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Almost
Everything We’re Taught Is
Wrong
By John Stossel
Published August 24, 2011
We
grow up learning that some things
are just bad: child labor, ticket scalping, price gouging, kidney
selling,
blackmail, etc. But maybe they’re not.
What
I love about economics is that it
can show that what seems harmful is actually good for society. It
illuminates
what common sense overlooks.
This
was the subject of my Fox
Business show last week. It was inspired by the eye-opening book
“Defending the
Undefendable” by economist Walter Block.
Most
people call child labor an
unmitigated evil. But my guests, David Boaz of the Cato Institute and
Nick
Gillespie of Reason.tv, said that’s wrong.
“If
we say that the United States
should abolish child labor in very poor countries,” Boaz said, “then
what will
happen to these children?
...
They’re not suddenly going to go
to the country day school. ... They may be out selling their bodies on
the
street. That is not an improvement over working in a T-shirt factory.”
In
fact, studies show that in at least
one country where child labor was suddenly banned, prostitution
increased. Good
economics teaches that as poor countries get richer and freer, capital
investment raises the productivity of labor and child labor diminishes.
There’s
no shortcut through government prohibition -- unless you like
starvation and
child prostitution.
What
about price-gouging? State laws
attempt to prevent people from charging “unconscionable” prices during
emergencies.
“If
I’m in the neighborhood of
Hurricane Katrina,” Boaz said, “what I want is water and ice and
generators.
... If you are in Kentucky (and) you’ve got 10 generators in your
store, are
you getting up at 4 a.m. to drive all day to get to Louisiana to sell
these
generators if you can only sell them for the same price you can sell
them for
in Kentucky? No, you’re going to go down because ... you can sell them
for
more.”
Also,
if prices rise during an
emergency, that’s a signal for people to buy only what they most need.
That
leaves more for everyone else.
If
the price remains low, an incentive
to conserve is lost.
Ticket
scalpers are seen as sleazy
guys who cheat you by marking up the price of tickets. Profits go to
middlemen
instead of the performers.
What
good could they possibly do?
“I
like to think of ticket scalpers as
the guy who stands in line so that I don’t have to,” Gillespie said.
Time
spent in line is part of the
ticket cost. Scalpers let you pay entirely in money, rather than partly
in valuable
time.
Most
people say that selling body
parts is wrong.
“It
also seems wrong to have people
dying because they can’t get a kidney,” Boaz said.
Some
400,000 Americans are on a
waiting list now for a new kidney, and they are not allowed to pay for
one.
“We
sell hair. We sell sperm. We sell
eggs these days.” Boaz added.
Gillespie
added, “The best way to grow
the supply and allow more people to live is to allow the market to
price those
organs.”
Maybe
the most counterintuitive
position argued on my show was that blackmail should not be a crime.
Blackmail
(unlike extortion) is the demand for money in return for withholding
information. Robin Hanson, a George Mason University economist, defends
blackmail.
“The
thing you’re threatening when
you’re threatening blackmail (is) gossip,” Hanson said. “If it should
be all
right to tell people, it should be all right to threaten to tell
people.”
What
we don’t like, however, is the
blackmailer saying, “Pay me to keep quiet.”
“But
the effect of that is to make
people behave,” Hanson said.
“If
we (allow) blackmail, people
behave even more because they are even more afraid of what might happen
if they
don’t.”
Maybe
Ponzi-schemer Bernie Madoff
would have been caught earlier?
“That’s
right. ... Blackmail is actually
a form of private law enforcement.”
Also,
since gossip is free speech,
blackmail is simply selling the service of not engaging in free speech.
Why
should that be outlawed?
I
subtitled my last book, “Everything
You Know Is Wrong”. I was exaggerating, of course, but many things
we’re taught
are fallacies. That’s why I like economics. It explodes fallacies.
Read
it at FoxNews
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