Camerons incentives

It seems to me, that there are a few issues that Libertarians are guilty of ignoring because the solution to them is so obvious. They just don’t offer an intellectual challenge, yet remain important.

Gay marriage is one of them, the obvious solution being to “privatise” it, splitting it into myriad institutional arrangements run by churches and philosophical groups rather than the state, for profit in some cases but probabaly not for profit most of the time. For example, the register of marriages might be a for profit service operating a wholesale service model.

Racism is another, we find it beyond obvious that the law should not treat people differently based on the colour of their skin or ethnic origins, and we rarely take the time to re-iterate that despite the tactical utility of doing so. Indeed, this is one area where people would really appreciate libertarian help because we do not make the mistake of hectoring the other side to conceal their prejudices, instead we tend to employ economic or epistemological arguments to persuade people that racism is just stupid, and without too much concern for anyone whom that would offend.

Corruption is the most topical of these problems, and the arguments are well worth reheasing.

Corruption arises due to incentives. If a man is making a decision about his own money he will want to make the best use of it. There can be one time finacial incentives – called “discounts” – and there can be value to be had outside of the trade – such as building a longer term relationship by patronising family members or community leaders. Neither of those factors will persuade someone to spend their own money on anything other than merit, they just broaden the range of factors involved in assessing merit.

In the other hand, if a man holds something that is not his own, such as taxpayers money, then it will be possible to bribe him. The bribe consists of a part of the profit available to a party if the resource is allocated to them, rather than to the party that merits it most. That portion is always going to be smaller than the total value of the missallocated resources but will always be larger than the stake held by the decision maker, which in the case of public officials is zero. The only disincentive is a small risk of getting caught.

So, when a libertarian looks at the Government and says “privatise it all!”, he is advocating for the realignment of incentives such that decisions are more likely to be made on merit. That does not mean that they believe the only value to be had from something is financial – not all capitalists are money grubbers – but it will mean that all the incentives (money, happiness, relationships, virtue etc) are more likely to be weighed correctly and things are more likely to be run well.

When we look at Cameron, a supposed capitalist, hob nobbing at No 10 with prominent business people (more alleged capitalists) is that a situation that improves or corrupts the incentives at work? Cameron has his hands on the levers of power and is First Lord of the Treasury. He is able to influence the reallocation of resources that are not his own, so it is actually quite reasonable to wonder if the business people are there to offer him a bribe and that he might indeed be tempted by those bribes. That would match our understanding of the incentives.

We could react to this by bashing capitalism, and doing down business people, but that would tend to mean more power and money going to politicians and would actually increase the incentives further in favour of bribery.

The clever trick the libertarian is performing is aligning his policy with the grain of the incentives. By keeping all the money and power away from politicians there is no incentive to go and bribe them. In this way, more resources will be allocated on merit leading to superior outcomes.

The gap in the theory is that politicians might actually like to receive the bribe and will fight against efforts to strip them of power. Also they need power to offer their own bribes to their favoured groups of electorates. The real challenge then is to persuade the electorate, not the politicians, to stop accepting bribes.

When the electorate is as alert to bribes offered to other members of the electorate as they are to bribes offered to politicians then the libertarian policy of privatising everything will  seem obvious to everybody.

4 responses to “Camerons incentives”

  1. For all the talk of Mr Cameron’s corruption (and he does appear to a be a dubious type) it would very little difference if he was the most honest and upstanding man in the United Kingdom. Nor would it make any real differences if his incentives were different.

    What really matters is what Mr Cameron (and Mr Osbourne and ….) were taught at school and university – and are still told by all the “experts”.

    That is why they back (for example) “monetary stimulus” (i.e. the Bank of England trying to keep the credit bubble going) – not because they are being bribed, but because they believe it is a GOOD THING DO TO.

    It is what their entire education has taught them to do – and what the “experts” still tell them to do.

    It is the basic CULTURE (such as education and the media) that is corrupt – the problem is not simple financial corruption (although plenty of simple financial corruption exists on top of the basic cultural corruption of ideas).

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  2. Multiple marriage ‘providers’ is all very well, but rather beside the point. The main reason gays want to be ‘married’ is so they can get government benefits. Stop the lavish redistribution, and the problem goes away.

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    1. I also see no point in government “marriage”. It did not really exist in Britain before the 1836 Birth, Marriages and Deaths (Registration) Act. And society did actually exist before the 1830s.

      However, Lucian is correct – the key matter is NOT the ceremony of “Gay Marriage”.

      Contrary to what the “mainstream” media (including Hollywood and so on) would like people to think, no evil “Rednecks” are going to attack San Francisco to prevent the “Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence” (or whoever) carrying out “gay marriage” ceremonies.

      The issue really is being forced to RECOGNISE such unions.

      For example, (as has already happened in Britain) a couple of homosexuals turning up at a Christian guest house run by an elderly couple and demanding a double bed (how brave of them! I wonder if they would have been so brave in a MUSLIM run guest house).

      When they a double room was turned down – out to the lawyers they went. To get MONEY.

      Of course breaking an old Christian couple is a small thing.

      The real target is insurance companies (and so on) – demanding that everyone “recognise” such unions (“recognise” meaning provide money and other stuff).

      The whole thing is a SCAM.

      Part of the general “anti discrimination” scam.

      Of course the above can all be refuted.

      All a refutation needs is that the “Gay Marriage” Bill have the following words….

      “No individual or organization will be forced to recongnise these unions in any way”.
      ]
      But, somehow, I suspect those words will not be in the Bill.

      Oh by the way – hetro sexual unions should not get forced recognision either.

      If a homosexual run guest house want NOT to rent a room to a man and a women – that is fine.

      Ditto a private hospital only allowing men to visit men and women to visit women.

      And so on.

      It is a matter of FREEDOM OF CONTACT (which is, of course, not compatible with “anti discrimination” doctrine) and PRIVATE PROPERTY (which is, of course, undermined by “anti discrimination” doctrine).

      If we oppose the decay of freedom of contract and private property under the late Roman Empire (in case people do not know where “anti discrimination” legal doctrine comes from – with its “common carriers” and inns and other private business enterprises being treated as “public”) then we must oppose the same legal decay now.

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