Archive for the ‘Econ. 101’ category

What Creates Wealth? Freedom

September 10, 2014

Front Cover

George Gilder talks about what creates wealth in this short video below from Prager University. He talks about knowledge and innovation leading to economic growth. But the most important point he makes in this video is that freedom is the foundation on which knowledge and innovation is expanded and used productively to create economic growth. Here are some excerpts from the video.

“If freedom promotes knowledge and innovation, which leads to economic growth; why don’t all people and Governments embrace it? Innovation is a surprise, it’s unpredictable. This unpredictability makes many people uncomfortable. Their goal is to eliminate surprise. One finds this in all utopian vision, from communism, to socialism, ….in Europe with its failing welfare states and more and more in the US. We see their desire to eliminate surprise in the ever-expanding role played by Government, bigger bureaucracies, more rules, and more regulations. Every new crisis, real or imagined, brings ever more laws….Ironically the ones that benefit from all these regulations are big corporations and their teams of lawyers, lobbyists, and accountants. They’re the only ones who have the resources to untangle the mess and survive it. This drift away from freedom can be reversed, and quickly within a matte of a few years….Because it’s an economy of mind, the future can change as fast as minds can change. The opportunity for dynamic growth exists not only in the US, but all over the world if we’re only courageous enough and free enough to seize it.”

WHAT CREATES WEALTH?

Here are some related quotes by George Gilder from his books  Wealth and Poverty and Knowledge and Power.

“Socialist and totalitarian Governments are doomed to support the past, because creativity is unpredictable, it is also uncontrollable. If the politicians want to have central planning and command, they cannot have dynamism and life. A managed economy is almost by definition a barren one. “

“Knowledge is about the past; Entrepreneurship is about the future regulations are rules based on past experience. Regulators are political appointees responsive to their bosses and to the rules. Only entrepreneurial owners taken their cues from the subtle signals on the crests of creation.”

“Under capitalism, economic power flows not to the intellectual, who manipulates ideas and basks in their light, but to men who gives himself to his ideas and tests them with his own wealth and work.”

“The real issue is between the rule of law and the rule of leveler egalitarianism, between creative excellence and covetous “fairness”, between admiration of achievement versus envy and resentment of it.”

“The leading enemy and obstacle for accomplishment throughout the ages is the philosophy of victimization and socialist redistribution.”

In my opinion Wealth and Poverty is a must read, not only because it will expand your mind, but also because his writing style will be pleasing to your ear buds.

Related ArticleUnleash The Mind, by George Gilder, at austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleCapitalism vs. Crony Capitalism, at austrianaddict.com.

 

Solutions To California’s Drought: Government Fines, or Market Prices.

July 24, 2014

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California’s water shortage due to the drought is being dealt with in typical interventionist fashion. The Government wouldn’t even consider how the free market deals with scarcity. Murray Rothbard wrote about a water shortage that occurred in 1977 in northern California in this article titled, The Water Shortage, (at economicpolicyjournal.com). Time has passed since this was written but the economic principles are as true today as they were in 1977.

FREE MARKET vs. CENTRAL PLANNING

When Government is the supplier a good, whether it’s water, electricity, or healthcare, the first thing that happens when there is a shortage is they blame the consumer for using too much. When electrical use is high during the summer, suppliers always warn consumers to use less electricity because of the strain on the system. Rolling black outs may come into play if use outstrips the ability to supply enough electricity. I’ve always wondered why producers of electricity are always trying to get consumers to use less of their product, even to the point of giving them energy efficient light bulbs. In the free market, producers use advertising to try to increase demand for their product.

The first rule of economics is scarcity. What we desire is greater than the means available to fulfill this desire. These scarce goods have to be rationed one way or another. If there were no scarcity, there would be no need to economize on any good. Prices ration scarce resources in the free market. Bureaucrats and planning boards ration scarce resources in a centrally planned system.

ROTHBARD EXPLAINS SCARCITY, SHORTAGE, RATIONING

I’m going to let Rothbard take it from here because he is way better than me at explaining scarcity, shortages, rationing, prices, and supply and demand. Her are some excerpts from the 1977 article.

“….northern California, has been suffering from a year-long drought, ……. government must leap in to combat it—not, of course, by creating more water, but by mucking up the distribution of the greater scarcity.”

“…. on the free market, regardless of the stringency of supply, there is never any “shortage”, that is, there is never a condition where a purchaser cannot find supplies available at the market price. On the free market, there is always enough supply available to satisfy demand. The clearing mechanism is fluctuations in price. If, for example, there is an orange blight, and the supply of oranges declines, there is then an increasing scarcity of oranges, and the scarcity, is “rationed” voluntarily to the purchasers by the uncoerced rise in price, a rise sufficient to equalize supply and demand. If, on the other hand, there is an improvement in the orange crop, the supply increases, oranges are relatively less scarce, and the price of oranges falls consumers are induced to purchase the increased supply.”

“Note that all goods and services are scarce, and the progress of the economy consists in rendering them relatively less scarce, so that their prices decline. Of course, some goods can never increase in supply. The supply of Rembrandts, for example, is exceedingly scarce, and can never be increased—barring the arrival of a Perfect Forger. The price of Rembrandts is high, of course, but no one has ever complained about a “Rembrandt shortage.” They have not, because the price of Rembrandts is allowed to fluctuate freely without interference from the iron hand of government.”

“If the water industry were free and competitive, the response to a drought would be very simple: water would rise in price. There would be griping about the increase in water prices, no doubt, but there would be no “shortage”, and no need or call for the usual baggage of patriotic hoopla, calls for conservation, altruistic pleas for sacrifice to the common good, and all the rest. But, of course, the water industry is scarcely free; on the contrary, water is almost everywhere in the U.S. the product and service of a governmental monopoly.”

“When the drought hit northern California, raising the price of water to the full extent would have been unthinkable; accusations would have been hurled of oppressing the poor, of selfishness, and all the rest. The result has been a crazy-quilt patchwork of compulsory water rationing, accompanied by a rash of patrioteering ecological exhortation: “Conserve! Conserve! Don’t water your lawns! Shower with a friend! Don’t flush the toilet!”

“…. local ecologists and statists got into the act. They groused that the over-conservation had induced people not to water their lawns, which led to the “visual pollution” “unsightly” lawns…..”

“…. wouldn’t the poor be hurt by the water district raising its water prices? …No….the poor are not being hurt by the higher price because, being forced to cut their consumption, their total bill has not increased. Thus, a price rise by a private firm is always selfish and oppressive of poor people; but when a monopoly governmental agency increases its price, the poor do not suffer at all, since if they cut their purchases sufficiently in response to the higher price, their total dollar payments will not increase. It is this sort of nonsense that our statists and busybodies are now being reduced to.”

NOTHING HAS CHANGED

In the present drought situation, central planners are trying the same failed responses to the problem, while free market solutions siton the sideline waiting for their chance to prove they are better than these “first string solutions” of the central planners. Remember, there is no solution to scarcity, just a better or worse way of dealing with it.

This article, California City Will Fine Couple $500 For Not Watering Lawn, State Will Fine Them $500 If They Do, by Mary Beth Quirk, at consumerist.com, shows that central planners have not gotten any smarter in 35 years. They are true believers in their central planning religion, and no amount of conflicting incentives or failures will convert them.

The market is always trying to correct perverse incentives created by central planners. It will come up with alternatives to paying the fines, as shown in this article, Spray-Painting Your Grass Green Is One Way To Avoid “Brown Lawn Fees“, by Mary Beth Quick, at consumerist.com. The shame of it is there would have been no need for this lawn spray-painting business in a true free market. It only became viable because of Government planning. The labor, capital, and resources used to keep from getting fined, could have been used in more productive ways satisfying true free market demand. If the price would have been allowed to go up to ration water, each person could have decided how much to use at the higher price, allowing them to use their money for other things than complying with green lawn laws. This is a version of the broken window fallacy, read here, Hurricane Sandy And The Broken Window Fallacy.

Understanding some basic economic principles will give us enough knowledge to confidently argue against the political “solutions” bureaucratic central planners come up with in dealing with the first rule of economics; scarcity.

Related ArticleIncentives Matter, at austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleThe Reality Of Obamacare, at austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleMilton Friedman on Market Failure vs. Government Failure. Which Has a Higher Cost? at austrianaddict.com.

 

Incentives Matter

May 29, 2014

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The recent revelations about VA hospitals shouldn’t surprise anyone. This problem isn’t peculiar to the VA, it’s systemic in all bureaucracies. The track record of central planning is less than stellar, whether It’s government intervention in a  free market economy like the U.S., or central planning in a communist economy like the former Soviet Union. Both systems create bureaucracies that have their own incentives under which the individuals inside these bureaucracies make decisions. We can’t look at bureaucracies from the stand point of how a business operates in the free market, because the incentive structure is totally different. We might think that these bureaucrats are not acting the way we would act, if we were in their position Don’t be too quick to judge, these bureaucrats are acting exactly how they should act if you consider the incentives they operate under. In a free market, prices ration scarce goods and services, and also pass knowledge to individuals and businesses. The incentives and constraints transmitted through the market, are totally different from the incentives and constraints transmitted to bureaucracies by politicians and administrators. In the market the incentive is to provide what the consumer wants which means you first must give before you receive. A bureaucracy is a monopoly on a particular service, which means the person using the service is an annoyance rather than someone who has to be pleased. In a free market the consumer can go somewhere else if he is not satisfied. At the DMV the consumer has no other place to go to get the service. In the case of the U.S. Postal Service, consumers are choosing better options for communicating and shipping packages, and the U.S. Post Office doesn’t care because it’s getting propped up by yours and my tax dollars.

PROBLEM SOLVING

Firing Eric Shinseki and replacing him with a better “angel” won’t solve the problem, {if the problem is making sure the veterans are being taken care of}, because the incentive structure will remain the same. If the problem is trying to find political cover, than firing him will help in solve the “political” problem, at the expense of veterans lives. Watch and see if the administration fires Shinseki and then claims the problem is being take care of. Remember Guantanamo Bay detention center in Cuba is still open today even though the President said during and after the campaign in 08, that he was going to close it, so we know political talk and actions are responses to political incentives.

CREATING INCENTIVES

Here are a few examples of Governments creating incentives that individuals respond to.

I will quote from Thomas Sowell’s book Basic Ecomomics. “During the Stalin era in the Soviet Union, there was a severe shortage of mining equipment, but the manager of an enterprise producing such machines kept them in storage after they were produced, rather than sending them out to the mines. The reason was that the official orders called for these machines to be painted with red, oil-resistant paint and the producer had on hand only green, oil-resistant paint and red varnish that was not oil-resistant. Disobeying official orders in any respect was a serious offense and “I don’t want to get eight years,” the manager said. When the manager appealed to a higher official to use the green, oil-resistant paint, this official’s reaction was “Well, I don’t want to get eight years either.” ….None of these people were behaving irrationally. They were responding quite rationally to the incentives and constraints of the system in which they worked. “

Remember the Deepwater Horizen oil drilling rig that exploded and spilled oil into the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. Well here is what you need to know about the incentives that government created to push oil drilling farther out in the gulf. I will quote from this article Bashing BP at mises.org. “In 1995, President Bill Clinton signed into law the Deepwater Royalty Relief Act (DWRRA), which was “intended to encourage natural-gas and oil development in the Gulf of Mexico in waters at least 200 meters (656 feet) deep by offering royalty relief on qualifying natural gas and oil lease sales.” This act has since expired, but there remain continued incentives for drilling in deep water.”

“In other words, the government specifically passed laws that gave the oil companies incentives to drill far offshore — that is, in deeper water where risk is presumably higher. In addition to the higher risk of accidents, the cost of solving any problems are necessarily greater in five thousand feet of water than in, say, 250 feet of water…..Who could blame a company for trying to achieve a minimum relief volume, which would guarantee billions of dollars in royalty-free sales of petroleum and natural gas?”

“Additionally, a liability cap of $75 million for the oil companies was put in place by law. This is an incredible use of the control of the political means to make favorable dealings for oneself in the economy.[1] In fact, it is the very definition of corporatism: First, individuals within a company work to get laws passed to reward companies for taking risks previously deemed unworthy of the time, energy, and capital expenditures. Then, those same individuals within the company work to get other laws passed to limit liability when things go wrong.”

CONCLUSION

The VA is a totally Government run healthcare system. Considering it treats veterans, it is relatively small compared to the amount of people Obamacare will affect. Since Government can’t manage the VA’s small sample size; how is it going to handle the amount of people in Obamacare? The short answer is, it can’t, and here are the two main reasons why.

The first is you can’t legislate abundance into existence. The first rule of economics is scarcity. We live in a world governed by scarcity and health care is not immune from this rule, no matter how much politicians want to legislate it out of existence. Scarcity means that healthcare has to be rationed in one of three ways, by prices in a free market, by fighting each other for the scarce good in a lawless society, or by an administrator or a board in a government-run system. If healthcare existed in abundance, it would not be an economic good and therefore would not have to be economised.

This reality of scarcity leads to very different incentives and constraints being created in a free market, a hampered market, or in a centrally planned socialist economy. People are self-interested individuals and will respond to the incentives and constraints created by each economic system. The consumer is sovereign in a free market system, and bureaucrats and their rules are sovereign in a centrally planned system. Think of the 2500 pages of rules in the Obamacare bill, and the 300 plus million individual citizens it is supposed to cover and ask yourself; will it work? If the end sought is to provide quality healthcare the answer is no. If the end sought is to prop up and grow government. The answer is yes. Always look for the incentives and ask; how will a self interested person respond?

Related ArticleCentral Planners Don’t See The Consequences Of Their Actions. Or Do They? at austrianaddict.com

Related ArticleHuman Action Reveals The Reality About Political Decisions, by austrianaddict.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What Is Seen And What Is Not Seen.

May 15, 2014

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Frederic Bastiat was an economist in France during the mid 1800’s. His essay, That Which Is Seed and That Which Is Not Seen, starts like this: “In the economy, an act, a habit, an institution, a law, gives birth not only to an effect, but to a series of effects. Of these effects, the first only is immediate; it manifests itself simultaneously with its cause – it is seen. The others unfold in succession – they are not seen: it is well for us if they are foreseen. Between a good economist and a bad economist this constitutes the whole difference……the bad economist pursues a small present good, which will be followed by a great evil to come, while the true economist pursues a great good to come, at the risk of a small present evil.”

SEEN AND UNSEEN CONSEQUENCES OF FOOD STAMPS

I read this article titled, American Dependency (And The Third Day Of The Month Effect), by Rory of  The Daily Coin at zerohedge.com, about the growing number of people, {almost 50 million} on food stamps, and Bastiats essay immediately came to mind. What is seen is the supposed benevolence of politicians and bureaucrats helping hungry people get food for their survival. What is not seen is the abuse of the system by people who don’t need assistance but take it any way, and also what happens on the retail, whole sale, and administrative side of this equation.

Must See Video!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQ-tvNbGy1M

UNSEEN INCENTIVES FOR THE CONSUMER AND PRODUCER

Under this program people who qualify are able to use their debit card to purchase things other than food, like cigarettes, booze, and lottery tickets. They can also sell these cards for cash to fund other purchases. People who qualify for the food stamps, but don’t need them, can use the money they would have spent on food every month to purchase anything they want. The woman in the video paid $9,000 for breast implants while she was getting $700 a month in food stamps.

Grocery stores and convenient stores are benefiting because of the increase in sales brought about by the food stamp program. The Snack Food Association, and the American Beverage Association represent whole sale companies like Coke, Frito Lay, Pepsi, Sunny Delite, and Nestle to name a few. These associations lobby Government for the food stamp program to offer as many choices to the consumer as possible, which of course means these companies products. JP Morgan Chase makes millions being the administrator of the debit cards used for this program. I’m sure big agricultural companies lobby for this program just like they lobby for ethanol mandates.

This is what happens when “good” politicians {bad economists} pursue a small present good”. The unforeseen incentives that are created, unleash a chain of actions that increase the demand for the Government program. The consumers, the suppliers, and the Government administers of the program all have a similar incentive, which is to grow the program.  When there is a pile of tax payer dollars to be spent, the line of people who are trying cash in stretches for miles. The food stamp program is welfare for people and companies at every level.

CONSUMPTION PAID FOR WITH COUNTERFEIT MONEY

Food stamps are just another way our Government counterfeits money. The “dollars” on these debit cards are just numbers put into a person’s account by a key stroke on a computer. Since the Government borrows 40 cents of every dollar it spends, 40% of the numbers printed into these accounts don’t exist. The government will eventually borrow the money, the Fed will purchase the debt using electronically printed counterfeit money, the Fed will continually roll over the debt when it comes due, and you and I will pay for 60% of this consumption through direct taxation, and the other 40% through the hidden tax of inflation. When do we pass the point of no return, or have we already passed it?

 

Capitalism vs. Crony Capitalism

April 23, 2014

Many people who decry capitalism do so from a position of ignorance of what capitalism really is. They look at the market system that exists in the U.S. today and mistakenly call it capitalism. Our present economic system is not free market capitalism, it is crony capitalism. Crony capitalism is a branch on the same central planning tree that includes socialism and fascism. In a true free market capitalist system, businesses wouldn’t be able to lobby government to pass laws that protect their position in the market and raise the costs on their present and future competitors, because government wouldn’t have the power to make these rules. Under free market capitalism businesses are incentivized to first serve their fellow-man before they can profit in any way. They must produce a good or service that consumers will freely exchange a portion of their labor for. Under crony capitalism businesses are incentivized to protect their own self-interest at the expense of the consumers and tax payers who are usually the same people.

Here is a video titled,  Why Capitalism Works, from Prager University, featuring George Gilder. He talks about the role of the entrepreneur in free market capitalism, as well as the incentive of giving before you receive.

 

SCARCITY TRUMPS  UTOPIAN VISIONS

The problem with how people perceive an economy is they don’t understand that a utopian world can’t be created on earth. The first rule of economics, scarcity, combined with the imperfections of man, make a utopian world impossible. The real question should be: What economic system can use limited means to supply the most ends for the most people? Put another way: In a world of scarce means and unlimited ends, which economic system can satisfy the most desires, with the knowledge that many desires will remain unmet? Free market capitalism,  produces the best possible result. History shows the branches of the central planning tree, whether it’s called crony capitalism, socialism, fascism, progressivism, communism, et al, produce a system were people have a lower standard of living and less individual freedom. A free market is nothing more than individuals freely producing, consuming and exchanging what they want, and in whatever quantities they want. Any interference by government, no matter how small, in the freedom of the individual to produce, consume, and exchange, moves an economic system down the central planning road, which is what Hayek called, “the road to serfdom”.

Related Video – Walter E. Williams, The Free Market Is Not Allowed To Work, by austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleWe Can’t Recreate The Garden Of Eden, by austrianaddict.com.

Related Video Milton Friedman vs. Phil Donahue, Greed Is In The Eye Of The Beholder, by austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleUnleash The Mind, by George Gilder, by austrianaddict.com.

Tiger Drops Out Of Masters + Ticket Prices Fall = Value Is Subjective.

April 7, 2014

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VALUE IS SUBJECTIVE

This article titled, Masters’ Ticket Prices Drop In Wake Of Tiger”s Absence, by Dan Wetzel, at yahoo.com, shows that value is not objective it is subjective. Value exists in the mind of each individual, it does not exist in an object. I could produce the best mouse trap ever invented for a price of x, but if no one is willing to pay x,  it has no value to anyone other than me. If you offered a sports fan  free tickets to either Saturdays third round at the Masters, or Saturdays Final Four games, he would make the decision based on which event he valued more, not on the monetary value of the tickets.

SUPPLY AND DEMAND

What does the drop in the price of the tickets mean? It doesn’t mean that people don’t value the Masters tournament, it just means that some people value it less when Tiger is not playing. After a bad back forced Tiger to withdraw from a tournament a month ago, demand for Masters tickets started to slow as people began to speculate that he wouldn’t play in this years Masters. Demand really dropped off when he officially withdrew from the Masters. This drop in demand revealed itself as the price for tickets began falling. The law of supply and demand is always in play, and in this case it says; if demand is low and the supply is fixed, the price will fall, and conversely if demand is high and the supply is fixed, the price will rise.

CONSUMER SETS WAGES

When you hear people say “they wouldn’t pay a particular athlete a particular amount of  money”, or “this athlete isn’t worth that much”, they obviously don’t understand subjective value, or supply and demand. The reason Tiger gets paid more than any golfer is because the value he creates is in high demand. There is a high number of people who value what he produces. Put simply, when there is a fixed supply of Tiger Woods, and a high demand for him, his price rises. If there weren’t enough consumers to voluntarily pay for the value they subjectively think Tiger produces for them, he wouldn’t get paid these “outrageous” sums of money. The consumer ultimately sets all prices in the process of production, and this includes the wages or salaries of all workers. So if you think certain professions don’t get payed enough, blame the greedy consumer, and if you think other professions get paid too much, blame the generous consumer.

Related Article – In a previous post, Ticket Scalping; The True Free Market In Action, we talked about voluntary exchanges from the stand point that each person involved in the exchange values what they receive more than what they give up, or no exchange would take place. Value is increased in voluntary exchanges.

Related ArticleSpontaneous Order = Free Market Economy, by austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleSpontaneous Order Utilizes More Knowledge Than Central Planning Could Ever Hope To Utilize, by austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleSpontaneous Order More Complex Than Top Down Planning, by austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleSpontaneous Order Demonstrated By Traffic With No Signals, by austrianaddict.com.

 

Myths About Capitalism

April 4, 2014

Many people think big businesses like free market capitalism. The truth is when big businesses were small they liked free market capitalism, because it allowed them to compete with bigger businesses for a share of the market. Once these businesses get big, they don’t like competition. They want to protect their position in the market, and the only way to do that is to try to get Government to pass regulations that makes it difficult for their competitors to compete. This is crony capitalism.

Free market capitalism rewards people who are good at production. They are rewarded by consumers who vote with their dollars on who provides the best product or service. Crony capitalism rewards people who are good at political games.

Free market capitalism uses scarce resources more efficiently than the waste that occurs in a crony capitalist system. {Solyndra}

Top Three Common Myths Of Capitalism, Video by learnliberty.org.

Here is a quote by Murray Rothbard,

“The market promotes and rewards the skills of production and voluntary cooperation. The Government enterprise promotes the skills of mass coercion and bureaucratic submission…and those who get to the top will be those with the most skill in that particular task.”

Related ArticleWalter E. Williams: Free Market Capitalism Creates A Higher Standard Of Living For Everyone, by austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleWhy Is Capitalism So Unpopular? by Art Carden at mises.org. Excerpt from the article.

“Under capitalism, the common man does not need an intellectual vanguard or a group of virtuous surrogates to make his decisions for him or to defend him against the rapacity of his fellows. He can do just fine without our help, thank you very much, and would be much obliged if we would go back to our ivory towers and leave him alone.”

Related ArticleDo Capitalists Produce Nothing, by D. W. MacKenzie, at mises.org. Excerpt from the article.

“Capitalists who improve production plans serve the needs of consumers and produce economic progress. This is how the system that we accurately call “free enterprise” actually works. Capitalists who participate in the redistribution of wealth through government policy produce disruptive production plans and economic waste. That is how the system that we accurately call “crony capitalism” works.”

 

There’s A Black Market For Cigarettes In NY State! I Wonder Why?

March 26, 2014

Less will be sold at a higher price than a lower price. The first part of the law of supply and demand makes perfect sense: do you cut back on the amount of a good or service purchased if the price gets too high? The second part of this law, more is supplied at a higher price than a lower price, also makes perfect sense; ask yourself: would you supply more labor at your normal wage or double your wage if asked to work overtime. The reality of supply and demand is always in play, even if Government tries to circumvent this economic law.

In this article, The Boom In Smuggling To Avoid Cigarette Taxes, by Jonathan Berr, at cbsnews.com, even though the State of NY has tried to raise the price on cigarettes, through taxes, to a level that would discourage the demand for cigarettes, it hasn’t worked, because the second part of the law, more will be supplied at a higher price, is also at work. As long as there is a demand for cigarettes, suppliers will fill that demand as long as the cost of supplying the product is lower than the price they receive in exchange, even if cigarettes are smuggled in via a black market. People will buy on the black market if they decide the cost of getting caught plus the lower price of the cigarettes is less then the higher price of the legal cigarettes. The sellers of the black market cigarettes could probably sell at a much lower price but they have to factor in the cost of getting caught into the prices they are charging. Supply and demand sets the black market price just as it sets the price in a free market hampered by taxes and regulation.

Government can’t stop activities that people want to engage in like prostitution or drug use. Government couldn’t stop the use or production of alcohol during the prohibition era. Eventually the 21st amendment had to be passed repealing the 18th amendment which prohibited the use of alcohol. At some point the question has to be asked, is the cost of prohibition greater than the cost of allowing people to freely engage in the prohibited activity? In the case of the Government trying to discourage an activity by raising the price through taxation, the point is reached where the price gets high enough that the black market supplies a portion of the product, and in the case of cigarette sales in NY, over half.

Economic forces are always trying to correct Government interventions into the market. The Fed created tech, housing, and present financial bubbles, the failed Obamacare roll out, fracking, failed green energy companies like Solyndra, and cigarette smuggling in NY are all examples of economic forces thwarting central planners plans. As long as the means needed to supply mans limitless ends are scarce, economic forces will reign over Government attempts to create abundance by decree.

Related ArticleThe Underground Economy In One Page, by Danny G. Leroy, at mises.org.

Related ArticleHealthy Hunger-Free Kids Act, Doesn’t Work As Planners Planned, by austrianaddict.com.

Related ArticleThe Reality Of Obamacare, by austrianaddict.com.

It’s Basketball Tourney Time, Lets Talk Ticket Scalping.

March 20, 2014

Once again it’s time for March Madness. We can learn a lot about how the free market works by walking around arena’s that are hosting games.  Ticket scalpers and ticket buyers are involved in voluntary exchanges which are the heart of a free market. I wrote this post below about ticket scalping last year and I’m going to post it again.

TICKET SCALPING: THE TRUE FREE MARKET IN ACTION

I’m going to the Ohio High School Basketball Tournament this weekend not and not just to watch the games. I like to observe the economic principles at play in the free market for tickets, (aka scalping) that takes place outside of the arena, it is a real education. This video explains whats going on.

Most of the people who participate in the free market of ticket scalping, have no understanding of the economic principles they are demonstrating by their actions. Supply and demand, subjective value, and the allocation of scarce resources through the price system, are just a few of the principles being demonstrated. Order is created out of seeming chaos by buyers and sellers voluntarily making decisions on the price that ultimately leads to an exchange. The scalper is a broker who ultimately brings the buyer and the seller together, in the same way a realtor brings the buyer and seller of a house together. I’ve seen scalpers make a good profit selling tickets when LeBron James was playing in the state tournament because demand was high and the supply of good seats was low. I’ve also been at a final four at the Louisiana Super Dome where scalpers were selling tickets for a dollar, minutes before the game, trying to get what they could before the tickets would became worthless just minutes after the game started. The one thing I’ve noticed in both situations, the buyer and the seller never make the exchange of a ticket, for money, unless both parties agree on the price.  If the same two individuals came together and tried to make the exchange earlier or later than when the exchange actually took place, the subjective valuations of each party would have been different, and an exchange would not have taken place, at that price. If you get a chance to go to an NCAA tournament game, walk around the arena for a while and watch basic economic principles being demonstrated in the secondary ticket market.

Unleash The Mind, by George Gilder

February 10, 2014

I recently reread  an article titled, Unleash The Mind by George Gilder, that I originally read in 2012 shortly before I started this site. It is filled with great insights into what an entrepreneur really is, and the importance of his role in the economy.

MAKING THE COMPLEX UNDERSTANDABLE

I love reading whatever George Gilder writes for few different reasons. 1)  Just like a chef who invigorates my taste buds by how he seasons and prepares a dish, Gilder puts words together in ways that invigorate my earbuds. His words not only sound good, I also enjoy the pictures his words paint in my mind. It’s my personal taste, it may not be yours. 2) He explains complex things in an understandable way, which is a rare skill. 3) He always makes me think, even though I believe some of his analysis slightly misses the mark. I don’t think he has a total understanding on how scarce resources are misallocated when the Federal reserve starts down it’s road of low interest rates and monetary expansion, and I don’t think he understands spontaneous order as Hayek explains it.

Milton Friedman had the same gifts as a speaker and debater, as Gilder has as a writer, although neither is a favorite of the Austrians. I see these two men much differently than Austrians do. I look at their ability to explain complex economic concepts, to regular people like me, as a more important asset than any theoretical differences Austrians may have with them. I read and listened to Gilder and Friedman, along with Thomas Sowell, before I could ever tackle Mises, Hayek, and Rothbard in any serious or understandable way. I suggest you read Wealth and Poverty, by Gilder, watch the Free to Choose videos by Milton Friedman, and read Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell before you tackle books like Human Action by Mises, Prices and Production by Hayek, and Man Economy and State by Rothbard. You don’t try to bench press 300 lbs the first day you walk into the weight room. You start with a manageable weight and work your way up to heavier weights.

UNDERSTANDING ECONOMICS LEADS TO FREEDOM

People have to be educated about how economic reality will always get in the way of the plans of our ruling elite. The result of allowing politicians and bureaucrats to pursue unattainable ends is, in the words of Hayek, “the road to serfdom”. Throwing people aside who have talent in communicating complexity to regular people because they don’t pass some purity test is not very smart. Their ability to move peoples thinking in the right direction is important to maintaining individual freedom.  As  Mises said, “Economics must not be relegated to classrooms and statistical offices and must not be left to esoteric circles. It is the philosophy of human life and action and concerns everybody and everything. It is the pith of civilization and of man’s human existence…..All present-day political issues concern problems commonly called economic. All arguments advanced in contemporary discussion of social and public affairs deal with fundamental matters of praxeology and economics…..There is no means by which anyone can evade his personal responsibility. Whoever neglects to examine to the best of his abilities all the problems involved voluntarily surrenders his birthright to a self-appointed elite of supermen. In such vital matters blind reliance upon “experts” and uncritical acceptance of popular catchwords and prejudices is tantamount to the abandonment of self-determination and to yielding to other people’s domination. As conditions are today, nothing can be more important to every intelligent man than economics. His own fate and that of his progeny is at stake.

EXCERPTS FROM GILDERS ARTICLE

I don’t think Gilder has a total understanding on how scarce resources are misallocated when the Federal reserve starts down it’s road of low interest rates and monetary expansion as explained by the Austrian Business Cycle Theory, and I don’t think he understands spontaneous order as Hayek explains it. Having said that, he is great at explaining how ideas of individuals are the human capital on which our expanding standard of living rests. You can click on the full article above to read the article. Here are some excerpts below.

“America’s wealth is not an inventory of goods; it is an organic entity, a fragile pulsing fabric of ideas, expectations, loyalties, moral commitments, visions….. As President Mitterand’s French technocrats discovered in the 1980s, and President Obama’s quixotic ecocrats are discovering today, government managers of complex systems of wealth soon find they are administering an industrial corpse, a socialized Solyndra.”

“The belief that wealth consists not chiefly in ideas, attitudes, moral codes, and mental disciplines but in definable static things that can be seized and redistributed—that is the materialist superstition. It stultified the works of Marx and other prophets of violence and envy. It betrays every person who seeks to redistribute wealth by coercion. It balks every socialist revolutionary who imagines that by seizing the so-called means of production he can capture the crucial capital of an economy.”

“……As Marxist despots and tribal socialists from Cuba to Greece have discovered to their huge disappointment, governments can neither create wealth nor effectively redistribute it. They can only expropriate and watch it dissipate. If we continue to harass, overtax, and oppressively regulate entrepreneurs, our liberal politicians will be shocked and horrified to discover how swiftly the physical tokens of the means of production dissolve into so much corroded wire, abandoned batteries, scrap metal, and wasteland rot”

“Capitalism…..is dynamic, a force that pushes Human enterprise down spirals of declining costs and greater abundance.”

“…..Under capitalism, wealth is less a stock of goods than a flow of ideas, the defining characteristic of which is surprise. Creativity is the foundation of wealth. As Princeton economist Albert Hirschman has put it, “creativity always comes as a surprise to us.” If it were not surprising, we could plan it, and socialism would work.”

“The process of wealth creation is offensive to levelers and planners because it yields mountains of new wealth in ways that could not possibly be planned. But unpredictability is fundamental to free human enterprise.It defies every econometric model and socialist scheme. It makes no sense to most professors, who attain their positions by the systematic acquisition off credentials pleasing to the establishment above them….. Leading entrepreneurs – from Sam Walton to Larry Page to Mark Zickerbert- did not ascend a hierarchy; they created a new one. They did not climb to the top of anything. They were pushed to the top by their own success. They did not capture the pinnacle; they became it.”

“Most of America’s leading entrepreneurs are bound to the masts of their fortunes. They are allowed to keep their wealth only as long as they invest it in others. In real sense, they can keep only what they give away. It has been given to others in the form of investments. It is embodied in a vast web of enterprises that retains its worth only through constant work and sacrifice. Capitalism is a system that begins not with taking but with giving to others.”

“For this reason, wealth is nearly as difficult to maintain as it is to create. Owners are besieged on all sides by aspiring spenders –    debauchers of wealth and purveyors of poverty in the name of charity, idealism, envy, or social change. Bureaucrats, politicians, bishops, raiders, robbers, short-sellers, and business writers all think they can invest money better than its owners.”

“The distributions of capitalism make sense, but not because of the virtue or greed of entrepreneurs, nor as inevitable by-products of the invisible hand. The reason capitalism works is that the creators of wealth are granted the right and the burden of reinvesting it.”

“Entrepreneurial knowledge has little to do with certified expertise, advanced degrees, or the learning of establishment schools….Wealth all too often comes from doing what other people consider insufferably boring or unendurably hard.”

“Most people consider themselves above the gritty and relentless details of life that allow the creation of great wealth. They leave it to the experts. But in general you join the one percent of the one percent not by leaving it to the experts but by creating new expertise, not by knowing what the experts know but by learning what they think is beneath them.”

“The competitive pursuit of knowledge is not a dog-eat-dog Darwinian struggle. In capitalism, the winners do not eat the losers but teach them how to win through the spread of information far from being a zero-sum game, where the successes of some come at the expense of others, free economies climb spirals of mutual gain and learning. Far from being a system of greed, capitalism depends on a golden rule of enterprise: The good fortune of others is also your own.”

 “….entrepreneurs cannot in general revel in their wealth, because most of it is not liquid. Greed, in fact, only motivates capitalists to seek government guarantees and subsidies that denature and stultify the works of entrepreneurs. The financial crash of 2007 and beyond reflected orgies of greed among crony capitalists awash in government guarantees and subsidies, sitting on their Fannies and Freddies, feeding in the troughs of Treasury privileges and government insurance scams. Greed leads as by an invisible hand to an ever-growing welfare and plutocratic state—to socialism and near-fascist corporatism……”

“….Volatile and shifting ideas, not heavy and entrenched establishments, constitute the source of wealth. There is no bureaucratic net or tax web that can catch the fleeting thoughts of Eric Schmitt of Google, Jules Urbach of Otoy, or Chris Cooper of Seldon Technologies”

“… Capitalist economies grow because they award wealth to its creators, who have already proven that they can increase it. Their proof was always the service of others rather than themselves”