Dishonesty is costly
By Walter E. Williams
Dishonesty, lying and cheating are not
treated with the right amount of opprobrium in today’s society. To gain an
appreciation for the significance of honesty and trust, consider what our
day-to-day lives would be like if we couldn’t trust anyone. When we purchase a
bottle of 100 pills from our pharmacist, how many of us bother to count the
pills? We pull in to a gasoline station and pay $35 for 10 gallons of gasoline.
How do we know for sure whether we in fact received 10 gallons instead of 9
3/4? You pay $7 for a 1-pound package of filet mignon. Do you ever
independently verify that you in fact received 1 pound? In each of those cases,
and thousands more, we simply trust the seller.
There are
thousands of cases in which the seller trusts the buyer. Having worked 40
hours, I trust that George Mason University, my employer, will pay me. People
place an order with their stockbroker to purchase 100 shares of AT&T stock,
and the stockbroker trusts that he’ll be paid. Companies purchase 5 tons of
aluminum with payment due 30 days later.
Examples
of honesty and trust abound, but imagine the cost and inconvenience if we
couldn’t trust anyone. We would have to lug around measuring instruments to
make sure that it was in fact 10 gallons of gas and 1 pound of steak that we
purchased. Imagine the hassle of having to count out the number of pills in a
bottle. If we couldn’t trust, we’d have to bear the costly burden of writing
contracts instead of relying on a buyer’s or a seller’s word. We’d have to bear
the monitoring costs to ensure compliance in the simplest
of transactions. It’s safe to say that whatever undermines honesty
and trust raises the costs of transactions, reduces the value of exchange and
makes us poorer.
Honesty
and trust come into play in ways that few of us even contemplate. In my
neighborhood, workers for FedEx, UPS and other delivery companies routinely
leave packages that contain valuable merchandise on the doorstep if no one
answers the door.
The local
supermarket leaves plants, fertilizer and other home and garden items outdoors
overnight unattended. What’s more, the supermarket displays loads of
merchandise at entryways and exits. In neighborhoods where there’s less
honesty, deliverymen’s leaving merchandise on doorsteps and stores leaving
merchandise outdoors unattended or at entryways and exits would be equivalent
to economic suicide.
Dishonesty
is costly. Delivery companies cannot leave packages when the customer is not
home. The company must bear the costs of making return trips, or the customer
has to bear the costs of going to pick up the package. If a supermarket places
merchandise outside, it must bear the costs of hiring an attendant — plus
retrieve the merchandise at the close of business; that’s if it can risk having
merchandise outdoors in the first place.
Honesty
affects stores such as supermarkets in another way. A supermarket manager’s
goal is to maximize the rate of merchandise turnover per square foot of leased
space. When theft is relatively low, the manager can use all of the space he
leases, including outdoor and entryway space, thereby raising his profit
potential. That opportunity is denied to supermarkets in localities where
there’s less honesty. That in turn means a higher cost of doing business, which
translates into higher prices, less profit and fewer customer amenities.
Crime,
distrust and dishonesty impose huge losses that go beyond those suffered
directly. Much of the cost of crime and dishonesty is borne by people who can
least afford it — poor people. It’s poor people who have fewer choices and pay
higher prices or must bear the transportation costs of going to suburban malls
to shop. It’s poor people in high-crime neighborhoods who are refused pizza
delivery and taxi pickups. The fact that honesty and trust are so vital should
make us rethink just how much tolerance we should have for criminals and
dishonest people.
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