November 16, 2005
Ignoring Economics III
By Thomas
Sowell
I first became aware of the law of gravity as a small child when I pedalled
by tricycle off the porch and crashed into the yard. Gravity was of course operating
all along, whether I was aware of it or not.
Economics is a lot like that. Many people who are completely unaware of economics
sometimes discover it the same way I discovered gravity, through some personal
or national crash.
Liberals especially tend to think up all sorts of good things we want -- a "living
wage," "affordable housing," "universal health care," and an ever-expanding
wish-list of things that everyone should receive as "rights" -- with little
or no awareness of the economic repercussions of turning that wish list into
laws.
In many cases, items on their wish list have already been turned into laws in
other countries and in other periods of history, but there is remarkably little
curiosity as to what the actual consequences were in those countries and times.
People who want the government to control the prices of pharmaceutical drugs
seldom, if ever, raise the question of what actually happens in places and times
when government has controlled the prices of pharmaceutical drugs. Canada and
other countries do it. What consequences have there been?
One major consequence is that Canada and other countries do not create nearly
as many of the new life-saving pharmaceutical drugs as the United States does.
These other countries live off the results -- the medicines -- produced by the
enormously costly research that "obscene" pharmaceutical profits finance in
America.
Those who want us to imitate those countries do not confront the inescapable
fact that we cannot all live off somebody else -- in this or other things. Somebody
has to pay the costs.
We can of course kill the goose that lays the golden egg -- and discover the
consequences the hard way, as I discovered the law of gravity by pedaling off
the porch. People needlessly suffering from diseases that new medications could
have cured or prevented will pay the highest cost of all.
Prices are perhaps the most misunderstood thing in economics. Whenever prices
are "too high" -- whether these are prices of medicines or of gasoline or all
sorts of other things -- many people think the answer is for the government
to force those prices down.
It so happens there is a history of price controls and their consequences in
countries around the world, going back literally thousands of years. But most
people who advocate price controls are as unaware of, and uninterested in, that
history as I was in the law of gravity.
Prices are not just arbitrary numbers plucked out of the air or numbers dependent
on whether sellers are "greedy" or not. In the competition of the marketplace,
prices are signals that convey underlying realities about relative scarcities
and relative costs of production.
Those underlying realities are not changed in the slightest by price controls.
You might as well try to deal with someone's fever by putting the thermometer
in cold water to lower the reading.
Municipal transit used to be privately owned in many cities, until local politicians'
control of fares kept those fares too low to buy and maintain buses and trolleys,
and replace them as they wore out. The costs of doing these things were not
reduced in the slightest by refusing to let the fares cover those costs.
All that happened was that municipal transit services deteriorated and taxpayers
ended up paying through the nose as city governments took over from transit
companies that they had driven out of business -- and government usually did
a worse job.
Something similar has happened in rental housing markets, where rent control
laws have kept the rents too low to build and maintain rental housing. Whether
in Europe or America, rent-controlled housing is almost invariably older housing
and more deteriorated housing.
Costs don't go away because you refuse to pay them, any more than gravity goes
away if you refuse to acknowledge it. You usually pay more in different ways,
through taxes as well as prices, and by deterioration in quality when political
processes replace economic process.
But the lure of the free lunch goes on.
Copyright 2005 Creators Syndicate
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/Commentary/com-11_16_05_TS.html