Organised common sense

Thomas J. Sargent delivered a graduation speech at his Alma Mater, University of California at Berkeley:

Economics is organized common sense. Here is a short list of valuable lessons that our beautiful subject teaches.

1. Many things that are desirable are not feasible.

2. Individuals and communities face trade-offs.

3. Other people have more information about their abilities, their efforts, and their preferences than you do.

4. Everyone responds to incentives, including people you want to help. That is why social safety nets don’t always end up working as intended.

5. There are tradeoffs between equality and efficiency.

6. In an equilibrium of a game or an economy, people are satisfied with their choices. That is why it is difficult for well-meaning outsiders to change things for better or worse.

7. In the future, you too will respond to incentives. That is why there are some promises that you’d like to make but can’t. No one will believe those promises because they know that later it will not be in your interest to deliver. The lesson here is this: before you make a promise, think about whether you will want to keep it if and when your circumstances change. This is how you earn a reputation.

8. Governments and voters respond to incentives too. That is why governments sometimes default on loans and other promises that they have made.

9. It is feasible for one generation to shift costs to subsequent ones. That is what national government debts and the U.S. social security system do (but not the social security system of Singapore).

10. When a government spends, its citizens eventually pay, either today or tomorrow, either through explicit taxes or implicit ones like inflation.

11. Most people want other people to pay for public goods and government transfers (especially transfers to themselves).

12. Because market prices aggregate traders’ information, it is difficult to forecast stock prices and interest rates and exchange rates.

Hat Tip: AEIdeas

 

One Response to Organised common sense

  1. Andrei's avatar Andrei says:

    The Government of the USA owes an astonishing $17.5 trillion, an sum that increases by a billion dollars every day.

    It works out to over $55,000 per citizen and over $151,000 per taxpayer.

    New Zealand isn’t quite so deeply in the hole about $60 billion, $13,000 per citizen.

    But the writing is on the wall for the Western world, it has sold its soul to the Devil and is engaged in its last orgy of self indulgent, self destruction.

    Exhibit: Adults cause mayhem at egg drop

    Like

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