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Prices and Values
Why economics fails as a sole
foundation of public policy.
Ernest Partridge, Co-Editor
The Crisis Papers
August 9, 2005
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The economist . . . keeps the motivations of human
beings pure, simple and hard-headed, and not messed up by such
things as goodwill or moral sentiments... [T]here is ... something
quite extraordinary in the fact that economics has in fact evolved
in this way, characterizing human motivation in such spectacularly
narrow terms. One reason why this is extraordinary is that economics
is supposed to be concerned with real people. It is hard to believe
that real people could be completely unaffected by the reach of the
self-examination induced by the Socratic question, "how should
one live?"
Amartya Sen
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Immediately upon assuming office in 1981, President Ronald Reagan issued an
Executive Order requiring all federal administrative agencies and departments
to justify proposed regulations with a cost-benefit analysis.
Similarly, on his first day in office, January 20, 2001, George Bush ordered
all cabinet officers to withhold implementation of more than fifty federal
regulations that had been approved late in the Clinton administration. They
were to be kept “on hold” until Bush’s Office of Management and Budget
determined that their benefits exceeded their costs.
As Amanda Griscom (of grist.com) reported
in September, 2003: “The frozen rules included more than a dozen
significant environmental ones. They called for less arsenic in drinking
water, a ban on snowmobiles in national parks, controls for raw sewage
overflow, stronger energy-efficiency standards, and protections against
commercial logging, mining, and drilling on national lands. Of the
environmental regulations that came under scrutiny, only half have since made
it past the cost-benefit analysis and into the Federal Register. ”
Cost-benefit analysis (CBA), an exclusively economic assessment of public
policy proposals, is based upon the assumption that the public values that
enter into policy decisions can all be quantified in monetary terms.
This is a remarkably impoverished concept of "values" to be coming
from an administration that proclaims its commitment to "moral
values."
But does anyone really believe that values can be reduced to (monetary) costs
and benefits? Apparently more than a few economists believe this. Consider the
following comments from standard economic texts and publications: “All goods
that matter to individuals ... must be capable of being bought and sold in
markets.” (A. Myrick Freeman) "The benefit of any good or service is
simply its value to a consumer." (J. Seneca and M. Taussig) " In
principle, the ultimate measure of environmental quality is the value people
place on these services ... or their willingness to pay." (Freeman,
Haveman, and Kneese) And finally, "anything that is valued
instrumentally ... can in principle be handled by economics, be it acts of
friendship or love." (Steven Edwards).
While historically utilized by both Democratic and Republican administrations,
cost-benefit analysis is especially favored by corporate and business
interests, and not surprisingly, the Bush administration – described by two
CBA critics as “populated by the most ardent defenders of cost-benefit
analysis in executive branch history.” These critics, Frank
Ackerman and Lisa Heinzerling continue:
The administration of George W. Bush is the most hostile
to environmental protection of any in recent memory. It is also the most
enthusiastic about the use of cost-benefit analysis to screen proposed
regulations. Perhaps this is only a coincidence. Perhaps [this] process of
carefully summarizing people’s preferences has found that the American
public wants to weaken the Clean Air Act, drill for oil in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge, ignore the dangers of global warming, allow more
polluting snowmobiles into national parks, use cheaper and less effective
safeguards against SUV tire blowouts, accept high levels of mercury in our
food and water, and so forth.
However, Ackerman and Heinzerling tell us, “we don’t
believe it.” Cost-benefit analysis and the monetization of values are
somehow failing to measure the authentic values of the American public. They
continue:
Gamblers know that dice that always roll snake-eyes are
loaded. The same holds true for a decision-making method that repeatedly
tells us to do less about environmental protection, even when public opinion
polls tell us that the American people want to do more. The problem ... is
that cost-benefit analysis is incapable of making meaningful choices about
things that matter to most people.
Why, therefore, are the Republican administrations of Ronald
Reagan and George W. Bush, not to mention many economists and policy analysts
(worthy exceptions noted below), so eager to apply monetary prices to values?
And why is CBA “incapable of making meaningful choices about things that
matter to most people?”
To these two questions we now turn.
First of all, why is "the economic approach" to public policy –
cost-benefit analysis and the monetization of values -- so attractive to
legislators and policy makers?
In the case the Bush administration, the White House’s Office of Management
and Budget has managed, through subtle and arbitrary “pricing” of costs
and benefits, to come up with cost-benefit analyses that support
pre-determined administration policies – i.e., policies favorable to
business and corporate interests, and critical of the federal regulation of
these interests. Chief among these devices is the inflation of costs and the
exclusion of benefits that can not be measured economically. To put it
bluntly, Bush’s OMB “rigs” the cost-benefit analyses to favor corporate
interests. As
Public Citizen reports in a February, 2004 news release:
Cost-benefit analysis attempts to assign a monetary value
to the costs and benefits of regulations, with an eye toward eliminating
rules with a higher cost than benefit. The method ignores benefits that
cannot be expressed in terms of money and disregards the principle that
industry should bear the cost of alleviating the harm it causes.
"Regulatory accounting [i.e., CBA] suffers from fatal flaws that make
it useless for any purpose other than lending a false appearance of
technical objectivity to a political decision that regulated industries’
interests trump the public’s interest," [Public Citizen President,
Joan] Claybrook said.
OMB’s report to Congress is misleading also in that it ignores the costs
to the public of scores of public health, safety and environmental
protections that have been weakened and blocked during the past three years.
Bush administration aside, economists and policy analysts
cite these general advantages of cost-benefit analysis and the monetization of
values:
 | They appear to be sensitive to particular and
identifiable facts - namely consumer choices, market prices, etc.
 | They employ precise, formal modes of quantification
and calculation that are public and replicable, and thus appear to be
"scientific."
 | They are "democratic," reflecting the actual
(rather than the "desirable") values of the public.
 | They are tolerant and libertarian, assuming that
"each individual is the best judge of his own welfare" (William
Baxter).
 | They commensurate values in terms of a common and
quantifiable denominator: cash. (Thus enabling the aforementioned
advantages of quantification and formalization).
 | They are determinate: they arrive at unequivocal
conclusions - the so-called "bottom line." |
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That final advantage ("the bottom line") may
suggest why, at congressional hearings, economists are many and philosophers
are few. The former are willing to supply answers, while the latter are
disposed to raise further questions.
With advantages such as these, why not base policy on economic values? As
many critics have pointed out (among them such economists as Kenneth Arrow,
Kenneth Boulding, Herman Daly and Amartya Sen), many of the values most
cherished by cultivated human beings are either independent of, or even
inversely related to, economic values. Four such categories of values
immediately come to mind: those of the scholar and scientist, the citizen,
the moral philosopher, and the friend and lover.
(a) The primary value of the scholar and scientist, of course, is truth
-- as supported by evidence and sound argument. An authentic scholar will say,
"show me your evidence, and if it is well-founded and your argument is
sound, then you will convince me." Never will he, qua scholar,
say, "how much are you willing to pay to have me believe you?"
Similarly, judges and juries ideally decide their verdicts on the weight of
evidence. A purchased verdict is not only invalid; it is quite properly
regarded as a crime. And even classical economists, when they publish their
theories, offer arguments, not bids.
(b) What an individual values (as a citizen) for his community may be
quite contrary to what he might value for himself as a consumer. Mark
Sagoff vividly illustrates this contrast:
Last year I bribed a judge to fix a couple of traffic
tickets, and was glad to do so because I saved my license. Yet, at election
time, I helped to vote the corrupt judge out of office. I speed on the
highway, yet I want the police to enforce laws against speeding. I used to
buy mixers in returnable bottles -- but who can bother to return them? I buy
only disposables now, but to soothe my conscience, I urge my state senator
to outlaw one-way containers. ... I send my dues to the Sierra Club to
protect areas in Alaska I shall never visit... And of course, I applaud the
endangered Species Act, although I have no earthly use for the Colorado
Squawfish or the Indiana bat... I have an 'ecology now' sticker on a car
that drips oil everywhere it's parked.
In fact, as these examples point out, a complete human being
is both an individual with consumer preferences, and a citizen with loyalties
and moral aspirations, which frequently over-ride the self-serving,
"utility maximizing" motives of homo economicus. The consumer
views the world through "the mind's I." The citizen takes "the
moral point of view," perceiving oneself as an equal member among many in
a community. "The governing impulse of the consumer is "I
want." The governing impulse of the citizen is "we need."
(See my “Consumer
or Citizen?").
(c) Distributive justice. As economists and utilitarian philosophers
have long acknowledged, "economic efficiency" and "utility
maximization" do not, by themselves, touch upon the essential moral issue
of justice. Economic theory is silent on the question of whether the wealth of
the cooperative enterprise which is society, goes to those who most deserve
it. "Just desert" is a moral, not an economic, concept. “Pareto
optimality” is the economist's term for that condition in society of
"perfect efficiency" whereby there are no further transactions that
can benefit anyone without making another individual worse off. It is
noteworthy that "Pareto optimality" can describe a slave economy.
For while justice demands the emancipation of the slaves, this can not be
accomplished without making the slave owners "worse off."
(d) Love, friendship and loyalty that is bought is less valuable than
that which is given freely. Economists enjoy telling the tale of new member of
the Economics Department encountering a colleague in the Quad. "How do
you like it here?" asks the veteran. "OK, I guess," replies the
newcomer, "intelligent students, good research facilities -- trouble is,
I don't seem to have many friends." His colleague suggests, "well,
if you value friendship that much, why not buy a friend?" Elaboration is
clearly superfluous.
As for love, Mark Sagoff makes the point with characteristic wit and
eloquence: "A civilized person might climb the highest mountain, swim the
deepest river, or cross the hottest desert for love, sweet love. He might do
anything, indeed, except be willing to pay for it."
(e) Finally, the market place can obscure Adam Smith's essential distinction
between "values in use" and "values in exchange."
"The things that have the greatest value in use," he writes,
"have frequently little or no value in exchange; and on the contrary,
those which have the greatest value in exchange have frequently little or no
value is use." As examples, Smith cites diamonds, which have little value
in use but great value in exchange, and water which has effectively infinite
value in use (we can not survive without it), but very little cost (exchange
value). Significantly, "environmental values" such as clean air and
water tend to be "values in use," and thus greatly undervalued in
markets.
Neo-classical economists are quite correct when they state that theirs is a
"positive discipline" that attempts to report values, rather than
prescribe values - and, as we have noted above, only a limited realm of values
at that. For while they might tell us what is valued by "the
consuming public," they can not tell us what is valuable. But the
latter question, "what is valuable," is of most basic and urgent
concern to the policy-maker, the legislator and the citizen. Ask an uncritical
economist, "what is the value of X?" and he will likely ask in
reply, "what are you (or 'the market') willing to pay for X?" The
astute citizen, asked such a question, will reply: "What am I willing to
payfor X? Before I can answer that, I must first assess the value of X?"
And that "value" will, of necessity, be normative, not economic. And
if this value is environmental - for example, the value of clean air,
access to wilderness, biodiversity, and the availability of these amenities
into the remote future - or political – the rights of life, liberty,
property, free speech, free association, free exercise of religion, etc. --
then the most appropriate means of assessing that value just might be not an
assessment of the marginal price in a "free market" to
self-interested, utility-maximizing individuals (“how much are you willing
to pay”) but rather a consensus through evaluation in a forum of informed
and deliberating citizens or their elected representatives. (See my "The
NewAlchemy").
Fairness requires that I anticipate a rebuttal by the economist: "We
never meant to suggest," he might reply, "that homo economicus describes
all dimensions of human existence, and thus we do not contend that prices are
the only values. While agreeing with the gist of your argument above, we would
only insist that economic motives and values happen to be the subject-matter
of our discipline. In some conditions of ordinary life, and even of public
life, human beings, both individually and collectively, act upon economic
motives. When they do, the concepts and methods of economics might prove to be
illuminating."
Fair enough! I have little quarrel with economists who thus qualify and
confine the application of their methodology and concepts. Unfortunately, such
commendable modesty is not universal. Moreover, these wise qualifications are
more likely to be found among scholars, especially as they write papers for,
and discuss public issues with, their colleagues. My quarrel is with
opportunistic politicians, such as those who labor in the Bush administration
and in Congress, who have no use for such qualifications, and who instead
employ cost-benefit analysis as a device to justify the elimination of laws
and regulations put in place to protect the general public, and to justify
policies design to benefit their corporate “sponsors.”
Copyright 2005 by Ernest Partridge

At the opening of his ill-fated campaign of 1968, Robert F.
Kennedy eloquently expressed the limitation of the Gross Domestic Product
(then called “the Gross National Product) as a measure of the value of a
society.
Too much and for too long we seem to have surrendered
personal excellence and community values for the mere accumulation of
material things. The Gross National Product .., if we judge the United
States by that, counts air pollution and cigarette advertising, and
ambulances to clear our highways of carnage. It counts special locks for our
doors and the jails for the people who break them. It counts the destruction
of the redwoods and the loss of our natural wonders in chaotic sprawl. It
counts napalm and nuclear warheads and armored cars for the police to fight
the riots in our cities. It counts [the killer's] rifle and [the rapist's]
knife and the television programs which glorify violence in order to sell
toys to our children. Yet the Gross National Product does not [include] the
health of our children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their
play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry, or the strength of our
marriages, the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our
public officials. It measures neither our wit nor our courage, our wisdom
nor our learning, neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country. It
measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile, and
it can tell us everything about America, except why we are proud that we are
Americans.

This essay is adapted from the second section of my
published paper, “In
Search of Sustainable Values.” Endnotes and references may
be found with that paper, which is located at my personal website, “The
Online Gadfly.” The third section is an extended analysis of the
Price/Value distinction. Follow
this link.
Dr. Ernest Partridge is a consultant, writer and lecturer in the field of Environmental Ethics and Public Policy. He publishes the website, "The Online Gadfly" ( www.igc.org/gadfly) and co-edits the progressive website, "The Crisis Papers" ( www.crisispapers.org). Send comments to: crisispapers@hotmail.com.
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