Tuesday, October 28, 2008

"I have repeatedly explained that those funds are impotent, or perhaps even a bit counterproductive"

Casey Mulligan argues for the effectiveness of placebos:

"Most economists felt better that the Treasury had big plans and had even tweaked those plans to better reflect the academics' advice. Probably the public felt better too. I am absolutely certain that, while sometimes intangible, feeling better is an important commodity. For example, brand names have tremendous value -- what are those names doing if they are not making people feel better? Although the production of good feeling would ideally be left to private enterprises, I admit that the Treasury created real value by the fanfare alone.

The Treasury has dragged their feet a month now. Hopefully they can stall further, without giving back too much of the good feeling they created."

Here's my comment:



Don said..

"Apparently, I am alone in entertaining the idea that the best solutions to tough problems come from the marketplace."

I'm also willing to entertain it, but the point is to implement it.

"But even I obtain comfort from the fact that, when the Treasury's time for stalling has run out, it will implement an impotent solution -- that is, a plan that has minimum interference with the market's functioning (there is some interference with market, but -- aside from literally doing nothing -- the interference is less than the alternatives)."

Wrong. This hybrid plan, subject to endless lobbying and so poorly planned that one can't even judge its effects, will end up costing taxpayers way more than a Swedish type plan. In between no regulation and regulation, there is regulation that is worse than both.

"they can claim full credit for avoiding it."

So then what progress will have been made? We'll make the same stupid mistakes next time.

The terrible truth about ineffectiveness is that it's terribly expensive.

Don the libertarian Democrat

October 28, 2008 6:32 PM

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