COVID-19 Essay Question

Question

Based on your political beliefs, would you never have implemented a quarantine and left it up to people to self-quarantine? If no, do you agree with all the government interventions that have been rolled out and/or are about to be rolled out in order to help individuals/businesses/industries affected by the quarantine? Please frame both in context of how they are consistent with your overall political/economic views or why this would be an exception if they’re not consistent with your general views.

Tl;dr

If I were the ruler of the galaxies, I would have never implemented a quarantine and left it up to people to self-quarantine.

I can’t entirely agree with the government interventions that have been rolled out or are about to be rolled out. There are some measures, though, with which I agree. Namely, the removal of the bureaucratic barriers that hinder markets from working more efficiently like testing regulations, occupational licensing, allowing for alternative supply chains to obtain resources, etc.

Context

I would let the market handle the issue at hand. The main problem with the COVID-19 pandemic is not the virus, per se, but the changes in relative scarcity caused by the virus. To me, the biggest scarcity issue is not the lack of hospital beds or test kits, but knowledge. The “knowledge problem” is that there is no centralized repository of knowledge, even if the CDC, FDA, or other government agency claims to be in that role. Knowledge is diffused among many people and is incredibly messy. The same nugget of information can appear to be contradictory to different people under different circumstances. The market mechanism, or price system, works because of the knowledge problem, not despite. 

In a perfect (libertarian) world, the media would report on the new concern from a trusted, privately-run nonprofit research institute that looks at pandemics. The Pandemonia Institute would be among several research institutes that have access to reported medical data, of course, via online medical records. As the media reports and concern increases, medical experts would suggest self-quarantine while the mitigation/suppression options begin to emerge. From there, we would see cooperation at the localized level, communities, and up, to address the epidemic at hand. Businesses would continue to run, as usual, making the necessary adjustments. Given how the particular virus is affecting different demographics, responses should be different for different communities. So the localized cooperation should be the best, at least from an epistemological perspective.

We’re not in a perfect world. We have a government that, throughout history, has exercised both edges of its sword. This fact is the libertarian concern. On one side, the monopoly on force has, in theory, reduced the destructiveness of violent organizations competing for market share. The other sharp edge has allowed the state to expand in power and scope, brewing and exasperating societal iniquities while often getting in the way of good, ole civil society. 

We also have a state that has always jumped in at any crisis, from legitimate to completely made-up, like Trump’s “Border Crisis.” The government MUST do something. Not because it will help, but because its constituents demand it out of uncertainty and fear, and because it is the opportunity to increase government scope–every government official’s desire.

Herein lies the problem. 

We have to be cautious of the institutional environment behind particular epistemic systems, or arrangements of the gathering and formation of knowledge. Koppl (2006) states that “epistemic systems are social processes viewed from the perspective of their tendency to help or frustrate the production of truth.” When it comes to the institutional environment of governments, disseminating truth might run into some roadblocks. 

Let’s agree on a few points: 

1) Public servants are self-interested. 

2) Medical and other government “experts” are also subject to the institutional incentives of engaging with said civil servants. 

3) Even with voters sharing a common interest–“BEAT THE VIRUS!”–they are ignorant of the right way to reach that goal. To be sure, they are rationally ignorant of virtually all public policy questions as the costs of being informed outweigh the benefits. 

4) And, there is a tendency for both laypersons and experts to “adjust their opinions away from the obvious truth in order to conform to majority opinion” (Koppl 2006).

Reasonable, right?

Not only are we, as constituents, pretty ignorant on the whole issue, so is the government (and its respective medical experts). Because the data we have is unreliable and biased, we lack the evidence that shows whether mandatory lockdowns and quarantines will, indeed, work to mitigate or suppress the pandemic. It is not biased out of malice, but out of the current scarce conditions where we don’t have the testing capabilities to capture a good sample of the infected population. “We don’t know if we are off by a factor of three or 300.” 

In other words, it is by no means clear that quarantining measures being implemented by governments are less costly than simply allowing markets to share information, allocate testing equipment, and mitigate the result of the virus spread without massive disruptions to people’s lives.

Given that lack of evidence, the state is still quick to action and quick to disregard the economic and social tradeoffs. How will shutting down schools help solve a problem of which we have such terrible data? Especially, when students, who may very well be infected, might now be at home with an elderly family member? 

What about the economic implications of completely shutting down businesses? We do not have the appropriate cost/benefit analysis to make these types of heavy-handed calls. In other words, will the mandatory quarantines end up being worse than taking a more level-headed, and localized approach to the situation? 

The state, however, is borne out of its ability to capitalize on its power and mobilize society. Unfortunately, it doesn’t have to prove that it’s done the necessary due diligence to take any action it decides to take. Fear and panic can grant it the appropriate authority.

The measures employed by the government, however, are expected. Given that we expect the government to act swiftly and with a heavy hand, there are less terrible ways of doing things. Professor Tyler Cowen lays out a few public policy proposals to help during the crisis in this document. Many of the policy suggestions involve removing or relaxing annoying restrictions that have typically hindered the allocation of goods and services like tariffs/taxes, labor laws, and price controls. It also includes reasonable “state capacity” suggestions like encouraging innovation via prizes and idea protections. And, finally, unemployment insurance and loan contract extensions to help those who are, for now, unable to participate in the market economy.

These suggestions do not necessarily fall outside of the “libertarian purview” because the current state was and continues to be built outside of the libertarian purview. The US government makes up about a fifth of the country’s gross domestic product. So, it makes sense to use the government’s capabilities to help soften the blow and encourage the rebounding of productivity as opposed to merely sitting idle. It might also be important to note that some, if not most, of the fragility in the market economy is due to previous government action. 

The Fed’s preemptive actions are not likely to stimulate the economy. In a world of meager interest rates, an expansionary policy will have little effect. As a result, we are left with government stimulus packages. Some of these might work, but many will not. 

In sum

From a practical libertarian standpoint, the main concern with the intervention is the government’s role after we’ve “defeated” the virus. I wouldn’t be surprised if a new agency pops up that performs medical testing at airports or large gatherings. In the name of national security, it will double down on surveillance, giving the state more control over our personal lives and medical data. Though presented innocuously, it has the potential of serious infringement of liberty for a variety of different groups of people. 

To be sure, several deregulatory measures are in line with the libertarian ideal of progressing toward a freer society. Our health care system, as expensive as it is, is better able to handle the capacity than other developed countries around the world. What’s more, is that it would be able to handle this overwhelming demand even more by removing the bureaucratic barriers in the way of biomedical manufacturers producing and distributing equipment around the country. As Jeffrey Tucker points out, “had we left this issue entirely to the private sector, which would have brought a Coronavirus test to you as quickly as you can order a pizza.” 

If we come out of this crisis with industries deregulated, we should be able to swallow the massive deficit spending to curb the economic disruption as a result of the current quarantining measures.

Don’t Judge My Shopping Therapy!

Photo by freestocks.org on Unsplash

Are you a rational shopper?

Marketers traditionally rely on metrics that model consumers as “rational” decision makers, but the history of marketing is full of poor branding and producing decisions made by companies based on what they thought consumers would want…only to find out they didn’t. According to research quoted in this Forbes article, “78% of consumers believe that they are fundamentally rational when they shop. Despite this fact, 76% of data experts claim that consumers are fundamentally irrational – making purchases based on boredom, tiredness and even the choice of music playing in a store.” 

This research suggests shopping is an emotional affair for people and those emotions aren’t always positive. One study revealed that “a fifth of consumers say that they find shopping stressful – even when shopping online.” Marketing metrics that don’t take into account people’s “irrationality” are, therefore, bound to fail. 

But is this true? Some individuals may lack the awareness to articulate what they feel and know, to quantify their own desires and justify their actions in terms that appropriately persuade others of the rightness of their decisions. But it’s wrong to label an individual’s choices as “irrational” simply because of this lack of articulation. To label a person’s choices as irrational is to imply that they are wrong. 

This type of thinking often flows from adherence to the traditional view of rational action used in neoclassical economic models, where economists assume people have “perfect information.” With perfect information, people know all relevant information to make the best choices  and they can articulate said knowledge. This is rarely true in real life where people face asymmetric information problems and cannot always articulate the local knowledge they possess. Thus, when people behave in ways that differ from predicted by neoclassical models, many people leap to call them “irrational.”

Ludwig Von Mises

But lack of perfect information does not invalidate the concept of human rationality. Rationality, at its core, is far more simple and far more powerful. Humans make choices they believe will provide the greatest satisfaction according to their subjective values with the information they have on hand. These values are not only unique to each individual, they are unique to the circumstances under which a good or service is experienced. Changes in our physical environment may well impact people’s emotions. But it then follows that if circumstances change, emotions will change, and thus people’s values will also change. Our subjective values are not created in a vacuum or permanently frozen once created. And if our values change, to be rational our actions must change too. As economist Ludwig Von Mises states in chapter 2 of Human Action, “No intelligent man can doubt that the behavior of men with regard to potatoes and every other commodity is variable. Different individuals value the same things in a different way, and valuations change with the same individuals with changing conditions…”

The Forbes’s article’s plea for marketers to consider the broader consumer experience is a good reminder to the “CX” – or customer experience – community that analyzing “uninspired quantification” is not the same thing as understanding why people act the way they do. Relying on customer survey metrics and scales is no substitute for the greatest market feedback system – the price system. Author Brian Solis’s grand goal – that the CX community focus less on isolated shopping incidents and more on consumer’s “specific needs and how these are manifested in particular emotions through their journey and lifecycle” is perhaps too ambitious to ever be fully realized. Customers can’t always predict future circumstances and how their own desires will change. That said, realizing people’s decisions cannot be entirely captured on a spreadsheet is certainly a step in the right direction. 

Scandalous Loopholes: You’d Do It, Too!

This year, we’ve watched journalists uncover multiple instances of questionable behavior in the college admissions and financial aid process. Just google “college admissions” AND “scandal” and you will find all the evidence that you need that people are trying to bend the letter of the law in order to save some cash. From turning over guardianship of one’s kid to qualify for more financial aid to bribing coaches to recruit one’s child to get accepted to Ivy League schools, parents and students are looking for loopholes to attain that coveted college degree.

Whenever I hear the word “loophole”, I think about incentives. Incentives are both monetary and nonmonetary costs or benefits that individuals respond to when choosing between alternative actions. In other words, what motivates people to do things—or not do things.

We all know that when the price of something increases, we buy less of it. But what’s going on in the mind of the individual? When the price of a good rises, will the individual pay the higher price and buy less of something else? Or, will they  substitute the good for a good with a lower price tag? However, as the stakes get higher, the higher the price. And, substitutes sometimes become harder to find. Individuals then look for other ways to cheat the system. How can I still get the good I want, at a lower price without having to stop purchasing it altogether? Think of couponing or searching for discounts or sales. Individuals are incentivized to act differently, searching for alternatives, as the price increases. We want our cake and eat it, too!

College is expensive! I don’t know about you, but I am still paying off my student loans. Student loan debt has steadily increased for the past 10 years. Not just for students, but for parents as well.

Both students and parents are searching for alternatives to taking out a quarter of a MILLION dollars to pay for a 4 year degree. Granted, the average student loan debt for students was just under $30,000, while the average debt for parents was closer to $35,000. But that is still a lot of money! Parents and students look for anything that can lower their bottom line, from “life hacks” to AP and community college courses to loopholes in financial aid.

When news about the scandals broke, there was a huge backlash. Many acted surprised! Unsurprisingly, though,they are responding to incentives! Because college costs so much money nowadays, most parents and students can’t afford the ticket price and look for alternatives such as seeking out counselors and education consultants to find ways to still get the college degree but without taking out a second mortgage. 
However, incentives only help us predict how individuals will act, or at the very least, see trends of behavior when a good becomes more expensive. Incentives do not tell us if what Lora Georgieva did was right. They tell us what people are likely to do, given the costs and benefits. Even though it wasn’t exactly ethical to get a bigger financial package by transferring guardianship of a student to the neighbor so that the student looks to have come from a home with zero income, you would’ve done it as well had you known! Especially, if you knew it was a perfectly legal maneuver! Because, well, we find ways to minimize our costs and maximize our benefits. Economics teaches us to find the reason behind why people act the way they do. For better or worse, it makes “scandals” not so scandalous at all! Who can blame those who take advantage of the system when all of the incentives were saying:

I Am Woman, Let Me Speak?

Episode #9: I Am Woman, Let Me Speak?

Time for some girl talk about how we talk about women and their career choices. As working women, Kathryn and Kenzi discover they have strong opinions on the matter. (Not that expertise mattered when it came to parenting!)

Didn’t know economics could be so relevant? Want to discover more ways it relates to your daily life? Sign up for AJ’s Morning Readings here!

Don’t Tell Me What To Do! Economics and Advice

Episode #8: Don’t Tell Me What To Do! Economics and Advice

Kathryn and Kenzi give advice on something they have no experience with, but who doesn’t love giving advice? But is our advice the best advice that you can take? Economics says otherwise. Also, Kenzi’s a terrible student.

Click here to subscribe to AJ’s Morning Readings, so you too can be informed and smart like us. And here’s the article we talk about in the podcast.

There’s no such thing as a free lunch?

Episode #4: There’s no such thing as a free lunch?

Wait a second…but what if we didn’t PAY for it? Kenzi and Kathryn talk about free lunch at conferences, Double Tree cookies, and opportunity costs: how we actually pay for “free” things.

“Grab some coffee and a bagel and listen to Kenzi Dickhudt and Kathryn Waldron humor you into appreciating Econ…”

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Rebekah Molloy

Virginia Tech

Music Credit: https://www.purple-planet.com

Get Your Hands Off My Things! A Tribute to Harold Demsetz

The economics community is mourning the death of another great economist. Dr. Harold Demsetz passed away January 4th at the ripe age of 88.  He spent his life working on studying property rights: where they come from, how they are established, and how they affect the world we live in. He was never awarded the Nobel Prize (he should have at least split a prize with Armen Alchian), but he nevertheless revolutionized the way we study property rights. It seems like every semester, our professors assign at least one of his pieces to discuss. Demsetz has been cited over 60,000 times. One of his most cited work is Toward a Theory of Property Rights, written in 1972, yet still relevant today.

In honor of Demsetz, the writers at ReasonablEconomics share their favorite (and more obscure) examples and application of property rights.

Kathryn: My favorite example is definitely cafeteria seats. At my undergraduate college, people laid claim to their desired spot at the cafeteria tables by laying down a napkin and silverware before going to get food. A solo napkin was not sufficient to keep prowling seat stealers at bay – a single utensil only marginally more protective. (And a cup on its own suggested the last user of the table was sloppy when it came to busing dishes). There was no official set of rules dictating these practices upon entering the cafeteria – these property rights emerged over time as students sought to navigate the chaos of lunch. But woe to the Freshman who didn’t yet know the rules and came back with a full tray of food, only to find their seat taken!

Danielle: Responding to Kathryn, I am currently writing this at a coffee shop where I half-stalked a table I wanted until the person sitting at it moved. I obviously claimed it by putting down my jacket on the table. I really appreciate the uncomfortable social etiquette of asking someone if you can sit at a table that has an extra chair. It’s the coffee shop’s table, but it’s definitely *their* chair until the informal rights transfer takes place.

Kenzi: Mice do not respect my property rights. I awoke one morning to find mice poop throughout my kitchen even though I’m the one paying rent! My food is properly stored in my cabinet, but they still nibbled my chocolate bar and popcorn kernels (who knew we both liked the same things?!). According to most property rights systems, the one who pays, owns. I paid for the chocolate and popcorn, yet they stole it from me (and contaminated the rest of it!). Side note: my wonderful roommates purged and sanitized everything while I was away.  Unfortunately, mice and other pesky, unwanted house guests do not follow standard property rights systems that I live by. This just shows that property rights create order only when everyone follows them.

Kevin: As a newlywed, I find property rights to be of the utmost importance these days. I am now, per the retired Omaha judge who married us, supposed to share everything with my wife. I am paraphrasing a bit, but that’s the main gist. I’m OK with some things being communal in our apartment, but one thing I am not budging on is the swivel chair I use for reading and lounging. We bought that chair specifically for me to be comfortable reading my economics books (here’s a great one by Demsetz). If anyone were to ask my wife whose chair that belongs to, she’d say “We both paid for it, but it’s Kevin’s.” The reason for claiming property rights over the chair is to avoid the costs of having to tell my wife to get off the chair when I want to use it. “Get ya booty off that chair, woman,” doesn’t usually go over very well. So, by having the property rights, I can avoid the uncomfortable confrontation over my sitting in the most comfortable chair.

Alex: I always think of my parking lot at work when someone brings up property rights. Right now, there’s a flat fee for anyone to take any spot. This leads to frequently full parking lots close to my building if you arrive near 9 AM. Without pricing of individual spots, thus essentially communal, we have to use a different method of allocation: first come, first serve. I solve this issue by waking up at 7 AM and getting to work by 8:15, 8:30 at the latest. But I would absolutely pay a premium to own a spot and not have to be at work until 9 AM every day.

All of these examples show how prevalent property rights are in our daily lives. Most of us hear the words “property rights” and think only of formal property rights, property rights determined legally by contracts, such as renting an apartment or buying a house. But as our examples above show, informal property rights—property rights determined by common custom and everyday behavior—are just as prevalent and important. We all have to share the world with other people – creative ways of determining property rights help our everyday lives run a little more smoothly.  

Sock Exchanges and the Utility of Gift Giving

Episode #3: Sock Exchanges and the Utility of Gift Giving

Happy holidays and Merry Christmas! Do you struggle with getting the right gift? Maybe it’s because of utility! Kathryn and Kenzi discuss how economics helps us understand why giving gifts is just so hard and why every gift exchange should include socks. 

Music Credit: https://www.purple-planet.com

Bacon and Elasticities

Episode #2: Bacon and Elasticities

What’s your favorite breakfast food? In this episode of Katallaxy, Kathryn and Kenzi discuss the elasticities of breakfast. After this episode, Kenzi is debating whether she needs to hold an intervention for Kathryn’s obsession with bacon. Listen in to discover just one more way economics applies to your daily life.

Music Credit: https://www.purple-planet.com