Monday, May 31, 2004
Externalities Everywhere
"The good news for Singapore's army of clandestine chewers: gum is going on sale legally for the first time in 12 years. The bad news: if you want some, you will have to register as a gum user and show an identity card every time you buy a packet. ... Nineteen 'medicinal' brands of gum such as Nicorette will now be available as part of a free trade agreement with America, but only on strict tightly-policed conditions. Anyone found trading illicitly will risk two years in jail, and a $S5,000 (1,650 Sterling) fine."
The article goes on to mention unsightly splats of disposed gum on sidewalks, etc.
Externalities (and antidotes) everywhere.
Sunday, May 30, 2004
Tort Costs
Denmark 0.4
UK 0.6
France 0.8
Canada 0.8
Japan 0.8
Switzerland 0.9
Spain 1.0
Australia 1.1
Belgium 1.1
Germany 1.3
Italy 1.7
U.S. 1.9
Depending on how one counts, we are the champions.
What explains the differences? Is it culture? Is it economics? Can we ever know?
America's lack of a loser-pays (contingency fee) system has been thought to be one cause of the problem. Defenders of our system argue that it is the best way to level the playing field.
Interestingly, the U.K. is the favorite example of loser-pays, the EU countries are thought to be closer to the U.K. and Australia's is an amalgam of U.S. and U.K. approaches. Jane Stapleton gives many more details.
The FT data do show that the U.K. and the U.S. are at opposite poles and that Australia is about half-way between them.
Bigger samples and we can get beyond the anecdotal. Good international cross-sectional comparisons are still the way to go.
Friday, May 28, 2004
Easy Bets
The European papers are full of solutions. Ban fat people from restaurants? It is seen by some as the logical extension of banning smokers from bars. Talk about slippery slopes! Many English are concenred( embarrassed) that the Irish did it first.
In a recent satire piece in the WSJ, P.J. O'Rourke speculated on the many benefits of the U.S. recusing itself from the world (Iraq, the UN, etc.). He concluded with the thought that they would like us again; they would line up to see our films, buy or magazines, watch our TV shows (or copy them).
Actually, we export; they import. Trade surplus!
Monday, May 24, 2004
Three Hypotheses
Can it be that culture and politics take a back seat to people's preferences? That the latter are remarkably similar over the world? That markets everywhere respond and cater to these?
Visit the suburbs of European cities, not their touristy centers (Disneylands for adults). Absent better measures, consider that shopping,living and playing are much more similar than dissimilar.
One day we'll measure the extent of similarity. It is a good bet that the three hypotheses will stand up.
Friday, May 14, 2004
Cynics and Exploiters
In fact, this episode is one that legitimately earns the label "exploitation", a term that is widely used but seldom so applicable.
The new NCAA President, Myles Brand, is a former university president and he explains all of this much better than I can. His words are cited in a piece in today's WSJ by Stefan Fatsis, who notes that Dr. Brand refers to critics as "self-anointed radical reformers and incorrigble cynics." Yup. It's very hard not to be cynical when colleges take in billions but hide behind sweetheart-deal exemptions from anti-trust rules that assure that the workers get almost nothing, rarely even a college education.
The real exploitation occurs when lawmakers regulate this way.
Light blogging while I am traveling. But, you never know.
Thursday, May 13, 2004
More Democratization of Luxury
My colleague Berokh Khoshnevis is close to developing usable robots that can build homes. He notes that construction is the last major industry to be untouched by modern production methods. His work will soon change that.
Not only will construction costs fall dramatically (Berokh envisions building a home in a day) but the design options available to most of us will also expand significantly. Both are auspicious.
This morning's LA Times includes a wonderful essay by Cara Mullio and Jennifer Volland about the Killingsworth home in Long Beach, California. Homes like this (and many others not even imagined yet) will soon be available to most of us.
Wednesday, May 12, 2004
Capital Markets, the Web, Human Well-Offness and ButtKickers
Why not? Buy and sell intellectual property rights on the Web and cut out some more middlemen. Actually, middlemen and other specialists will always be on hand where they can add value. It's just that their fees will now be facing new pressures.
Anything that reduces barriers between investors and inventors is to be welcomed.
Speaking of an improved quality of life, the WSJ's Walter Mossberg writes about the ButtKicker: "A Killer Amp --for Your Desk Chair ... Device Attaches to a Seat To Let Users Literally Feel The Vibes of Music, Games ... Is this a Great country or what? Thanks to technology, you soon will be able to not only hear your favorite music and the sound effects of videogames, but to actually feel these sounds, and not just in your heart and soul."
In a busy shared office space, these would go well with the headphones.
Tuesday, May 11, 2004
Consumer Sovereignty
These are the new high-tech kind, enhanced with specially made video entertainment clips (Dick Clark's is big), programmable to dribble out winnings at an optimal rate to keep players playing even as they slowly lose -- and with a stylized old-slots look, complete with wheels, beeps and chimes that maintains the "feel" that players like. Rivlin's piece suggests that these devices have the same hold on the beyond-60s set that video games have on younger people.
"The makers of slot machines may rely on the lure of life-changing jackpots to attract customers but the machines' ability to hook so deeply into a player's cerebral cortex derives from the more powerful human feedback mechanisms, a phenomenon behavioral scientists call infrequent random enforcement, or 'intermittent reward' ... 'The slot machine is brilliantly designed from a behavioral psychology perspective,' says Nancy Perry, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine ..."
Rivlin's coverage mentions no cognitive scientists among the creators. There is a mathematician that helps to fine tune the odds but the creative side is all industry types. They somehow get it right without PhDs. It's their business and that's what profit-inspired competition routinely does.
I simply must compare all this to the white elephants alluded to in yesterday's blog which are failures because their creators have no clue about what people want. How can they? No competition, no profit and only specialized knowledge of what people should want.
Monday, May 10, 2004
Social Engineering is Hard Work
Let's see. People cannot drive through it (they can "transfer" cars onto and off shuttles and they can ride the Eurostar train) and airline deregulation in Europe has dropped cross-Channel airfares. My London-Berlin flight last year cost $25 (and $35 to have the ticket express mailed to LA). And this is Europe where gasoline prices are much higher than anything Americans have seen.
What do planners in Los Angeles want to build? High-speed rail to remote airports and high-speed rail to compete with north-south intrastate air and auto travel.
Just like the Chunnel, the price tags quoted are in the billions, almost all local planners and politicians are on-board. The proposals are seen as good ways to "get people out of their cars."
Sunday, May 09, 2004
Tough Mom Needed
The Economist also chimes in with respect to Germany's economic problems and the slow pace of labor market reforms. Writing about an important reform commission: " ... The Hartz Commission, established to reform the labour market and create new jobs, has sociologists on board but not a single economist."
Economists aside, is there a Margaret Thatcher in Germany's future? It took a very tough lady to change Great Britain's course. Germany's troubles require no less. Mother's Day is a good time to start the search
Postscript to yesterday's blog. Anna Schwartz adds that an important part of the story is Friedman's steady work as a popularizer of important ideas.
Saturday, May 08, 2004
Ideas Matter
"In an April 15, 1988 WSJ op-ed, I wrote, 'No major institution in the U.S. has so poor a record of performance over so long a period as the Federal Reserve, yet so high a public recognition.' That conclusion was, I believe, amply justified by our book and experience in the quarter century after its publication. Fortunately, as I wrote in a WSJ op-ed of August 19, 2003 ('The Fed's Thermostat'), it no longer is."
"Since the mid-1980s, central banks around the world have reacted to the mounting evidence of monetary research by accepting the view that their basic responsibility is to produce price stability. More important, they have succeeded to a remarkable extent as they have discovered that far from being a trade-off between price stability and monetary stability, they are mutually supporting. The variability of prices is less by an order of magnitude since the mid-1980s than it was before, not only in the U.S., but also in New Zealand (the first country to adopt an explicit inflation target), Great Britain, Euroland, Japan and elsewhere."
Ideas matter and good ideas have a way of being heard. It may take time but it is powerful.
Friday, May 07, 2004
Virtuous Cycles
Indeed, there is increasing evidence for a virtuous cycle, whereby prosperity and property rights reinforce each other and co-evolve. This is probably the best explanation for our long-term increasing affluence, longevity, etc. The latest Cato Journal features yet another contribution to these ideas, by Bernard Heitger.
And the news is even better. The latest Journal of Economic Literature includes a survey by Brian Copeland and M. Scott Taylor which demonstrates that we also get more concern and care for the environment along the way. Higher incomes are also good for the environment.
What's not to like?
Thursday, May 06, 2004
Productivity
There are always two "jokers" involved when one attempts to connect good news like this with rosy forecasts. They are the international scene and the oddball policies that politicians might come up.
It is, therefore, all the more remarkable that economic progress continues. The underlying economy is much stronger than the data show. We get over 5% of annual productivity growth in a system that has to discount the two jokers.
Wednesday, May 05, 2004
Livable Cities
Consider that the top-ten U.S. counties in terms of adding most private sector jobs in 1991-2001 were Maricopa (AZ), Harris (TX), Dallas (TX), Clark (NV), Los Angeles (CA), Orange (CA), San Diego (CA), Cook (IL), Santa Clara (CA) and New York (NY). Not surprisingly, there is very little overlap between these (and the next 20) and the 30 "most livable". (Admittedly the jobs data are for counties, not cities, but the point holds.) Perhaps economic opportunity is no big deal for the list makers.
The most livable are described this way: "Each of this year's 30 Most Livable Communities have developed innovative approaches to prepare for the New Economy through creative strategies, actions, and visions of their leadership."
Is it any wonder that the two lists are distinct?
Tuesday, May 04, 2004
Growth
So, can we "grow our way" out of these deficits? U.S. economic productivity over the last half century has approximately doubled. There are the usual measurement problems but the Cox-Alm data strongly suggest that material well-offness has better than doubled in that time. This performance has been in spite of politics as unusual as the scope and size of government has grown significantly.
No one can predict the future (goes the cliche) but we do all the time. We have no choice. We cannot "know" performance over the next fifty years (the stretch of many doomsday scenarios) but given the choice of a bet on slower growth vs faster growth, I would pick the latter.
Individuals' planning is over a shorter span and this rosy scenario may have limited relevance. Yet, societies do have a longer horizon and doomsday scenarios must be put into long-term perspective. Accelerating productivity is likely as is the relaxation of economic growth "speed limits". This sort of talk occurred in the late 1990s and is now in bad repute. Yet the recent recession was mild. We are all the time too preoccupied with recent events.
Monday, May 03, 2004
Industrial Policy
Much less was heard about the merits of IP when Japan's economy floundered in the 1990s. In fact, the term IP is not much used in the US anymore but, of course, its essence is all around us.
Some of our most regulated markets are land and housing in cities. Land use and land improvement is routinely thought to be the province of local (or state) governments -- which are thought to be implementing some sort of master plan. The nomenclature resonates with just enough people who put normal skepticism aside -- or who may see an opportunity for gain. This is why IP is simply the politicization of markets -- with all of the attendant problems.
Put Eminent Domain Abuse through Google and thousands of sites come up. Most depict episodes that restrict property rights, limit liberties, diminish market efficiency and raise serious equity concerns. What's not to dislike?
Can there be eminent domain without eminent domain abuse. Perhaps not. Bruce Benson has argued that holdout problems are not, by themselves, potent enough to warrant eminent domain powers. Perhaps the only way to limit eminent domain abuse is to jettison eminent domain.
Sunday, May 02, 2004
Footprints and Brainwaves
The newspaper coverage goes along and reports that, "the 8.3-square-mile city has a footprint of 2,747 square miles, ... a swath that would take in most of California ... but the city announced last month that it had shrunk its footprint by 5.7% between 1990 and 2000."
Saturday, May 01, 2004
Transportation Policy
The Economist reports the New York City story: "Higher fares for an unfair racket ... If a city goes to the bother of regulating its taxi industry, it should presumably have the interest of residents at heart. How, then, to explain the system in New York? It benefits neither passengers nor drivers. Instead, most of the proceeds flow to a third group of 'medallion holders' -- the people who own the aluminum badges that give a taxi the right to pick up passengers on the street. The going rate for a medallion is now about $300,000, so they are usually owned by investment companies, investors or partnerships rather than the driver.
"These monopoly franchise rights were granted back in the Depression, when then notion of using rationing to fight deflation seemed like a good idea. In 1937, 11,787 cab licenses were handed out at $10 each. Remarkably, no more medallions were handed out until 1996 when the city desperate for money (again), sold off another 400 ..."
Why does anyone expect politicized systems to do any better?

