
Brother, can you paradigm, or spare a signature?
In a recent post, blogger Janet Bufton writes:
The second way toward lasting change is to do the persuasive work that would have brought them [the changes] about—or the best approximation that the people can bear—through democratic politics. This method does not save anyone from the problems in politics that public choice so usefully identifies. But unlike a solution that prevents politics from breaking out, democratic persuasion keeps power dispersed and treats people as equals, with principles of motion of their own.
What I got from her post is that one can be so trapped in the public choice paradigm that one doesn’t even consider the idea of working through the system to effect good change or stop bad change. I’ll be posting in the near future about a few experiences I had through the political system, mainly in preventing bad changes.
But for now, I’ll tell one story about my trying to effect good change. It’s also about someone who was so imbued with the public choice view that he wouldn’t take even one second to support a change that he agreed with. Janet’s post caused me to remember this.
In the summer of 1973, I was a summer intern with President Nixon’s Council of Economic Advisers. I was from Canada and was on an F-1 student visa. (I mention that because it’s conceivable to me, in retrospect, that I unknowingly broke a law, if there was one, against political activism by a non-permanent resident.)
I thought it would be a good idea to write a succinct statement calling for ending the U.S. postal monopoly and send it to someone in Congress. So I wrote one up and sent it to Milton Friedman for his signature. A few days later, I got Milton’s signed copy in the mail. He recommended a few other economists to send it to and so I did. I also had my own list of people whose work I respected, people I thought would certainly agree with the idea.
One of them was a young economics professor at the University of Missouri, St. Louis. His name was Thomas Ireland. Here’s his CV. He was generous enough with his time to write me a letter explaining why he wouldn’t sign. It wasn’t because he disagreed with the goal. He agreed. But, Ireland explained, workers in the U.S. Post office were a concentrated interest group and we consumers were a dispersed interest and so there was no point in pushing for such a change. I’m guessing he assumed that I didn’t know this argument. But in the year I took off to study economics on my own (1970-71), which I’ve written about in The Joy of Freedom: An Economist’s Odyssey, I had come across public choice and had read not only Buchanan and Tullock, but also Anthony Downs. It was Downs who made the argument that Ireland made.
Here’s what I found strange. It had to have taken Ireland at least 3 minutes to write the few paragraphs in which he explained the Downs concentrated benefit/dispersed cost paradigm. That’s 180 seconds. It would have taken him about 1 second to sign the statement. He didn’t. That’s how tightly he held on to the public choice paradigm.
READER COMMENTS
Craig
Dec 17 2024 at 12:25am
Privatizing USPS is low hanging fruit with respect to fiscal situation. Convert it from a tax consuming entity to a tax producing business. This is the easy one, they still won’t do it.
Alan Goldhammer
Dec 17 2024 at 9:12am
I’m pretty sure it will require an Act of Congress to do this. In the past whenever the Postal Service has advanced proposals to cut costs, Congress has always balked at reduced service (halting Saturday delivery of mail is always opposed). Most rural areas in the US would see diminished or even no postal service under privatization as it would not be worth the money. Do you really think rural Congressional members would support this?
I assume a lot of readers here have set up auto bill paying via the Internet and consume a lot of media this way. There are large swaths of the country that do not have fast broadband. Lots of Americans may not be Internet savvy as well.
steve
Dec 17 2024 at 11:20am
Some in Congress complain that the USPS doesnt act like a private entity but then they wont let the USPS do the things a private entity would. If Congress shuts down the USPS but requires its replacement maintain costly routes and not raise prices it will lose money also.
Steve
Craig
Dec 17 2024 at 10:41pm
“If Congress shuts down the USPS but requires its replacement maintain costly routes and not raise prices it will lose money also.”
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying the above is wrong, to expound I would suggest the basic problem with USPS is that they run a hub/spoke system and they have too many spokes stuffing garbage into your mail box daily. Look at what UPS/Fedex/Amazon etc do they have more regional DCs that do cover those routes but they only come when they have something for you. At a retail level you can print a label off online, you can go to a UPS Store or a Fedex Office/Kinkos, perhaps drop places at a drug store, etc.
Roger McKinney
Dec 17 2024 at 11:11am
Maybe I havent read enough public choice. But what I have read seems to agree with Henderson and encourage political involvement to reduce government back to Constitutional levels. What am I missing?
Jon Murphy
Dec 17 2024 at 11:41am
Good stuff here. I’m reminded a little of Adam Smith’s comment in the Wealth of Nations where he expressed skepticism that free trade would ever become a reality in Britain (I forget the exact wording; I’m at the airport and can post the quote later). But, despite these reservations, he continued to support free trade both through The Wealth of Nations and through political activism (eg his letters and opinions to various political leaders in Britain advocating for free trade).
Indeed, it was just about half a century after his death that the first free trade agreement was signed, and with bitter rival France no less! (The Cobden-Chavilier Treaty)
Alan Goldhammer
Dec 17 2024 at 12:32pm
What would Adam Smith think of Brexit?
Jon Murphy
Dec 17 2024 at 2:06pm
Good question. I haven’t the slightest idea.
Jim Glass
Dec 18 2024 at 1:29am
“There is a great deal of ruin in a nation.”
Comments are closed.