The law of unintended consequences is at work always and everywhere
The law of
unintended consequences, often cited but rarely defined, is that actions of
people—and especially of government—always have effects that are unanticipated
or unintended. Economists and other social scientists have heeded its power for
centuries; for just as long, politicians and popular opinion have largely
ignored it.
The concept of
unintended consequences is one of the building blocks of economics. Adam Smith’s “invisible
hand,” the most famous metaphor in social science, is an example of a positive
unintended consequence. Smith maintained that each individual, seeking only his
own gain, “is led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of
his intention,” that end being the public interest. “It is not from the
benevolence of the butcher, or the baker, that we expect our dinner,” Smith
wrote, “but from regard to their own self interest.”
Most often,
however, the law of unintended consequences illuminates the perverse
unanticipated effects of legislation and regulation. In 1692 the
English philosopher John Locke, a forerunner of
modern economists, urged the defeat of a parliamentary bill designed to cut the
maximum permissible rate of interest from 6 percent to 4 percent. Locke argued
that instead of benefiting borrowers, as intended, it would hurt them. People
would find ways to circumvent the law, with the costs of circumvention borne by
borrowers. To the extent the law was obeyed, Locke concluded, the chief results
would be less available credit and a redistribution of income
away from “widows, orphans and all those who have their estates in money.”
In the first half
of the nineteenth century, the famous French economic journalist Frédéric Bastiat often
distinguished in his writing between the “seen” and the “unseen.” The seen were
the obvious visible consequences of an action or policy. The unseen were the
less obvious, and often unintended, consequences. In his famous essay “What Is Seen and What Is
Not Seen,” Bastiat wrote:
There is only one difference between a bad economist and a good one: the bad economist confines himself to the visible effect; the good economist takes into account both the effect that can be seen and those effects that must be foreseen.(1)
Bastiat applied
his analysis to a wide range of issues, including trade barriers, taxes, and
government spending.
The first and most
complete analysis of the concept of unintended consequences was done in 1936 by
the American sociologist Robert K. Merton. In an influential article titled
“The Unanticipated Consequences of Purposive Social Action,” Merton identified
five sources of unanticipated consequences. The first two—and the most
pervasive—were “ignorance” and “error.”
Merton
labeled the third source the “imperious immediacy of interest.” By that he was
referring to instances in which someone wants the intended consequence of an
action so much that he purposefully chooses to ignore any unintended effects.
(That type of willful ignorance is very different from true ignorance.) The
Food and Drug Administration, for example, creates enormously destructive
unintended consequences with its regulation of pharmaceutical drugs. By
requiring that drugs be not only safe but efficacious for a particular use, as it
has done since 1962, the FDA has slowed down by years the introduction of each
drug. An unintended consequence is that many people die or suffer who would
have been able to live or thrive. This consequence, however, has been so well
documented that the regulators and legislators now foresee it but accept it.
“Basic values” was
Merton’s fourth source of unintended consequences. The Protestant ethic of hard
work and asceticism, he wrote, “paradoxically leads to its own decline through
the accumulation of wealth and possessions.” His final case was the
“self-defeating prediction.” Here he was referring to the instances when the
public prediction of a social development proves false precisely because the
prediction changes the course of history. For example, the warnings earlier in
this century that population growth would
lead to mass starvation helped spur scientific breakthroughs in
agricultural productivity that have
since made it unlikely that the gloomy prophecy will come true. Merton later
developed the flip side of this idea, coining the phrase “the self-fulfilling
prophecy.” In a footnote to the 1936 article, he vowed to write a book devoted
to the history and analysis of unanticipated consequences. Although Merton
worked on the book over the next sixty years, it remained uncompleted when he
died in 2003 at age ninety-two.
The law of
unintended consequences provides the basis for many criticisms of government
programs. As the critics see it, unintended consequences can add so much to the
costs of some programs that they make the programs unwise even if they achieve
their stated goals. For instance, the U.S. government has imposed quotas on
imports of steel in order to protect steel companies and steelworkers from
lower-priced competition. The quotas do
help steel companies. But they also make less of the cheap steel available to
U.S. automakers. As a result, the automakers have to pay more for steel than
their foreign competitors do. So a policy that protects one industry from
foreign competition makes it harder for another industry to compete with imports.
Similarly, Social Security has helped
alleviate poverty among senior citizens. Many economists argue, however, that
it has carried a cost that goes beyond the payroll taxes levied on workers and
employers. Martin Feldstein and others maintain that today’s workers save less
for their old age because they know they will receive Social Security checks
when they retire. If Feldstein and the others are correct, it means that less savings are available,
less investment takes place,
and the economy and wages grow more slowly than they would without Social
Security.
The law of
unintended consequences is at work always and everywhere. People outraged about
high prices of plywood in areas devastated by hurricanes, for example, may
advocate price controls to keep the
prices closer to usual levels. An unintended consequence is that suppliers of
plywood from outside the region, who would have been willing to supply plywood
quickly at the higher market price, are less willing to do so at the
government-controlled price. Thus results a shortage of a good where it is
badly needed. Government licensing of electricians, to take another example,
keeps the supply of electricians below what it would otherwise be, and thus
keeps the price of electricians’ services higher than otherwise. One unintended
consequence is that people sometimes do their own electrical work, and,
occasionally, one of these amateurs is electrocuted.
One final sobering
example is the case of the Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989.
Afterward, many coastal states enacted laws placing unlimited liability on tanker
operators. As a result, the Royal Dutch/Shell group, one of the world’s biggest
oil companies, began hiring independent ships to deliver oil to the United
States instead of using its own forty-six-tanker fleet. Oil specialists fretted
that other reputable shippers would flee as well rather than face such unquantifiable
risk, leaving the field to fly-by-night tanker operators with leaky ships and
iffy insurance. Thus, the
probability of spills probably increased and the likelihood of collecting
damages probably decreased as a consequence of the new laws.
No comments:
Post a Comment