The Lesser of Two Evils?

Today’s Republican Party (it’s not my father’s Republican Party) is in thrall to a lot of people I wouldn’t want to have a beer with, even if they drank beer. Democrats, many of whom I enjoy having a beer with, fear what they see as a Republican plot to install a theocratic state.

Most Democrats (and not a few Republicans) seem willing enough to regulate every facet of the economy and promote dependency on the welfare state through income redistribution — all of which really tends to make most people worse off, even the relatively poor among us. (The law of unintended consequences and all that.) Not only that, but I’m willing to bet that most allies of affirmative action (which isn’t equal protection of the law) and campus speech codes are Democrats.

So Democrats practice a truncated version of libertarianism, and Republicans are becoming me-too Democrats with a somewhat different social agenda. Today’s version of the Libertarian Party is a lost cause, having retreated into ostrich-like isolationism. (Even Kerry is better on defense than your average card-carrying Libertarian.)

What we’re left with is a choice between the lesser of two evils: Republican or Democrat, the lady or the tiger? Which of the evils we choose depends on which one we fear the least. As for me, I really don’t fear the rise of a theocratic state, regardless of what some Republicans might like to do about things like prayer in public schools. In fact, we used to live in a quasi-theocratic state, which is gone for good. (Remember when we said The Lord’s Prayer in public school? Remember when we couldn’t buy a mixed drink in Virginia or buy alcohol on a Sunday?) The regulatory-welfare state, on the other hand, has been with us for decades and only occasionally stops growing.

No one is forcing us to pray or go to church, but “they” (that includes Republicans) are making most of us worse off through regulation (that includes censorship by the FCC), welfare (that includes corporate welfare), and pork-barrel spending (Democrats have no monopoly on that). And, of course, there’s quite a political base for regulation, welfare, and pork, because their costs are subtle and well concealed from most people. The myth of the “free lunch” lives on.

Is there a “lesser evil” left to choose? I’m beginning to think not.

  • Comments? Click here.
  • Liberty or Anarchy?

    I recently remarked flippantly to a friend that I wouldn’t wear a certain brand of footwear in public because doing so might brand me “liberal”. His retort:

    Probably a large percentage of the wearers of Brand X are true libertarians, whereas you are a control libertarian. These folks moved to the mountains, work “off the formal economy” and thus don’t pay any taxes, ignore all forms of government, and don’t really care about anyone’s political or personal views.

    I think I like being a “control libertarian” — whatever that is. Perhaps it means that I have good personal hygeine and save my tax returns for three years. I know that I care about others’ personal or political views only to the extent that those views might affect my taxes or my physical security. (Oh, and sometimes those views are good fodder for this blog.) In fact, I spend as much time as possible reading novels and ignoring others’ personal and political views.

    Those “true libertarians” who don’t pay taxes and ignore all forms of government aren’t libertarians, they’re neo-anarchists (that’s a fancy term for hippie drop-out). Libertarians aren’t anarchists, because libertarians understand that liberty is impossible without just enough government to protect us from each other and from our enemies. As Wikipedia

    puts it (emphasis added by me):

    Libertarianism is a political philosophy which advocates individual rights and a limited government. Libertarians believe individuals should be free to do anything they want, so long as they do not infringe upon what they believe to be the equal rights of others. In this respect they agree with many other modern political ideologies. The difference arises from the definition of “rights”. For libertarians, there are no “positive rights” (such as to food or shelter or health care), only “negative rights” (such as to not be assaulted, abused, robbed or censored). They further believe that the only legitimate use of force, whether public or private, is to protect those rights.

  • Comments? Click here.
  • Global Warming: Realities and Benefits

    Climatologists — those who are willing to abandon the guilt-ridden political agenda that has entirely blamed human activity for global warming — are beginning to get somewhere:

    The truth about global warming – it’s the Sun that’s to blame
    By Michael Leidig and Roya Nikkhah
    (Filed: 18/07/2004)

    Global warming has finally been explained: the Earth is getting hotter because the Sun is burning more brightly than at any time during the past 1,000 years, according to new research.

    A study by Swiss and German scientists suggests that increasing radiation from the sun is responsible for recent global climate changes.

    Mmm…just as I was saying, here. In the same post I also pointed to a few other likely causes of global warming that have been neglected by politically correct “scientists”, namely, activity in Earth’s core and reversal of Earth’s magnetic field.

    Before anyone commits suicide because we can’t regulate our way out of global warming, consider the possibility that it has beneficial effects as well as harmful ones; for example, warmer winters, longer growing seasons, and more sunny days (therefore more vitamin C intake and less depression). Why do you think that the Sunbelt States have grown much faster than the Rustbelt States?

    Books

    A few weeks ago I mentioned A Student of Weather, a novel by Elizabeth Hay. I was then 79 pages into the book, which I’ve since finished. It lived up to its early promise. It’s a beautifully written, affecting novel.

    Since finishing A Student of Weather, I’ve finished one entertaining-but-not great novel and abandoned a dreary psychological novel. Now I’m into Juno and Juliet, by Irish author Julian Gough. It’s a comic novel about identical twin sisters who have arrived in Galway to attend university. The narrator, Juliet of the title, is “disappointed by the university, and vice versa.” Juliet has many things to say about her disappointment. This observation rings especially true to me:

    I’d so looked forward to leaving the cultural wasteland in which I’d half-grown up, and in my last year at school I’d fever-visioned a dreamy, sunlit university-state peopled by the brightest and the best. I’d half-lived there for the final school months, it had seemed more real to me than the town outside. To get to the university and find it had fallen into barbarian hands, that its halls were full of the very peasants and savages I thought I’d left behind, still talking about how their new shoes had split on the second day, and of the TV shows they’d missed, and the terrible price of twenty cigarettes…it was a bitter blow.

    Thus far, everywhere I’ve turned in this book I’ve found gems like that.

    What Goes Around Comes Around, No. 2

    Instapundit says this about the Kerry candidacy:

    A WHILE BACK, I wrote that if Kerry is elected he’ll probably wind up like Jimmy Carter: The “anybody but Bush” constituency will evaporate as soon as he’s sworn in, leaving him weak and subject to attacks from within his own party. For the barest glimpse of what a Kerry presidency might look like, read this Maureen Dowd column. And note this comment on Kerry from Garry Trudeau: “Like most Americans, I’ve been forced to unambiguously take sides, and I’m not particularly happy about it.”

    Not exactly a strong base of support, but it’s what happens when you nominate a weak candidate, and unify your party around hatred for the incumbent.

    And, in “What Goes Around Comes Around”, I wrote about the similarities between Clinton-haters and Bush-bashers. Although I prefer Bush to Kerry, I think that Republicans in 2000 nominated a weak candidate, and unified around hatred for the incumbent’s perceived surrogate.

  • Comments? Click here.
  • The Word Is "Flipocrisy"

    UPDATED

    Orin Kerr at The Volokh Conspiracy asks for a word

    for when advocates on both sides of an ongoing debate switch rhetorical positions, and yet they insist on decrying the inconsistency of their opponents while overlooking their own inconsistency.

    Kerr doesn’t mention the case of Saddam Hussein and the Iraq war, but it’s hard not to notice that many Democrats who have opposed the war — and by extension the overthrow of Saddam — sang in a different key when Clinton was president. There’s also the case of deficit spending, on which members of the two major parties have, in the main, reversed positions since Reagan’s ascendancy.

    I think “flipocrisy” captures the phenomenon nicely. “Flip” for reversal; “ocrisy” because we’re seeing a form of “hypocrisy” in action.

    John Holbo at Crooked Timber suggests “poetic justice as fairness” (for those who are in the Rawls joke-getting set). It’s not a ringing phrase, but its logic is impeccable; to quote Holbo:

    “Poetic justice as fairness” denotes a vendetta-based, rather than abstract reason-based approach to argument. Dialectic as feud; Hatfields and the McCoys do thesis and antithesis, with stupidity as synthesis. The rule is: if you think your opponent commited a fallacy in the recent past, you are allowed to commit a fallacy. And no one can remember when it started, but the other side started it. It is difficult to break the tragic cycle of intellectual violence once it starts.

    Spot on!

    PG at de novo gets Rawls jokes but prefers “rubber glue-ism” — as in “I’m rubber and you’re glue, and whatever you say bounces off me and sticks to you.”

  • Comments? Click here.
  • "Physics Envy"

    I’ve said a lot here, here, here, here, here, here, and here about economics, the social sciences in general, and a certain pseudo-science (climatology).

    What I’ve really been talking about is a phenomenon known as “physics envy” — a term used by Stephen Jay Gould. He describes it thus in The Mismeasure of Man (1981):

    the allure of numbers, the faith that rigorous measurement could guarantee irrefutable precision, and might mark the transition between subjective speculation and a true science as worthy as Newtonian physics.

    But there’s more to science than mere numbers (quoting, again, from The Mismeasure of Man):

    Science is rooted in creative interpretation. Numbers suggest, constrain, and refute; they do not, by themselves, specify the content of scientific theories. Theories are built upon the interpretation of numbers, and interpreters are often trapped by their own rhetoric. They believe in their own objectivity, and fail to discern the prejudice that leads them to one interpretation among many consistent with their numbers.

    Enough said? Probably not.

    Climatology

    Climatology isn’t social science but it’s in the same league when it comes to quantification. (See previous post.) There’s a lot of uncertainty about the events that determine climactic conditions, about the relative importance of those events, and about the appropriate numerical values to assign to them. In spite of protests to the contrary, its likely that climatologists haven’t adequately accounted for sunspot activity, which is reaching a 1,000-year high, the effects of activity in Earth’s molten core, and the apparent reversal of Earth’s magnetic field.

    Hemibel Thinking

    Don’t go away. Stick around for some useful insights about social-science research.

    First, what is “hemibel thinking”? Philip M. Morse and George E. Kimball, pioneers in the field of military operations research, wrote in their classic Methods of Operations Research (1951) that the

    successful application of operations research usually results in improvements by factors of 3 or 10 or more….In our first study of any operation we are looking for these large factors of possible improvement….They can be discovered if the [variables] are given only one significant figure,…any greater accuracy simply adds unessential detail.

    One might term this type of thinking “hemibel thinking.” A bel is defined as a unit in a logarithmic scale corresponding to a factor of 10. Consequently a hemibel corresponds to a factor of the square root of 10, or approximately 3.

    This is science-speak for the following proposition: Things are rarely clear cut in the “real” world, especially in the realm of human behavior, where there’s a lot of uncertainty about which events contribute to particular outcomes, about the relative importance of those events, and about the appropriate numerical values to assign to them. Anyone who aspires to be a social scientist, should therefore be humble about claiming precision for quantitative estimates that are probably very imprecise.

    Exhibit A: Prof. Ray Fair’s macroecnomic model of the U.S. It consists of 131 equations, each of which has several independent variables. No wonder Fair’s model, in its various incarnations, has done such a lousy job of forecasting changes in real GDP.

    You might say that Fair’s model is an extreme case. There are, after all, many simpler models in the social sciences. Yes, but all models in the social sciences rely on inevitably imprecise estimates of the events arising from human behavior — even when those events are economic ones. Indeed, many social-science models are incomplete because many crucial events are unknown, unquantifiable, or both. In the case of the minimum wage, about which I have written recently, a professional economist echoes my views.

    Hemibel thinking takes on great importance in light of the imprecision inherent in complex social-science models. Consider a model with only 10 variables. Even if the model doesn’t omit crucial variables, its results must be taken with large doses of salt. An error of about 25 percent in the value of each variable can produce a result that is off by a factor of 10; an error of about 12 percent in the value of each variable can produce a result that is off by a factor of 3 (a hemibel). (By the way, if you think that social-science data aren’t that bad, you haven’t seen how such data are collected and reported.) Of course, the errors might (miraculously) be offsetting, but don’t bet on it. It’s not that simple: Some errors will be large and some errors will be small (but which are which), and the errors may lie in either direction (but in which direction?).

    So, the next time you read about research that purports to “prove” or “predict” such-and-such about a social phenomenon — the effect of the minimum wage on employment, the influence of “nature” vs. “nurture” in child-rearing, the inflationary effect of government deficits — take a deep breath and ask yourself “does this make sense?”

    The Party of Ideas?

    Remember when the GOP was called the party of ideas? That was when it was flirting with libertarianism — limited government, free markets, and other such notions now mostly abandoned in the quest for votes. Power still corrupts.

    Not that Democrats are any better. Democrat “ideas” — to dignify the donkey party’s dogmas — amount to a handful or two of sound bites. Here’s my translation of what passes for conventional wisdom among Democrats nowadays:

  • We hate terror — it’s so inconvenient — but we don’t know what to do about it, so we’re just going to criticize Bush’s method of dealing with it.
  • It’s all about oil, anyway. (And it’s a good thing; otherwise, we might have to start driving small, ugly, sluggish, dual-fuel cars.)
  • A lot of us Democrats became rich thanks to the market economy, but we don’t like to talk about it. We’d rather raise your taxes than support our favorite causes out of our own pockets.
  • We think that people who support capital punishment, believe in the right of individuals to bear arms, oppose abortion, and oppose gay marriage are just plain stupid, but we can’t say that so we imply that they’re bigots and religious psychotics. It keeps our “base” happy.
  • Health care and energy are among the many “problems” that are too important to be resolved by the market. A few liberal economists and smart (Democrat) politicians can solve any problem.
  • It’s more important to save (replaceable) trees than it is to make housing more affordable for low-income people.
  • And just look at the income gap between the poorest 20 percent, where I used to be, and the richest 20 percent, where I am now. I guess it’s a permanent state of affairs for everyone but me.
  • Illegal aliens are okay because most of them vote Democrat and do our yard work for a few bucks an hour.
  • We’ll always have the poor and people of color with us — that is, with us Democrats. We know how to condescend to them better than Republicans.
  • Some of us practice religion because it’s the “right thing” to do, but most of us believe that religious people are psychologically unbalanced. We’re not, of course. We just hate a lot of things about America these days because it isn’t the way we want it to be. Wa-a-a-a-h!
  • Finally, underlying everything, are these two axioms:

  • It’s the government’s money, not yours, and we know how to use it better than you do.
  • The government is sovereign, not you, and we know just how much freedom to give to you to keep you in line.
  • And, in conclusion, the Democrat party’s unofficial motto: “When we feel guilt everyone does penance.”

  • Comments? Click here.
  • Maybe Economics Is a Science

    This reminds me of economists quibbling about the effects of the minimum wage on employment of unskilled workers (from BBC News, UK Edition):

    Hawking backs down on black holes

    Stephen Hawking is saying he was wrong about a key argument he put forward nearly 30 years ago about the behaviour of black holes.

    The world-famous physicist addresses an international conference on Wednesday to revise his claim that black holes destroy everything that fall into them.

    It appears black holes may after all allow information in them to escape.

    There’s more, but it’s inconclusive. Oh well, we’re less threatened by black holes than we are by the minimum wage — I think.

    School Vouchers and Teachers’ Unions

    The American Federation of Teachers — exhibit A in the case against labor unions — is crowing on its web site about the Colorado Supreme Court’s recent 4-3 decision that declared the state’s new school voucher program unconstitutional. The AFT says that the decision marks “an important victory in the union’s ongoing battle against voucher schemes.”

    At the bottom of the page about the Colorado decision there’s a link to another page: Find out more about why the AFT opposes private school vouchers at taxpayers’ expense. Here we learn that

    The AFT supports parents’ right to send their children to private or religious schools but opposes the use of public funds to do so. The main reason for this opposition is because public funding of private or religious education transfers precious tax dollars from public schools, which are free and open to all children, accountable to parents and taxpayers alike, and essential to our democracy, to private and religious schools that charge for their services, select their students on the basis of religious or academic or family or personal characteristics, and are accountable only to their boards and clients.

    There are several whoppers in that quotation. I’ll take them one at a time:

    • “Public funds” are, in fact, tax revenues collected through the coercive power of government.

    • The phrase “private or religious education” seems calculated to appeal to anti-religious sentiment (especially anti-Catholic sentiment). The distinction is unnecessary because a “religious” school is, by definition, a “private” school.

    • Public schools would need fewer “precious tax dollars” if there were fewer students in public schools. Public school systems would probably become even more top-heavy with administrators as the number of public-school students dwindled. Then we’d see just how much they are “accountable to parents and taxpayers.”

    • Public schools aren’t “free” and they do “charge for their services” — they just seem free to the naïve among us because they collect their fees in the form of taxes.

    • “Private and religious schools” may or may not “select their students on the basis of religious or academic or family or personal characteristics.” So what if some of them do? It’s a two-way street. With vouchers, parents can select their children’s schools on the basis of religious or academic or family or personal characteristics. There’s nothing wrong with that, unless you believe that Johnny should be forced to go to school with a bunch of louts just because they live in his public-school district.

    • Public schools aren’t “accountable to parents and taxpayers,” they’re “accountable” to elected school boards, whose members are usually co-opted by public-school administrators. Public schools are not accountable to taxpayers, who must cough up their taxes regardless of the quality of “their” public schools. Most taxpayers take no interest in the quality of public education because they are childless or their children aren’t in school.

    • Private schools, on the other hand, have what the AFT sneeringly calls “clients” — that is, parents — who have a direct interest in the quality of their children’s education and who can vote with their checkbooks if they’re dissatisfied with the education they’re paying for. That’s accountability.

    But accountability is the last thing the AFT wants for its members, who pay their dues to be protected from true accountability, which they would experience if vouchers were widely available.

    It’s no wonder that more and more parents are willing to give of their own time (and some amount of money) to home-school their children. Teachers’ unions care first and foremost about protecting teachers’ jobs. If teachers’ unions really cared about the education of children, they’d go out of business.

    Economics as Science

    I recently unloaded on Tyler Cowen of Marginal Revolution for his rather weak argument that economics is a science (see here and here). Cowen now says , more reasonably, that economics is a science “but let’s keep in mind that being a science, taken alone, doesn’t get you very far.” That’s more like it.

    Many thoughtful economists have considered the question whether economics is a science. A Google search on “economics a science” yields some good hits on the subject. I won’t venture a summary, but I will say that they seem consistent in tone with Cowen’s newly found humility.

    Nevertheless, economics — microeconomics in particular — offers useful insights about human behavior. To the extent that those insights are buttressed by statistical evidence — if not precisely quantified by such evidence — they are even more useful. It remains true, however, that economics, in its inchoate form, more closely resembles climatology than physics.

    Is Economics a Science?

    Tyler Cowen of Marginal Revolution asserts that economics is a science (see here and here). Normally, I would ignore such an assertion, but when a thoughtful blog like The Right Coast points to it, uncritically, I am compelled to comment on it.

    Cowen is not alone in claiming that economics is a science, of course. But his claim is especially fatuous; to wit:

    We produce empirical knowledge which is subject to process of testing, broadly interpreted, and feedback….We even now have controlled experiments. And look at some of our competitors. String theory is not yet empirical. Environmental science and ecology are rife with ideology. Astronomy doesn’t have controlled experiments. And isn’t chemistry just plain outright boring? There is plenty of empirical economics I don’t trust, but usually it is for quite hackneyed reasons (e.g., data mining), rather than for “intrinsic to economics” reasons.

    I’ll come back to Cowen’s first point, that economics produces empirical knowledge, etc. As for the other points, here goes:

    • A controlled experiment involving human behavior doesn’t yield valid results if its subjects know they’re participating in an experiment or if their environment is manipulated for the purpose of an experiment.

    • So what if string theory isn’t yet empirical? It’s a hypothesis that may, someday, be tested by practitioners of a bona fide science: physics.

    • So what if astronomy doesn’t have controlled experiments? A science can be a science without controlled experiments.

    • The boringness of chemistry is in the mind of the contemplator. And boringness, of course, is neither here nor there when it comes to science.

    • Not trusting “plenty of empirical economics” is a valid instinct. (See my post on economic forecasting, for example.)

    Before I attack — no, address — Cowen’s claims about the “empirical knowledge” produced by economics, I want to be clear about the definition of science. Wikipedia says this:

    Science is both a process of gaining knowledge, and the organized body of knowledge gained by this process. The scientific process is the systematic acquisition of new knowledge about a system. This systematic acquisition is generally the scientific method, and the system is generally nature. Science is also the scientific knowledge that has been systematically acquired by this scientific process.

    The scientific method, according to Wikipedia, amounts to this:

    The essential elements of the scientific method are iterations and recursions of the following four steps:

    1. Characterization [or observation]
    2. Hypothesis (a theoretical, hypothetical explanation)
    3. Prediction (logical deduction from the hypothesis)
    4. Experiment (test of all of the above)

    All of this is overlaid by publication, criticism, and argument. Science cannot be like “cloistered virtue, unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her adversary…” (John Milton, a speech to the parliament of England, 1644, found here). Granted, economists publish a lot, and their lives seem to revolve around criticism and argument. Big deal. The same is true of The New York Times.

    So let’s look at Cowen’s assertion that economists “produce empirical knowledge which is subject to process of testing, broadly interpreted, and feedback” — which I take as a clumsy attempt to say that economists follow the scientific method. That’s precisely where Cowen and others who claim that economics is a science are wrong.

    Remember what I said about controlled experiments in economics: They’re meaningless. Therefore, the only valid way to test a hypothesis in economics is 1) to make a prediction of future economic behavior that is based on all data from non-experimental events that are relevant and available at the time of the prediction and 2) to test that prediction against data for non-experimental events that occur after the date of the prediction. Any other approach (e.g., “screening” available data or using data for past events to test the validity of a predictive model) is unscientific. (The words “cheating” and “manipulation” come to mind.)

    Let’s see if Cowen adduces valid examples of the scientific method in his eight empirical propositions about economics. He says, reasonably enough, that if economics is a science “we should expect to see empirical progress.” He then lists eight “issues where I (and many others) have been swayed by the data,” which he states in the form of untrue claims in which he no longer believes. Here they are, followed in turn by my comments.

    1. We can both control the price level and keep interest rates stable by targeting the monetary base. Twenty years ago I believed this, but even the Swiss have not stuck with monetary targeting. A better solution is to broadly target the price level but allow for mild inflation.

    This is a case where “science” learns what “real people” already know, as in the case of the recent “discovery” that dogs understand words. Ratifying lessons from experience is more bookkeeping than science.

    2. Minimum wage boosts will generally put many low-skilled workers out of work.

    I addressed this one in recent posts, here and here. Cowen’s co-Volokh Conspirator, Jacob Levy, has more to say here. In any event, Cowen’s sources (here) are hardly compelling. The bottom line is akin to a shoddy defense summation. In the exact words of one of Cowen’s sources: “Now that we’ve re-evaluated the [spurious: ED] evidence…, here’s what most labor economists believe: The minimum wage kills very few jobs [one, two, thousands?: ED], and the jobs it kills were lousy jobs anyway [says the well-fed economist: ED]. In other words, “My client isn’t guilty, but if he is guilty he isn’t very guilty.”

    3. Investment is highly elastic with respect to observed changes in real interest rates. I’ve seen a few good studies that generate significant elasticities, typically using taxes as an exogenous instrument. But more often than not you can’t get this result.

    If the “good studies” are good, the other studies must be “bad”. This isn’t science, it’s a fishing expedition.

    4. Free capital movements for developing countries should usher in macroeconomic stability. Ask Argentina, Thailand, and Indonesia. Sometimes this proposition will be true, it is simply not as true as we once thought. If you don’t do all your reforms to perfection, and perhaps even if you do, international capital markets may put you through the wringer.

    This has elements of the scientific method, in that it represents the refinement of a model based on experience. But the resulting model is merely qualitative; it has no predictive power.

    5. Immediate privatization is more important than establishing the rule of law [in ex-Communist countries]. Arguably the jury is still out on this one. We haven’t observed the other sequencing in many cases (when has rule of law come first?) and thus we do not have the relevant counterfactual. But privatization alone is less effective than we used to think, pick almost any ex-Communist country as an example.

    First, the proposition isn’t a valid scientific hypothesis because neither “privatization” nor “the rule of law” can be quantified. Second, if the hypothesis was widely believed among economists, that only goes to show the naiveté of economists.

    6. It is relatively easy for a disinflation to be credible, provided the government sticks to its guns.

    This is another untestable hypothesis, which Cowen “disproves” by referring to a theoretical analsyis. Wouldn’t it be great if science were always so easy?

    7. Fairness perceptions, envy, and a stubborn attachment to the status quo have little to do with nominal wage stickiness. OK, this one remains up for grabs. But the evidence is mounting in favor of the importance of fairness perceptions; furthermore this is strongly consistent with my real world experience.

    So, the original hypothesis — if you can call it that — hasn’t been disproved, after all. But that doesn’t matter, because if you can disprove a scientific hypothesis with a theoretical analysis (as in number 7), I guess you can disprove it with a few “real world” observations.

    8. Human beings maximize expected utility in the same way, regardless of context. But now, alas, I despair as to how general a science economics can ever become.

    My point, exactly.

    Economics will approach being a science only when its practitioners finally make an unambiguously scientific breakthrough, such as accurately and consistently predicting near-term changes in GDP. Barring that, economics will remain what it is today: a cacophony of competing untestable hypotheses, shaped by ideology, and justified by decorative mathematics and selective statistics.

    I Just Can’t Help It

    When Cass Sunstein shows up as a guest blogger, I’m compelled to renounce my earlier resolution to say no more about him. Here he is, at Glennreynolds.com, regurgitating his line about FDR’s Second Bill of Rights. Mercifully, he does it quickly — this time.

    Because there’s nothing new in Sunstein’s latest utterance, I will simply refer you to my earlier posts about Sunstein: here, here, here, here , here, and here. The last post is actually funny, in the way that Chaplin’s The Great Dictator was funny about Hitler.

    What Goes Around Comes Around

    Perhaps it’s obvious to everyone else, but…

    The virulence of the anti-Bush crowd (horde, really) reminds me of the virulence of the anti-Clintonistas:

    1. The trouble began with Clinton when he beat Bush 41 because of Perot’s presence in the 1992 race. The trouble began with Bush when he beat Gore because of the controversial outcome in Florida.

    2. Clinton initially tried to push a left-wing agenda, especially with his proposal for “reform” of the health-care system. Bush initially tried to push a right-wing agenda, especially with his “faith-based initiative” and nomination of pro-life jurists to judgeships.

    3. Conservatives saw Clinton’s tax increases not as valid economic policy but as a way of punishing achievement. Liberals see Bush’s tax cuts not as valid economic policy but as a way of rewarding “fat cats”.

    4. Clinton made a major rightward move by embracing welfare reform, but that didn’t placate Clinton-haters. Bush has made a major leftward move in his domestic agenda, but that hasn’t placated Bush-haters.

    5. Far-left Democrats viewed Clinton as a traitor to his party because of welfare reform. Far-right Republicans view Bush as a traitor to his party because of his “profligate” domestic budget.

    6. Given everything else, conservatives weren’t willing to cut any slack for Clinton in the Jones-Lewinsky affair. Given everything else, liberals haven’t been willing to cut any slack for Bush when it comes to the war in Iraq.

    I know just how the Bush-haters feel. I was a Clinton-hater.

    More Things a Libertarian Can Believe In

    In two earlier posts (here and here), I staked out a number of positions on foreign and defense policy that are not au courant in libertarian circles. Here are some possibly heterodox positions on other matters:

    • Sure punishment for crime, administered swiftly and evenhandedly, fosters mutual trust in a socially fragmented society. The only necessary justification for capital punishment, therefore, is that it has broad support.

    • Religious scruples aside, it’s possible that many pro-life advocates see abortion as a step down the slippery slope toward legalized, involuntary euthanasia. And perhaps they’re right.

    • Religious scruples aside, it’s possible that many opponents of gay marriage see it as step toward undermining the importance of the traditional nuclear family, which — in spite of its many problems — remains a cornerstone of societal stability. And perhaps the opponents are right, at least insofar as the proponents of gay marriage tend to demean heterosexual marriage. The issue would be far less salient if the state would go out of the marriage business and let society sort itself out.

    • Opposing Bush because he’s a “big spender” or “soft on civil liberties” or a “war-monger” or a “protectionist” makes no sense when his opponent is a bigger spender, a proponent of the regulatory state, a knee-jerk multilateralist, and a candidate of the labor-union party.

    • Economists who advocate free-market capitalism because of its economic efficiency are often mistaken for libertarians. (Some of them are, some of them aren’t, and some of them — being too “rational” for such ethereal concerns — don’t care whether they are or aren’t.) But libertarianism is more than a belief in the superiority of free-market capitalism over other economic systems. It is a belief in political freedom, that is, freedom from the shackles of the state in matters intellectual, religious, social, and — yes — economic. Political freedom offers the best assurance of free markets and secure property rights, as long as the political system prevents encroachments on markets and property rights.

    • Environmentalism is, in part, a defense of property rights. Environmentalism often goes beyond a defense of property rights into pure silliness (e.g., no species should ever die, no tree should ever be cut down). There is, however, a positive case to be made for certain forms of environmentalism. Libertarians should advance a positive version of environmentalism and tone down their negative rhetoric about environmental silliness.

    About Economic Forecasting

    In the the previous post I disparaged the ability of economists to estimate the employment effects of the minimum wage. I’m skeptical because economists are notoriously bad at constructing models that adequately predict near-term changes in GDP. That task should be easier than sorting out the microeconomic complexities of the labor market.

    Take Professor Ray Fair, for example. Prof. Fair teaches macroeconomic theory, econometrics, and macroeconometric models at Yale University. He has been plying his trade since 1968, first at Princeton, then at M.I.T., and (since 1974) at Yale. Those are big-name schools, so I assume that Prof. Fair is a big name in his field.

    Well, since 1983, Prof. Fair has been forecasting changes in real GDP over the next four quarters. He has made 80 such forecasts based on a model that he has undoubtedly tweaked over the years. The current model is here. His forecasting track record is here. How has he done? Here’s how:

    1. The median absolute error of his forecasts is 30 percent.

    2. The mean absolute error of his forecasts is 70 percent.

    3. His forecasts are rather systematically biased: too high when real, four-quarter GDP growth is less than 4 percent; too low when real, four-quarter GDP growth is greater than 4 percent.

    4. His forecasts have grown generally worse — not better — with time.

    How hard can it be to forecast the direction and magnitude of macroeconomic activity given the plethora of relevant data at hand? It can’t be as hard as estimating the employment effects of changes in the minimum wage, where such effects are subtle and perhaps impossible to measure (e.g., employers shave unmandated employee benefits or allow working conditions to deteriorate; businesses are not continued or started that might otherwise continue or start).

    By the way, Prof. Fair also has a model of presidential elections that he first published in 1978 and has tweaked six times. (Links are here.) According to the current model, Pres. Bush will receive 51.7 percent of the popular vote even under three extreme conditions: zero percent real GDP growth in the first three quarters of 2004, 5 percent growth in the GDP deflator over the first 15 quarters of the Bush administration, and zero quarters (out of the first 15) with real GDP growth at an annual rate of more than 3.2 percent. In other words, a Republican incumbent is a shoo-in for re-election. Ha!

    I rest my case.

    On the One Hand…

    …Tyler Cowen of Marginal Revolution, quotes Steven E. Landsburg, writing in Slate, who says:

    Now that we’ve re-evaluated the evidence…, here’s what most labor economists believe: The minimum wage kills very few jobs, and the jobs it kills were [sic] lousy jobs anyway. It is almost impossible to maintain the old argument that minimum wages are bad for minimum-wage workers.

    That’s easy to say if you’re a well-fed economist who thinks it better to kill a “lousy” job than to have such a job filled by a person who’d be glad to have the income.

    On the other hand, Landsburg goes on to say:

    In fact, the minimum wage is very good for unskilled workers [those who don’t lose their jobs: ED]. It transfers income to them. And therein lies the right argument against the minimum wage….

    [T]he minimum wage places the entire burden [of income redistribution] on one small group: the employers of low-wage workers and, to some extent, their customers. Suppose you’re a small entrepreneur with, say, 10 full-time minimum-wage workers. Then a 50 cent increase in the minimum wage is going to cost you about $10,000 a year. That’s no different from a $10,000 tax increase. But the politicians who imposed the burden get to claim they never raised anybody’s taxes.

    Which means that the minimum wage causes unemployment among unskilled workers by 1) helping to drive small businesses out of business and 2) shrinking the market for unskilled labor by discouraging the formation of small businesses. Have those effects been measured adequately by our oh-so-clever coterie of economists, whose ilk cannot forecast economic growth from quarter to quarter with anything resembling accuracy? I don’t think so.

    Your Vote May Count

    The Volokh Conspiracy’s Tyler Cowen, writing about votes for third-party candidates, asserts this: “Your vote will not count, no matter what. If the election is close, the courts will decide it. ‘They’ won’t let me…decide an election.”

    Balderdash! The outcome of the 2000 presidential election, supposedly “decided” in the courts, was really decided by the voters of Florida. Here’s why:

    Bush won in 2000 because of Florida’s electoral votes. Bush won Florida’s electoral votes because he had 537 more votes than Gore when the U.S. Supreme Court stopped the recount in Florida. It’s safe to say that not a single Florida voter anticipated the events following the closing of the polls in Florida. It’s also safe to say that voters who cast valid ballots for Bush, valid ballots for Nader, and invalid ballots for Gore decided the election in Bush’s favor.

    Suppose Floridians had cast 538 fewer valid votes for Bush. The U.S. Supreme Court might have stepped in with Gore ahead by one vote. Would the U.S. Supreme Court have stopped the recount there? We’ll never know.

    Suppose Floridians had cast 536 fewer valid votes for Bush, giving him a lead of only one vote when then U.S. Supreme Court stepped in. Would the U.S. Supreme Court have let that result stand? We’ll never know.

    Suppose 538 of the 97,488 Floridians who voted for Nader had voted for Gore, instead….

    In a State where there’s a close race (as there will be in several States this year), individual voters have no way of knowing how close the race might be. Nor do they have any way of knowing how many votes might be invalidated for one reason or another. Nor do they have any way of knowing how a recount might proceed, or knowing at what point the courts might step in (if at all), or knowing what the courts might do if and when they step in.

    In other words, the outcome of a close election is unpredictable. Tyler Cowen’s dictum, therefore, strikes me as pure hindsight. The outcome of an election, even one that is “decided” in the courts, does depend on voters.

    The only sensible thing to do when you anticipate a close election in your State, and you favor a particular major-party candidate, is to vote for that candidate. If you don’t vote, or if you vote for a third-party candidate, you are effectively voting against your favored major-party candidate.

    Will your vote make a difference? It might. You can’t know in advance. Therefore, you should vote as if your vote will make a difference.

  • Comments? Click here.