Friday, October 9, 2015

The welfare state

This is Joseph

Matt Yglesias talks about the issues regarding opposition to the welfare state:
This is why thoughtful opponents of the welfare state have generally avoided making the argument that capitalism is good because it promotes human well-being. Since capitalism does promote human well-being, "capitalism promotes human well-being" sounds like a good argument in its favor. But it turns out that capitalism plus a large welfare state promotes human well-being even more. So you either need to embrace the welfare state (the correct answer) or come up with another justification of capitalism. One that frequently arises is what Greg Mankiw has referred to as the "just deserts" perspective in which "people should receive compensation congruent with their contributions" and we should aim for a society in which public policy ought to ensure that "every individual would earn the value of his or her own marginal product."

So if, for example, you are blind and inability to see makes it hard for you to earn a living in an unregulated market that's too bad for you. Your vision impairment means your ability to contribute to market production is limited, and therefore it is morally appropriate that your living standards be limited as well. By the same token, if a combination of genetics and childhood living conditions have left you with an IQ that is 2 standard deviations below average (this is about five percent of people) then, again, it's just the case that you deserve to have a much lower standard of living than society could provide for you if it were willing to do more redistribution.

Mankiw's moralized capitalism seems bone-chilling to me but I don't really think I can prove him wrong. It is, however, pretty trivial to see that Mankiwism isn't a Christian worldview.
This is really the major challenge of neo-conservative or libertarian thought.  You can argue that government is inefficient, but that is an argument for good government and not an argument for trying to create a self-fulfilling prophecy.  Proponents of the welfare state can easily argue that the focus should be on improving the role of government -- improving both efficiency and accountability. 

The only argument for the just desserts argument that I can think of (as absolute adherence to economic efficiency as the main determinant of human value seems like a dead end) is that it produces more economic efficiency on the long run.  The problem is that areas of very low levels of government do not create vast periods of economic growth.  You can have growth flourishing despite great conflict (see the American Civil War or the War of the Roses).  But when the state actually collapses (see the English Civil War or recent events in Syria), you end up with people like Hobbes arguing for more government. 

Nor have experiments with lesser versions of this worked out well.  The data is inconclusive with respect to tax cuts for the wealthy, but the trend is not supporting this mechanism. This makes it hard to figure out why this viewpoint is so generally popular.  After all, nobody is arguing that we should have a French Revolution or even massive taxes.  Instead, the current argument is whether we should redistribute wealth to look a little bit more like other industrialized nations.

Are we all missing an argument? 

5 comments:

  1. Part of the problem with the just desserts approach is also that I would view a person who is disabled as an externality. When lots of people have children, some of those will have problems, but the problem is actually caused by people having children. So, it's not even the person who is disabled who is at fault, and it's not the parents of that person, everyone is a bit a fault, since the production of disabled persons is really a stochastic event from our perspective. Everytime someone has a child there's some uncontrollable % chance they will be disabled in addition to whatever % chance is controllable (drug use by parents, etc.) So, the correct way to do it would be to actually pay the disabled person more, since they are paying the cost for everyone having babies.

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  2. Two thoughts.

    1. In aggregate, it is unsustainable for a society to consume more than its collective marginal product. It is easy to misapply this principle at the individual level if you don't think it through carefully.

    2. An argument often made explicitly, or sometimes just with dog whistles, is the freeloader problem. And while I'm pretty confident that most people collecting disability genuinely are unable to work, I know for a fact that there are some people who aren't--I have known a few of them personally over the years. I think that those who are opposed to welfare states view the freeloader problem as huge. And if you believe that, you would in fact be correct in further believing that the degree of government intrusion into people's personal lives that would be needed to manage the freeloader problem is unacceptable.

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  3. In a world where you are given greater respect if you are clever rather than ill, especially mentally ill, then it's likely some people would rather say they are clever enough to defeat the system rather than they have some sort of illness.

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  4. Joseph:

    A related issue came upHere's what I wrote in that earlier discussion:

    "I realize that [Mankiw and his collaborator] are trying to be provocative, but I think they're being provocative in the context of an argument among economists that I don't fully understand. It's sort of an academic version of those all-black paintings in the Museum of Modern Art that can only be understood as responses to earlier paintings (as described, for example, in Tom Wolfe's book, The Painted Word)."

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  5. Joseph:

    A related issue came up a few years ago regarding Mankiw's views on taxes: he seemed to think that the state should only tax things that are “unjustly wrestled from someone else.”

    This seemed a bit odd to me, given that when you consider sales taxes, income taxes, import taxes, etc.: presumably almost none of these are taxing things that are unjustly wrested.

    I think the usual view is that taxation is, from the government's perspective, a way to raise revenue; and, from the taxpayer's perspective, a cost of doing business. But Mankiw seems to view taxes as a sort of punishment or fine.

    I actually don't think Mankiw has fully thought these ideas through, which seems strange given that his field is economics and his specialty is public communication.

    Or maybe he just hasn't communicated well enough. Here's what I wrote in that earlier discussion:

    "I realize that [Mankiw and his collaborator] are trying to be provocative, but I think they're being provocative in the context of an argument among economists that I don't fully understand. It's sort of an academic version of those all-black paintings in the Museum of Modern Art that can only be understood as responses to earlier paintings (as described, for example, in Tom Wolfe's book, The Painted Word)."

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