Our
institutions need fixing
By
NIALL FERGUSON
Not
everyone is an entrepreneur. Still, everyone should try—if only once—to start a
business. After all, it is small and medium enterprises that are the key to job
creation. There is also something uniquely educational about sitting at the
desk where the buck stops, in a dreary office you've just rented, working day
and night with a handful of employees just to break even.
As an
academic, I'm just an amateur capitalist. Still, over the past 15 years I've
started small ventures in both the U.S. and the U.K. In the process I've
learned something surprising: It's much easier to do in the U.K. There seemed
to be much more regulation in the U.S., not least the headache of sorting out
health insurance for my few employees. And there were
certainly more billable hours from lawyers.
This
set me thinking. We are assured by vociferous economists that economic growth
would be higher in the U.S. and unemployment lower if only the government would
run even bigger deficits and/or the Fed would print even more money. But what
if the difficulty lies elsewhere, in problems that no amount of fiscal or monetary
stimulus can overcome?
Nearly all
development economists agree that good institutions—legislatures, courts,
administrative agencies—are crucial. When poor countries improve their
institutions, economic growth soon accelerates. But what about rich countries?
If poor countries can get rich by improving their institutions, is it not
possible that rich countries can get poor by allowing their institutions to
degenerate? I want to suggest that it is.
Consider the
evidence from the annual "Doing Business" reports from the World Bank
and International Finance Corporation. Since 2006 the report has published data
for most of the world's countries on the total number of days it takes to start
a business, get a construction permit, register a property, pay taxes, get an
export or import license and enforce a contract. If one simply adds together
the total number of days it would take to carry out all seven of these
procedures sequentially, it is possible to construct a simple measure of how
slowly—or fast—a country's bureaucracy moves.
Seven years
of data suggest that most of the world's countries are successfully making it
easier to do business: The total number of days it takes to carry out the seven
procedures has come down, in some cases very substantially. In only around 20
countries has the total duration of dealing with "red tape" gone up.
The sixth-worst case is none other than the U.S., where the total number of
days has increased by 18% to 433. Other members of the bottom 10, using this
metric, are Zimbabwe, Burundi and Yemen (though their absolute numbers are of
course much higher).
Why is it
getting harder to do business in America? Part of the answer is excessively
complex legislation. A prime example is the 848-page Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act of July 2010 (otherwise known as the Dodd-Frank Act), which, among other things, required
that regulators create 243 rules, conduct 67 studies and issue 22 periodic reports.
Comparable in its complexity is the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(906 pages), which is also in the process of spawning thousands of pages of
regulation. You don't have to be opposed to tighter financial regulation or
universal health care to recognize that something is wrong with laws so
elaborate that almost no one affected has the time or the will to read them.
Who
benefits from the growth of complex and cumbersome regulation? The answer is:
lawyers, not forgetting lobbyists and compliance departments. For complexity is
not the friend of the little man. It is the friend of the deep pocket. It is
the friend of cronyism.
We used to have the rule of law. Now it is
tempting to say we have the rule of lawyers, which is something different. For
the lawyers can also make money even in the absence of complex legislation.
It has long been recognized that the U.S.
tort system is exceptionally expensive. Indeed, tort reform is something few
people will openly argue against. Yet the plague of class-action lawsuits
continues unabated. Regular customers of Southwest Airlines recently received this email: "Did
you receive a Southwest Airlines drink coupon through the purchase of a
Business Select ticket prior to August 1, 2010, and never redeem it? If yes, a
legal Settlement provides a Replacement Drink Voucher, entitling you to a free
drink aboard a Southwest flight, for every such drink coupon you did not
redeem."
This is not the product of the imagination
of some modern-day Charles Dickens. It is a document arising from the
class-action case, In re Southwest Airlines Voucher Litigation, No. 11-cv-8176,
which came before Judge Matthew F. Kennelly of the District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois. As the circular explains: "This Action
arose out of Southwest's decision, effective August 1, 2010, to only accept
drink coupons received by Business Select customers with the purchase of a
Business Select ticket on the date of the ticketed travel. The Plaintiffs in
this case allege Southwest, in making that decision, breached its contract with
Class Members who previously received drink coupons," etc.
As often happens in such cases, Southwest
decided to settle out of court. Recipients of the email will have been
nonplused to learn that the settlement "will provide Replacement Drink
Vouchers to Class Members who submit timely and valid Claim Forms." One wonders how many have bothered.
Cui
bono? The answer is, of course, the lawyers representing the plaintiffs. Having
initially pitched for "up to $7 million in fees, costs and expenses,"
these ingenious jurists settled for fees of $3 million "plus costs not to
exceed $30,000" from Southwest.
Canada's Fraser Institute has been
compiling an "Economic Freedom" index since 1980, one component of
which is a measure of the quality of a country's legal system and property
rights. In the light of a case like the one described above, there is nothing
surprising about the recent decline in U.S. performance. In 2000 U.S. law
scored 9.23 out of 10. The most recent score (for 2010) was 7.12.
Such indexes must be used with caution,
but the Fraser index is not the only piece of evidence suggesting that the rule
of law in the U.S. is not what it was. The World Justice Project uses a completely
separate methodology to assess countries' legal systems. The latest WJP report
ranks the U.S. 17th out of 97 countries for the extent to which the law limits
the power of government, 18th for the absence of corruption, 19th for
regulatory enforcement, 22nd for access to civil justice and the maintenance of
order and security, 25th for fundamental rights, and 26th for the effectiveness
of criminal justice. Of all the former British colonies in the report, the U.S.
ranks behind New Zealand, Australia, Singapore, Canada, Hong Kong and the
United Kingdom—though it does beat Botswana.
The decline of American institutions is no
secret. Yet it is one of those strange "unknown knowns" that is well
documented but largely ignored. Each year, the World Economic Forum publishes
its Global Competitiveness Index. Since it introduced its current methodology
in 2004, the U.S. score has declined by 6%. (In the same period China's score
has improved by 12%.) An important component of the index is provided by 22
different measures of institutional quality, based on the WEF's Executive
Opinion Survey. Typical questions are "How would you characterize
corporate governance by investors and boards of directors in your
country?" and "In your country, how common is diversion of public
funds to companies, individuals, or groups due to corruption?" The
startling thing about this exercise is how poorly the U.S. fares.
In only one category out of 22 is the U.S.
ranked in the global top 20 (the strength of investor protection). In seven
categories it does not even make the top 50. For example, the WEF ranks the
U.S. 87th in terms of the costs imposed on business by "organized crime
(mafia-oriented racketeering, extortion)." In every single category, Hong
Kong does better.
At the same time, the U.S. has seen a
marked deterioration in its World Governance Indicators. In terms of
"voice and accountability," "government effectiveness,"
"regulatory quality" and especially "control of
corruption," the U.S. scores have all gone down since the WGI project
began in the mid-1990s. It would be tempting to say that America is turning
Latin, were it not for the fact that a number of Latin American countries have
been improving their governance scores over the same period.
What is the process at work here? Perhaps
this is a victory from beyond the grave for classical Western political theory.
Republics, after all, were regarded by most ancient political philosophers as
condemned to decadence, or to imperial corruption. This was the lesson of Rome.
Democracy was always likely to give way to oligarchy or tyranny. This was the
lesson of the French Revolution. The late Mancur Olson had a modern version of
such cyclical models, arguing that all political systems were bound to become
the captives, over time, of special interests. The advantage enjoyed by West
Germany and Japan after World War II, he suggested, was that all the
rent-seeking elites of the pre-1945 period had been swept away by defeat. This
was why Britain won the war but lost the peace.
Whatever the root causes of the
deterioration of American institutions, smart people are starting to notice it.
Last year Michael Porter of Harvard Business School published a report based on
a large-scale survey of HBS alumni. Among the questions he asked was where the
U.S. was "falling behind" relative to other countries. The top three
lagging indicators named were: the effectiveness of the political system, the
K-12 education system and the complexity of the tax code. Regulation came
sixth, efficiency of the legal framework eighth.
Asked to name "the most problematic
factors for doing business" in the U.S., respondents to the WEF's most
recent Executive Opinion Survey put "inefficient government
bureaucracy" at the top, followed by tax rates and tax regulations.
All this should not be interpreted as yet
another prophecy of the imminent decline and fall of the U.S., however. There
is some light in the gloom. According to the most recent United Nations
projections, the share of the U.S. population that is over 65 will reach 25%
only at the very end of this century. Japan has already passed that milestone;
Germany will be next. By midcentury, both countries will have around a third of
their population age 65 or older.
More imminently, a revolution in the
extraction of shale gas and tight oil, via hydraulic fracking, is transforming
the U.S. from energy dependence to independence. Not only could the U.S., at
least for a time, re-emerge as the world's biggest oil producer; the lower
electricity costs resulting from the fossil-fuel boom are already triggering a
revival of U.S. manufacturing in the Southeast and elsewhere.
In a functioning federal system, the pace
of institutional degeneration is not uniform. America's four "growth
corridors"—the Great Plains, the Gulf Coast, the Intermountain West and
the Southeast—are growing not just because they have natural resources but also
because state governments in those regions are significantly more friendly to
business. There are already heartening signs of a great regeneration in states
like Texas and North Dakota.
"In America you have a right to be
stupid—if you want to be." Secretary of State John Kerry made that remark
off the cuff in February, speaking to a group of students in Berlin. It is not
a right the founding fathers felt they needed explicitly to enshrine. But it
has always been there, and America's leaders have frequently been willing to
exercise it.
Yes, we Americans have the right to be
stupid if we want to be. We can carry on pretending that our economic problems can
be solved with the help of yet more fiscal stimulus or quantitative easing. Or
we can face up to the institutional impediments to growth I have described
here.
Not many economists talk about them, it's
true. But that's because not many economists run businesses.
_______________________________________________
A Senate aide
pushes a stack of documents bound in red tape. They were used as a prop during
a debate on the budget on March 22.
|
By the Numbers
- 433: Total number of days it takes in the U.S. to start a business, register a property, pay taxes, get an import and export license and enforce a contract
- 368: Total number of days it took to do the same in 2006
- 7: U.S. ranking, out of 144 countries, on the World Economic Forum's 2012-2013 Global Competitiveness Index
- 1: U.S. ranking on the 2008-2009 Global Competitiveness Index
- 33: U.S. ranking for its legal system and property rights in 2010 on the Fraser Institute's Economic Freedom index, out of 144 countries
- 9: U.S. ranking for its legal system and property rights in 2000
Sources: 'Doing Business'; World Economic Forum; Fraser Institute
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