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A Journal for Western Man |
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----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- Mr. Stolyarov's Articles on Helium.com ----------------------------------- Mr. Stolyarov's Articles on Associated Content ----------------------------------- Mr. Stolyarov's Articles on GrasstopsUSA.com ----------------------------------- ----------------------------------- -----------------------------------
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With the almost constant
statist apologetics we hear from many government and academic economists [1] it is hard to believe that the discipline
of economics was once a thorn in the side of the state and its political elite.
So commonplace are fallacious economic arguments advocating state control that
it sometimes seems that refutation of all of these arguments has become a case
of cutting the heads off the Hydra a tiring and fruitless endeavor. But if economics is to
become an instrument of freedom and prosperity instead of an instrument of
statism, [2] then there are certain fundamental fallacies that must be
continually challenged and discredited. Chief among these is the persistent non sequitur from externality to coercion
that is, the bogus conclusion that coercion is a proper means to solve
problems involving economic externalities. One of the most blatant
examples of this non sequitur
occurs in discussions of the "free rider problem" and the alleged
solution of government provision of so-called "public goods."[3] This is a particularly insidious economic
theory that bears a great deal of the responsibility of derailing economics
into the ditch of statism. The
"problem" of free riding The "free rider
problem" occurs in situations in which a person derives a "positive
externality" from the actions of another that is, a benefit that he did
not pay for. This occurs in situations where the beneficial effect of an action
is "nonexcludable," meaning that the benefits cannot be withheld from
people who had nothing to do with the action. For example, a beekeeper
may keep bees solely as a means of producing honey. However, an ancillary
effect of this activity an externality is that the bees will pollinate
flowers in surrounding properties, benefiting the owners of those properties at
no cost to them.[4]
Nor is there any practical means by which the beekeeper can produce his honey
without conferring this benefit on his neighbors. Thus, the "good"
provided to surrounding property owners is nonexcludable. Observe that this situation
involves no detriment to anyone, let alone any violation of rights. The
beekeeper chooses to buy the bees because he expects to be better off by virtue
of this action. Moreover, as an unintended consequence of his purchase,
surrounding property owners also find themselves enjoying a benefit from the
bees, at no cost to them. This may seem like a
fortuitous event even something to be celebrated. And yet, there is a
"problem" or, to be more precise, a free rider "problem." The problem is not that
anyone has aggressed against anyone else. It is not that anyone's rights have
been violated. It is not even that anyone has suffered any detriment at all.
Rather, it is a "problem" only when compared to what might have been done instead a problem
of allegedly inefficient underproduction of the good in question. In other
words, the problem is that, if not for the nonexcludability of the good, things
could potentially have been
even better. To illustrate how things
might have been better, consider again our beekeeper and his neighbors. If the
beekeeper possessed some means to prevent surrounding property owners from
benefiting from his bees, without detracting from his own enjoyment, then he
would be able to negotiate with them to pay him for the benefit. Since he would
then derive an additional benefit from his bees the payment he would have
an incentive to keep even more
bees, benefiting both himself and his neighbors to an even greater extent. Nor
is this merely a zero-sum game. Rather, under certain assumptions,[5] it turns out that there is some level of
payment at which the surrounding property owners would be indifferent between
the excludable and the nonexcludable situation, whereas the beekeeper would be
demonstrably better off i.e., there would be a Pareto-efficient gain.[6] This kind of analysis has
led many economists to conclude that the ancillary benefit from the bees is a
"public good" and that, therefore, the neighbors should be forced to contribute to the cost of this
good. This is supposed to be justified on the basis that the neighbor will
enjoy a benefit that will, according to the economist, outweigh the cost. And
yet, regardless of the benefits that they enjoy, it cannot be said that the
neighbors have in any way solicited this good or the forced arrangement
advocated by the economist. Thus, the essence of this proposal is that the
neighbors be forced to pay for an unsolicited
good.[7] Moreover, this is not merely a special
case. Rather, the theory of "public goods" is a doctrine that
advocates forced payment for unsolicited goods as a general economic ideal,
applicable whenever a person obtains any benefit that is nonexcludable and
which does not detract from the enjoyment of the good by others. Finding
a Pareto-efficient solution In assessing arrangements
to solve the "problem" of free riding, economists claim to be guided
by the principle of Pareto efficiency. That is, they claim to put forward
arrangements that will make at least some people better off without any detriment to others, in terms of
their own happiness. If they are serious about this efficiency criterion then
any proposed arrangement must surely accord with the preferences of the people
involved, as revealed through their actual
behavior. It follows that the ultimate test of any allegedly Pareto-efficient
arrangement must surely be to convince all of the parties affected that they
are better off (or at least, no worse off) under the proposed arrangement.
Indeed, the consent and agreement of all parties must be regarded as the sine qua non of Pareto efficiency. Unfortunately, this is not
usually how economic analysis of these problems proceeds. Rather, such analysis
is frequently conducted on the basis that the economist knows more about the
preferences of the people involved in the situation than those people do
themselves. In particular, dubious mathematical assumptions are often used to
steamroll the implicitly revealed or even explicitly declared preferences of
those actually taking the actions to "prove," on the basis of a
mathematical model, that they are really
happier under the economist's desired arrangement, even if they may complain to
the contrary. In considering such
analyses, it is important to note that theorems in mathematical economics that
are used to demonstrate the potential for Pareto-efficient gains are often
crucially dependent upon certain doubtful assumptions, such as low transaction
costs, that may or may not be present in actual situations involving
nonexcludable goods.[8]
While mathematical models may be highly useful as an approximating tool for
predicting, explaining, or even suggesting human action, these models must not
be used to trump the revealed preferences of people taking the actions as a
test of Pareto efficiency. Perhaps, in our beekeeping
situation, there is some arrangement that can be made between the beekeeper and
his neighbors to make them all happier, and perhaps there is not. A
mathematical model may shed light on this question and may even be used to
convince the beekeeper and his neighbors of the merits of a particular
arrangement. This would be an entrepreneurial solution, which does not involve
coercion against any of the parties involved. It is one thing to propose a
voluntary arrangement on the basis of an idealized mathematical analysis, but
it is entirely another to propose a coercive arrangement under which the
utility curves concocted by the economist are allowed to trump the revealed
preferences of the parties themselves. It is dubious to suggest
that an arrangement that could be undertaken voluntarily by the parties, but is
not, will make them all better off. And it is especially dubious to suggest
that such an arrangement must be imposed on them by force rather than by their
own agreement. After all, if all parties genuinely stand to gain from some arrangement,
according to their own
preferences, then there is no reason why they should refuse to undertake such
an arrangement voluntarily. Or, to put it another way, the absence of any voluntary activity by the
parties especially when proposed arrangements are put to the parties and
declined is prima facie
evidence that there is no
potential for Pareto-efficient gains. Even if we have no
objection to coercion per se,[9] there are nonetheless sound economic
reasons to reject coercive "solutions" to any alleged inefficiency
problem due to free riding. Since an entrepreneurial arrangement involves no
coercion against any of the parties, it ensures that all of the parties will
enjoy ex ante gains. However,
there is no such guarantee under a coercive arrangement, and it is nonsense to
suppose that the government is able to determine arrangements for
Pareto-efficient gains any better than those parties who actually stand to gain
from such arrangements. Indeed, arguments in public-choice theory, not to
mention our actual experiences with government provision of goods and services,
give us every reason to believe that at least someone will get screwed. Thus, even if there were some arrangement that could be made
between the parties to affect such an efficiency gain, it would by no means
follow that this arrangement must involve government provision of goods or any
other coercive measure.[10]
On the contrary, this is the opposite
of what we should expect. If all
of the parties stand to gain, then there is no reason to expect that coercion
will be required; there is every reason to expect an entrepreneurial (i.e.,
noncoercive) solution. Indeed, there is a fundamental contradiction between the
criterion of Pareto efficiency and the use of force against those who are to be
made "better off." Those who advocate
government provision of goods or other coercive measures as the solution to the
"problem" of free riding frequently suffer from a lack of imagination
in considering entrepreneurial solutions. In fact, there are plenty of ways in
which entrepreneurial activity may allow the parties to arrange their affairs
to take advantage of Pareto-efficient gains. Our beekeeper may enter into an assurance contract with his neighbors,
whereby he agrees to purchase the bees or purchase more bees only if they will pay him
some of the cost. He may decide to buy out
his free riding neighbors if he feels that the benefit he is about to provide
to their property makes it a good deal. Or he may think of some other idea for
a voluntary agreement. And of course, it may even be that there is no way to
achieve a Pareto-efficient gain due to high transaction costs, or some other
reason. Thus, although the
"problem" of free riding does indeed identify situations that involve
the potential for further
gains, it most certainly does not follow that government provision of goods or
other coercive arrangements will improve the situation. Those who advocate
coercive arrangements to obtain Pareto efficiency gains are forced to ignore
the revealed preferences of the people involved, and thereby commit a
fundamental economic error. By arguing for coercion as a means of solving the
"problem" of positive externalities, they elevate the policy of
forced payment for unsolicited goods to the status of an economic ideal. This
is surely one of the most conspicuously tyrannical arguments in modern
economics. Ben O'Neill
is a researcher at the Notes [1] With the notable exceptions of the [2] This should not be taken as a
suggestion that economics should not be a value-free science. Rather, it is a
suggestion that economics should be correct,
and that if it is, it will most certainly promote individual liberty at the
expense of state coercion. [3] For a refutation of the fallacy of
the economic theory of "public goods" see Hoppe, H.H. (1989)
"Fallacies of the Public Goods Theory and the Production of
Security." The Journal of Libertarian
Studies 9(1). Hoppe summarizes the situation as follows: In spite of its many
followers, the whole public goods theory is faulty, flashy reasoning, ridden
with internal inconsistencies, non sequiturs, appealing to and playing on
popular prejudices and assumed beliefs, but with no scientific merit
whatsoever. (p. 27) [4] Similarly, surrounding property
owners may plant more flowers in their garden solely for the aesthetic benefit
they provide. However, as an ancillary effect another externality the
beekeeper will benefit from the greater supply of flowers for pollination by
his bees. [5] Such as the absence of, or at least
a low level of, transaction costs. [6] A Pareto-efficient gain is one in
which at least one person is made better off and no other person is made worse off. [7] Hoppe presents a reductio ad absurdum of this principle: You, gentle reader, have
never hired me as an economic consultant. You have not taken advantage of this
marvelous opportunity open to you. However, whether you know it or not, whether
you realize it or not, whether you appreciate it or not, you actually benefit
from my economic analysis. You are thus a selfish, chiseling free-rider on
these multifaceted benefits I have long provided for you, gratis. But now it is
time to stop you from exploiting me regarding these spillover gains you have long
enjoyed for free. It is time for you to pay your fair share! Accordingly, I am
hereby presenting you with this bill for $100,000, a bargain at the price. See Hoppe, H.H. (2003) The Myth
of National Defense: Essays on the Theory and History of Security Production,
p. 310. Of course, as is evident
from legal prohibitions on demands for payment for unsolicited goods and
services (usually enacted under consumer-protection laws), governments will not
allow such an absurd principle to prevail in private industry. And hence, as is
common in government action, absurdity is compounded by manifest hypocrisy. [8] This is not to say that
mathematical economists are "incorrect" in formulating their models.
It is notoriously difficult to construct mathematical models of human behavior
and some degree of idealization is almost invariably required. The point is
that these models are often used incorrectly as a basis to tell people what really makes them happy, despite their
protestations to the contrary. [9] And of course, we should have an
objection. [10] To those unfamiliar with arguments
in political economy, the government provision of goods is coercive because it
involves taxation, i.e., the coercive acquisition of money by government. Recommend this page.
This TRA feature has been edited in accordance with TRAs Statement of Policy. Click here to return to TRA's Issue CXXVIII Index. Learn about Mr. Stolyarov's novel, Eden against the Colossus, here.. Read Mr. Stolyarov's new comprehensive treatise, A Rational Cosmology, explicating such terms as the universe, matter, space, time, sound, light, life, consciousness, and volition, here.
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