too many pitfalls. A major one is that in order to recoup losses from
charging low prices to bankrupt rivals, the predator would later have to charge
higher-than-normal prices. That would attract new rivals who might have
purchased the bankrupt assets of the predator's prey and be able to undercut
the predator's prices.
A far more
successful means to monopoly wealth is for businesses to enlist the aid of
congressmen to form a collusion. Classic examples are the dairy industry, which
uses the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Federal Milk Marketing Orders to set
statutory minimum prices, or the Gasoline Retailers Association using state law
to do the same or the sugar industry using Congress to establish quotas on
foreign sugar imports.
Professor
Lott's chapter "Government as Nirvana" highlights examples of
government predation. When the U.S. Postal Service raised the price of
first-class mail in 1999, it reduced its price for domestic overnight express
mail from $15 to $13.70, even though it was losing money at $15. The Postal
Service was facing stiff competition from FedEx and UPS overnight services and
wanted to keep its market share.
During the
1980s, private meteorology firms saw a chance to make money by selling
television stations specialized forecasts that weren't provided by the National
Weather Service. The National Weather Service started providing television
stations the same services for free, thus driving private forecasting companies
out of business.
Predation is
observed in higher education. UCLA is both Lott's and my alma mater. It spends
$40,000 per student but charges $6,522 tuition for in-state students. Such
below-cost pricing gives public universities a significant competitive
advantage over private universities. State universities have acquired many
formerly private universities after driving, or threatening to drive, them out
of business. Lott gives examples of George Mason University School of Law,
University of Buffalo, University of Houston and University of Pittsburgh. In
the case of University of Buffalo, the State University of New York reportedly
threatened to open a public university across the street unless the University
of Buffalo joined the state system.
The U.S.
Department of Justice would go after a private business using similar predatory
practices of intimidating its rivals and selling goods and services below cost.
The U.S. Department of Commerce sanctions foreign companies accused of selling
goods in the U.S. below cost with anti-dumping duties. If selling goods below
cost is seen as unfair in the international arena, why is it not when it's done
by government entities?
Lott's
"Crime and Punishment" chapter has a lot of interesting tidbits. It
starts off stating a fundamental principle of economics: the higher the cost of
something, the less people will do of it. To demonstrate the generality of this
principle, Lott says that when the number of referees were increased from two
to three in the Atlantic Coast Basketball Conference, fouls fell by 34 percent;
fouling became more costly. The American League has more hit batsmen than the
National League, but the difference only appeared after 1973 when the American
League removed its pitchers from the batting lineup in favor of designated
hitters. Not being afraid of being hit themselves, American League pitchers
threw more bean balls; bean balls became cheaper. The same principle applies to
the U.S. crime rate that fell after the death penalty was reinstated, more
prisons were built and concealed-weapon carry laws were enacted. The higher the
cost of a crime, the less people will do of it.
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.