I am frustrated when reading that article because it tells me I should doubt a certain set of assumptions but doesn’t describe in detail the assumptions it wants me to use to replace those assumptions. “Doubting” in a vacuum is pretty difficult to do well, it’s better to create many different ideas and then compare and contrast their strengths and weaknesses.
Doubt… or test? My assumption/belief is that Elizabeth Warren doesn’t know what keeps people running. Your assumption/belief is that she does know what keeps people running. If we can test our assumptions/beliefs… then shouldn’t we? Or is the possibility of being right better than the possibility of being proved wrong?
Really this is where betting comes into play..
A bet instantly raises the marginal private cost of error, which leads to a sharp increase in rationality. Faced with financial consequences, people suddenly—if temporarily—admit to themselves that they know a lot less than they like to believe—and bet accordingly. - Bryan Caplan, Beating the Odds: Why Do People Insist on Even Bets?
… which brings us back to Carnegie...
Yet you and I, if we examine the facts closely, will discover that the majority of our opinions, our most cherished beliefs, our creeds, the principles of conduct on which many of us base our very lives, are the result of suggestion, not reasoning… Prejudiced, biased, and reiterated assertions, not logic, have formulated our beliefs.
If you’re not willing to bet that Elizabeth Warren knows what keeps people running… then this leads me to believe that you really haven’t examined your belief.
I think there’s a lot of work within the concept of “know what keeps people running” that needs to be elaborated on before I can even evaluate the question in a coherent way. I think Warren probably understands the politics of Washington DC than I do. I think she better understands working with constituents and negotiating tradeoffs between different goals than I do. I think she better understands quite a lot of policy better than I do. She also has better working familiarity with it than I do.
There’s not any clear way to evaluate whether or not Elizabeth Warren knows better than I do how to keep people running. Not taking an ill formed necessarily impossible hypothetical to win bet doesn’t prove anything. You’re acting like you’re extremely rational and you’ve got skin in the game so you’re more trustworthy and have thought things through better, but you’re dealing with hypotheticals just as much as I am here. What “test” is it that your beliefs pass that the other beliefs fail?!
Also, I never even said that I am on Elizabeth Warren’s side of the question you asked. You sort of just assumed. I don’t really feel much enthusiasm for either option presented, however.
Congresspeople either do, or they don’t, know what keeps people running. If they don’t know what keeps people running then they really shouldn’t be spending our taxes.
If, in a pragmatarian system, people choose to allocate their taxes themselves, rather than give them to their congresspeople, then this would indicate that there was insufficient evidence for people to believe that congresspeople know what keeps them running.
By comparison, when you give your money to a baker it’s because he knows what keeps you running… bread! Is this the only thing that keeps you running? Nope. There are plenty of things that keep you running… and you allocate your money/time accordingly. For example… here you are!
Everybody wants to keep themselves running. So if people allocated their taxes themselves, rather than give them to congresspeople, then it really wouldn’t seem like congresspeople were doing anything that keep people running.
Right now we give a lot of money to congresspeople… which is a huge problem… if they don’t do anything that keeps people running. It should be pretty straightforward that we have plenty to gain and nothing to lose by giving people the option to directly allocate their taxes.
Are you suggesting a direct democracy? Citizens vote directly on policies, rather than electing a representative to vote for them? Or are you saying that individual citizens should choose where their individual tax dollars go? Because that second option seems to defeat the point of raising taxes at all, which is that it helps overcome collective action problems. Wouldn’t each citizen just choose to have their tax dollars given back to themself, through either direct or indirect means?
What I’m suggesting is that we create a market in the public sector. Individual citizens would choose where their individual tax dollars go.
Citizens would only be able to choose to give their taxes back to themselves if this option was available. But why, if the public sector is about overcoming collective action problems, would this option be available? Is putting money back into your pocket a collective action problem?
So far not a single person has made a donation to my blog. Maybe it’s because nobody values my blog? Naw, that can’t be right! It’s because of the free-rider problem! People guess that I’m going to continue blogging whether or not I get any money… so why should they contribute if they don’t have to?
With this in mind I can pretend there are gazillions of people who derive value from my blog. But what if you wanted to challenge my belief? One way you could do it would be to create a blog sector. Everybody would get “taxed” $5 a month but… they could choose which blogs they gave their money to.
With this system in place, what would I be able to say if I still didn’t receive any contributions? Unfortunately I wouldn’t be able to blame it on the free-rider problem. I’d have to come up with some other rationalization.
Well… maybe I’d give myself $5 a month for my own blog. Why not? Do you think everybody would start a blog so that they could put their $5/month back in their own pockets? If so, then you’d probably have to figure out some sort of threshold. Maybe something like… any blog that 30 or fewer people contributed to would be booted from the blog sector.
Now let’s apply this logic to the public sector. If too few people contributed to a public good then we would say that it has insufficient demand breadth. If it has insufficient demand breadth then it’s not an adequately large enough collective action problem to warrant inclusion in the public sector. Therefore, people wouldn’t be able to spend their taxes on helping to overcome it.
With that under our belt.. we can get back to congress. If people have to pay taxes anyways, but they don’t give any of their taxes to congress… then congress wouldn’t have sufficient demand breadth. Perhaps congress creates some value (just like my blog) but clearly people derive more value from other public goods.
A blog sector makes perfect economic sense. There’s plenty of studies on the free-rider problem. But if you wanted people to elect a small group of representatives to allocate everybody’s blog “taxes”… then I’d ask you to cite the economic justification for the additional step. And you wouldn’t be able to because it doesn’t exist.
I’ve been digging and debating this for several years and there’s absolutely no economic evidence to support our current system. Yet, most people believe in it. This is why I like Carnegie’s quote… it’s painfully pertinent.
So, you’re suggesting that the public should get to choose where their tax dollars go out of a list of preselected options. Who selects the options that go onto the list?
Voters? Would they want a department of books to be added to the list? It stands to reason that if the list gets longer… congress would probably receive more positive feedback (money) if it raised the tax rate.
Initially I thought that, in a pragmatarian system, the government would be the perfect embodiment of unmet demand. But now I’m not sure whether the public sector would grow larger. This is because the public sector market would be different from the private sector market.
In the private sector market there would be prices and profits but in the public sector market there wouldn’t be. But in both markets there would be consumer sovereignty. I don’t think that both types of markets can be equally effective though. It’s hard for me to wrap my mind around.
Imagine that every vegetarian lied about their preferences. This would result in the destruction of value. They’d order steak that they really wouldn’t want to eat! As a result of this increase in demand, more meat would be supplied and society’s limited resources would be shifted accordingly. The supply would less accurately reflect the true demand. The lies of the vegetarians would create a distortion.
So the basic rule here is that more honesty equals more value. Getting back to my blog example… if people don’t communicate (via money) the amount of value they derive from blogs… well… clearly this will result in less blogs being supplied and less value being created for consumers. Markets work because people have the opportunity to communicate what they value… and this helps guide production. But, as we can see from blogs, music and numerous other example… it’s quite possible for people to not communicate their values.
So if the public sector market facilitates better communication of values… then it will create more value and expand accordingly.
Nobody “knows what keeps people running”, and it takes a huge organization with experts in many different fields to give us SNAFU instead of total disaster.
If you’re a fan of experts in many different fields then why aren’t you a fan of pragmatarianism? Maybe you’re under the impression that experts work for peanuts?
I am frustrated when reading that article because it tells me I should doubt a certain set of assumptions but doesn’t describe in detail the assumptions it wants me to use to replace those assumptions. “Doubting” in a vacuum is pretty difficult to do well, it’s better to create many different ideas and then compare and contrast their strengths and weaknesses.
Doubt… or test? My assumption/belief is that Elizabeth Warren doesn’t know what keeps people running. Your assumption/belief is that she does know what keeps people running. If we can test our assumptions/beliefs… then shouldn’t we? Or is the possibility of being right better than the possibility of being proved wrong?
Really this is where betting comes into play..
… which brings us back to Carnegie...
If you’re not willing to bet that Elizabeth Warren knows what keeps people running… then this leads me to believe that you really haven’t examined your belief.
I think there’s a lot of work within the concept of “know what keeps people running” that needs to be elaborated on before I can even evaluate the question in a coherent way. I think Warren probably understands the politics of Washington DC than I do. I think she better understands working with constituents and negotiating tradeoffs between different goals than I do. I think she better understands quite a lot of policy better than I do. She also has better working familiarity with it than I do.
There’s not any clear way to evaluate whether or not Elizabeth Warren knows better than I do how to keep people running. Not taking an ill formed necessarily impossible hypothetical to win bet doesn’t prove anything. You’re acting like you’re extremely rational and you’ve got skin in the game so you’re more trustworthy and have thought things through better, but you’re dealing with hypotheticals just as much as I am here. What “test” is it that your beliefs pass that the other beliefs fail?!
Also, I never even said that I am on Elizabeth Warren’s side of the question you asked. You sort of just assumed. I don’t really feel much enthusiasm for either option presented, however.
Congresspeople either do, or they don’t, know what keeps people running. If they don’t know what keeps people running then they really shouldn’t be spending our taxes.
If, in a pragmatarian system, people choose to allocate their taxes themselves, rather than give them to their congresspeople, then this would indicate that there was insufficient evidence for people to believe that congresspeople know what keeps them running.
By comparison, when you give your money to a baker it’s because he knows what keeps you running… bread! Is this the only thing that keeps you running? Nope. There are plenty of things that keep you running… and you allocate your money/time accordingly. For example… here you are!
Everybody wants to keep themselves running. So if people allocated their taxes themselves, rather than give them to congresspeople, then it really wouldn’t seem like congresspeople were doing anything that keep people running.
Right now we give a lot of money to congresspeople… which is a huge problem… if they don’t do anything that keeps people running. It should be pretty straightforward that we have plenty to gain and nothing to lose by giving people the option to directly allocate their taxes.
Wrong. It’s not binary.
Are you suggesting a direct democracy? Citizens vote directly on policies, rather than electing a representative to vote for them? Or are you saying that individual citizens should choose where their individual tax dollars go? Because that second option seems to defeat the point of raising taxes at all, which is that it helps overcome collective action problems. Wouldn’t each citizen just choose to have their tax dollars given back to themself, through either direct or indirect means?
What I’m suggesting is that we create a market in the public sector. Individual citizens would choose where their individual tax dollars go.
Citizens would only be able to choose to give their taxes back to themselves if this option was available. But why, if the public sector is about overcoming collective action problems, would this option be available? Is putting money back into your pocket a collective action problem?
So far not a single person has made a donation to my blog. Maybe it’s because nobody values my blog? Naw, that can’t be right! It’s because of the free-rider problem! People guess that I’m going to continue blogging whether or not I get any money… so why should they contribute if they don’t have to?
With this in mind I can pretend there are gazillions of people who derive value from my blog. But what if you wanted to challenge my belief? One way you could do it would be to create a blog sector. Everybody would get “taxed” $5 a month but… they could choose which blogs they gave their money to.
With this system in place, what would I be able to say if I still didn’t receive any contributions? Unfortunately I wouldn’t be able to blame it on the free-rider problem. I’d have to come up with some other rationalization.
Well… maybe I’d give myself $5 a month for my own blog. Why not? Do you think everybody would start a blog so that they could put their $5/month back in their own pockets? If so, then you’d probably have to figure out some sort of threshold. Maybe something like… any blog that 30 or fewer people contributed to would be booted from the blog sector.
Now let’s apply this logic to the public sector. If too few people contributed to a public good then we would say that it has insufficient demand breadth. If it has insufficient demand breadth then it’s not an adequately large enough collective action problem to warrant inclusion in the public sector. Therefore, people wouldn’t be able to spend their taxes on helping to overcome it.
With that under our belt.. we can get back to congress. If people have to pay taxes anyways, but they don’t give any of their taxes to congress… then congress wouldn’t have sufficient demand breadth. Perhaps congress creates some value (just like my blog) but clearly people derive more value from other public goods.
A blog sector makes perfect economic sense. There’s plenty of studies on the free-rider problem. But if you wanted people to elect a small group of representatives to allocate everybody’s blog “taxes”… then I’d ask you to cite the economic justification for the additional step. And you wouldn’t be able to because it doesn’t exist.
I’ve been digging and debating this for several years and there’s absolutely no economic evidence to support our current system. Yet, most people believe in it. This is why I like Carnegie’s quote… it’s painfully pertinent.
So, you’re suggesting that the public should get to choose where their tax dollars go out of a list of preselected options. Who selects the options that go onto the list?
Voters? Would they want a department of books to be added to the list? It stands to reason that if the list gets longer… congress would probably receive more positive feedback (money) if it raised the tax rate.
Initially I thought that, in a pragmatarian system, the government would be the perfect embodiment of unmet demand. But now I’m not sure whether the public sector would grow larger. This is because the public sector market would be different from the private sector market.
In the private sector market there would be prices and profits but in the public sector market there wouldn’t be. But in both markets there would be consumer sovereignty. I don’t think that both types of markets can be equally effective though. It’s hard for me to wrap my mind around.
Imagine that every vegetarian lied about their preferences. This would result in the destruction of value. They’d order steak that they really wouldn’t want to eat! As a result of this increase in demand, more meat would be supplied and society’s limited resources would be shifted accordingly. The supply would less accurately reflect the true demand. The lies of the vegetarians would create a distortion.
So the basic rule here is that more honesty equals more value. Getting back to my blog example… if people don’t communicate (via money) the amount of value they derive from blogs… well… clearly this will result in less blogs being supplied and less value being created for consumers. Markets work because people have the opportunity to communicate what they value… and this helps guide production. But, as we can see from blogs, music and numerous other example… it’s quite possible for people to not communicate their values.
So if the public sector market facilitates better communication of values… then it will create more value and expand accordingly.
Nobody “knows what keeps people running”, and it takes a huge organization with experts in many different fields to give us SNAFU instead of total disaster.
If you’re a fan of experts in many different fields then why aren’t you a fan of pragmatarianism? Maybe you’re under the impression that experts work for peanuts?