Shipping news

I’m delighted to find that Rose George’s new book [amazon_link id=”1846272637″ target=”_blank” ]Deep Sea and Foreign Going: Inside Shipping, the Invisible Industry that Brings You 90% of Everything,[/amazon_link] is Book of the Week on Radio 4. Good for Maersk for allowing her to join the voyage. I’m looking forward to reading the whole book.

[amazon_image id=”1846272637″ link=”true” target=”_blank” size=”medium” ]Deep Sea and Foreign Going: Inside Shipping, the Invisible Industry That Brings You 90% of Everything[/amazon_image]

Regular readers of this blog will know of my mild obsession with shipping containers. Thanks to @illicit_econ on Twitter (well worth a follow) I’ve also found this documentary film essay, The Forgotten Space, by Allan Sekula and Noel Burch. I’m not sure how to get hold of this in a UK format but it looks enticing.

Economists, doctors and quacks

The news of the death of Ronald Coase sent me to his key papers, of course (all listed here), but also to a collection of essays I hadn’t read before, [amazon_link id=”0226111032″ target=”_blank” ]Essays on Economics and Economists[/amazon_link]. He makes some very interesting points about the role of economics in public policy, expanding on the question of how limited government intervention to correct market failures ought to be. Essentially, Coase argued that this is an empirical question. The existence of significant transactions costs means market arrangements can lead to inefficient outcomes, but government interventions are often flawed too. He approves of George Stigler’s work on the political ‘market’, with the firms affected by regulations likely to be the highest ‘bidders’, therefore able to shape regulation in their own interests. (If this seems cynical, think about banking regulation.)

[amazon_image id=”0226111032″ link=”true” target=”_blank” size=”medium” ]Essays on Economics and Economists[/amazon_image]

In ‘Economists and Public Policy’, Coase turns to economists: “The problem is that economists seem willing to give advice on questions about which we know very little and on which our judgements are likely to be fallible, while what we have to say that is important and true is quite simple – so simple that little or no economics is required to understand it.” However, the simple truths are highly unwelcome. The essay goes on to discuss the political and popular resistance to economic arguments against, say, price controls after a bad harvest. “History indicates that these are simple truths which people find it easy to reject or ignore.” The essay is not entirely pessimistic – Coase believed that when the counter-productive effects of policies became too large, the policies would be reversed.

Coase is also trenchant on the character of economics. It is clear he disapproved of the ‘imperialism’ of economics, the Chicago-originated move into subject areas such as family life, previously the terrain of other social sciences. He cannot have been a fan of [amazon_link id=”0141019018″ target=”_blank” ]Freakonomics[/amazon_link]. However, he is pretty scathing, in the essay ‘Economics and Contiguous Disciplines’, about the failure of other social sciences to raise their game in their techniques and attention to evidence – he sees as particular strengths of economics the recognition of general equilibrium effects (everything is connected) and the relevance of economic incentives in other decisions, too often simply denied by other social scientists. Finally, the essay argues that economists need to study contiguous social sciences, “because it is necessary if they are to understand the working of the economic system itself.” He concluded: “We may expect the scope of economics to be permanently enlarged to include studies in other social sciences. But the purpose will be to enable us to understand better the working of the economic system.” His own work, of course, laid the foundations for institutional economics.

There are a couple of interesting essays on Marshall in the book too. Coase likes Marshall’s insistence on the need for both theory and evidence, deductive and inductive reasoning in economics. He obviously found modern economics far too much on the theoretical, deductive (or reductive) side.

I also happened to read this weekend Jamie Whyte’s pamphlet for the Institute of Economic Affairs, [amazon_link id=”0255366736″ target=”_blank” ]Quack Policy: Abusing Science in the Cause of Paternalism[/amazon_link]. There was a brief to-do online about this, with critics noting that it was hardly surprising the free-market IEA had published a pamphlet arguing against government interventions, and how could anyone argue against evidence-based policy? Whyte wrote some years ago an excellent and funny book, [amazon_link id=”0954325532″ target=”_blank” ]Bad Thoughts: A Guide to Clear Thinking[/amazon_link], about the absence of logic and sense in much public debate. The pamphlet looks at several different areas of policy and asks about the standards of evidence underpinning them. It’s obvious where it’s coming from, but it makes a number of sound points.

[amazon_image id=”0255366736″ link=”true” target=”_blank” size=”medium” ]QUACK SCIENCE & PUBLIC POLICY[/amazon_image]

The first two examples are health-related: proposals for minimum alcohol pricing and the ban on ‘passive’ smoking. Any health-related subjects are awash with political correctness and the abuse of statistics; medical people are strongly resistant to the relevance of any economic considerations at all, which one might take more seriously if they were more statistically-adept. In these two chapters Whyte argues that:

(a) a cost-benefit analysis must take account of the costs of outlawing something, and this is rarely done in health matters – NICE guidelines seemingly explicitly rule out consumer welfare considerations (p35);

(b) the incremental risks of the target behaviour are such that these costs can be very small (although he seems to me to underestimate them in the alcohol example); and

(c) the policies ought not to be economically perverse.

Actually, I think he misses the strongest case against a minimum alcohol price, which is that it increases the profits of big retailers by enforcing the kind of retail price maintenance long outlawed by competition authorities. If the government decides alcohol should be dearer, it should raise the rate of duty. This would not, however, be so pleasing to the sellers of alcohol as taxpayers would then benefit, not retailers – see Coase’s essay, above.

Whyte has a chapter on global warming that goes through the debate about how much we should weigh future against current welfare, including the likelihood that future generations will be richer, and that technological progress will occur, in trying to calculate the costs and benefits of action against global warming. (I think he’s sceptical about whether it’s occurring but that isn’t the main point here.) This is the same debate that occurred among economists like Partha Dasgupta, William Nordhaus and Nick Stern when the [amazon_link id=”0521700809″ target=”_blank” ]Stern Review[/amazon_link] was published. It’s a perfectly respectable argument to set out. Then he turns to what he describes as ‘happiness engineering’, where my sympathies are with him entirely. Government attempts to make people ‘happier’ are either obvious – ensure there are plenty of jobs, keep inflation modest – or intrusively paternalistic.

There’s a final chapter, which is too cursory, about the problem of using ‘scientific authority’ as the basis for public policy. “Experts are natural supporters of policies that draw on their expertise and thus naturally inclined to overstate the credibility and importance of their ideas,” he writes. Of course. But is not using expertise really better? Of course we would like policy to be genuinely evidence-based, and it is difficult to assess the epistemological status of proclaimed expertise. However, Coase’s pragmatism is more attractive than Whyte’s all-out scepticism, for all that Quack Policy flags up some good reasons for concern about how ‘evidence’ is used in actual policy-making.

This was a theme of another book I read recently, [amazon_link id=”0815793898″ target=”_blank” ]Government Failure versus Market Failure[/amazon_link] by Clifford Winston, which in this post I compared and contrasted with Hirschman’s writing on [amazon_link id=”067476868X” target=”_blank” ]The Rhetoric of Reaction[/amazon_link]. How you devise and implement welfare-enhancing, effective government policies in complex societies with a wide range of interests bearing on politicians – it’s what we’re all about as economists (and other social scientists).

A new book reviewed by Peter Wilby in The Guardian this weekend looks highly relevant too: [amazon_link id=”1780742665″ target=”_blank” ]The Blunders of Our Governments[/amazon_link] by Anthony King and Ivor Crewe.

[amazon_image id=”1780742665″ link=”true” target=”_blank” size=”medium” ]The Blunders of Our Governments[/amazon_image]

I’m sceptical about a lot of government interventions and also sceptical about leaving everything to the mythical market; it seems the only evidence-based possibility. We should demonstrate due humility by avoiding overclaiming either way.

 

 

Not average at all

Tyler Cowen has followed up the best-selling [amazon_link id=”0525952713″ target=”_blank” ]The Great Stagnation[/amazon_link] with another profoundly interesting book on the impact of new technology on the economy and beyond. [amazon_link id=”0525953736″ target=”_blank” ]Average is Over: Powering America Beyond the Age of the Great Stagnation[/amazon_link] picks up the theme of the disruption technological change and the consequent restructuring of business and focuses on the effects on individual jobs and what people might be able to do to safeguard their livelihood.

[amazon_image id=”0525953736″ link=”true” target=”_blank” size=”medium” ]Average Is Over: Powering America Beyond the Age of the Great Stagnation[/amazon_image]

The bottom line is that you need to think about which of your skills can easily be done – better, cheaper – by a computer, and work hard at developing other skills. The general message is relatively optimistic, with the book concluding that the combination of machine plus human power being much more productive than either alone; one of the examples of how and why this is so is ‘freestyle chess’. So a computer able to do fast routine work plus a human who has either advanced cognitive skills or non-cognitive skills that computers can’t attain could prove a winning team. The spread of computers through the economy would in that case prove to be another instance, seen many times in economic history, of investment in capital ultimately increasing the productivity and living standards of the people working with that capital.

However, the more specific message of the book is rather sober: Cowen doubts that all that many people in America at least have the focus and capacity for work and concentration to turn themselves into complements for robots rather than being substituted by them. And so far there is certainly plenty of evidence that routine work in many sectors of the economy, in the middle-skilled, middle-income bracket, is being away by computerisation, either directly through automation or indirectly through offshoring. About 60% of the jobs lost during the US recession have been in mid-wage occupations. Wages for the median male worker declined by about 28% between 1969 and 2009, this with no nuclear war, no asteroid striking earth, or other disaster. Nor is this disappearing middle of the income distribution just a US phenomenon: last week’s report on UK incomes from the Resolution Foundation pointed to similar evidence. Cowen writes: “The obvious and direct beneficiaries [of ever-more powerful computers] will be the humans who are adept at working with computers. … That means humans with strong math and analytic skills, humans who are comfortable working with computers because they understand their operation.” He argues that the scope of the phenomenon in the wider economy will only grow, pointing to driverless cars and taxi driver jobs, for example. Or think of those dreadful machines that are replacing supermarket cashiers.

A section of the book uses chess as an illustration of the trends – what computers can do, and can’t, and what human skills are substitutes and complements for computer skills. In short, computers do not have intuition, and cannot actually move chess pieces on a board. Nor are people interested in watching computers play chess, nor even human-computer teams – they want to watch other people play, and thanks to the internet chess has become a mass spectator, global sport.

There is a very interesting section on ethics – I wished it had been longer. Driverless cars will be more efficient. When the investment in the infrastructure is made, they will economise on drivers, be able to use fuel more efficiently, observe speed limits, probably be much, much safer. But how will they respond to moral dilemmas? If the choice is running over a baby carriage on a crossing by swerving into a group of five pensioners, what will have been coded into their programmes? Another section of the book predicts that the detailed tracking of measurements will transform all kinds of services, such as medical care. Patients will have increasingly detailed metrics on individual doctors’ performances; doctors will have detailed measures of how patients behave – do they take the full course of medicine? Do they make time-wasting visits? Do they smoke? It will be hard for people to make the judgements weighing up the things that can be measured easily (like death or recovery rates) and those that can’t, such as a caring personality, or a willingness to treat the most serious diseases. Steadily, without discussion, a moral framework is becoming encoded into the machines around us, and by the habits of use that are developing.

I’m not sure I share the book’s view about exactly what kinds of jobs will be left to humans. Cowen argues that these will be marketing jobs, work synthesising lots of areas of expertise to help people make complicated judgements, and coaching jobs for those lucky individuals who can develop their complementary talents, whether that’s being a top doctor, a top tennis player or a top executive. A more optimistic perspective would see opportunities for the growth of fulfilling creative work, such as acting or gardening or creating beautiful clothes; let the robots do the dull, repetitive jobs. Whether that is possible depends of course on whether the productivity gains from computerisation can be shared, and whether income can be distributed from the owners of the machines to the wider society. Clearly, that has not happened during the past generation.

All capitalist societies have faced this issue, however. How can people who are less productive (because there is less capital linked to their job, whether that’s machine-embedded capital or human capital) not be left so far behind that it becomes socially unsustainable. In past centuries that involved, for example, the spread of public schooling to primary and then secondary and tertiary levels, the growth of unions campaigning effectively for labour’s share of profits, redistribution through progressive taxation paying for public services available to all, and so on. I’d have liked more in Average is Over about how social and political institutions might respond to the challenge of the robots, more political economy. Maybe that will be his next book. Meanwhile, there is a clear message here for every reader: if you want to win the race against the machines, you’d better start running.

Here’s Andrew Keen discussing the book with Tyler. I discussed it with him on the FT’s Alphaville podcast.

Learning about development economics

Dean Yang posted his syllabus (pdf) for the graduate Development Economics course he is teaching at the University of Michigan this Fall. It looks a terrific course. I particularly approved of the selection of books recommended for purchase:

[amazon_link id=”0718193660″ target=”_blank” ]Poor Economics: A Radical Rethinking of the Way to Fight Global Poverty[/amazon_link] (2011) by Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo – an inspiring exposition of the use of experimental methods to determine what interventions are effective in certain contexts. There’s a danger of overdoing the enthusiasm for RCTs because you need to be confident about controlling for context – a bag of lentils as an inducement to get a child vaccinated has different results in, say, Chennai and Liverpool. But this approach represents a huge step forward in development economics.

[amazon_image id=”0718193660″ link=”true” target=”_blank” size=”medium” ]Poor Economics: Barefoot Hedge-fund Managers, DIY Doctors and the Surprising Truth about Life on less than $1 a Day[/amazon_image]

[amazon_link id=”0691148198″ target=”_blank” ]Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day[/amazon_link] (2009) by Daryl Collins, Jonathan Morduch, Stuart Rutherford, and Orlanda Ruthven. One of my favourite books. It gathers new evidence about the financial services people on very low incomes need – and the answers are sometimes surprising. Should be read by anyone with views on microcredit and/or payday loans.

[amazon_image id=”0691148198″ link=”true” target=”_blank” size=”medium” ]Portfolios of the Poor: How the World’s Poor Live on $2 a Day[/amazon_image]

[amazon_link id=”1846143454″ target=”_blank” ]Scarcity: Why Having Too Little Means So Much[/amazon_link] (2013) by Sendhil Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir. I haven’t read this yet but am keen to do so. Here’s a great review by Cass Sunstein and here it is written up on Marginal Revolution.

[amazon_image id=”1846143454″ link=”true” target=”_blank” size=”medium” ]Scarcity: Why having too little means so much[/amazon_image]

The fact these are recommendations on a graduate course syllabus should not put anyone off – the two I’ve read are clear and definitely accessible to the general reader.

A book for geeks who want to have fun

If your interests lie at the intersection of the sets in this Venn diagram:

then you’ll enjoy [amazon_link id=”1782391193″ target=”_blank” ]Mr Penumbra’s 24 Hour Bookstore[/amazon_link] by Robin Sloan. Mine do. A really good, fun read.

I like the conclusion, too: “There is no immortality that is not built on friendship and work done with care. All the secrets in the world worth knowing are hidden in plain sight. It takes 41 seconds to climb a ladder three stories tall. It’s not easy to imagine the year 3012, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try. We have new capabilities now – strange powers we’re still getting used to.”

[amazon_image id=”1782391193″ link=”true” target=”_blank” size=”medium” ]Mr Penumbra’s 24-hour Bookstore[/amazon_image]