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Comments on: Caricature of the libertarian, economist, statist divide http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/ The Visible Hand in Economics Tue, 28 Apr 2009 11:58:11 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 By: Economic Report on China | The SmarterGroup Blog http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19369 Tue, 28 Apr 2009 11:58:11 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19369 […] TVHE » Caricature of the libertarian, economist, statist divide […]

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By: Brad Taylor http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19259 Thu, 23 Apr 2009 05:40:16 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19259 @Tom M
“FYI, Hayek, strictly speaking, is not a libertarian. His views on such matters are quite different to those of most libertarians, at least academic ones. I don’t think Matt’s summary is too bad, as a caricature.”

Libertarianism is a big tent. Hayek favoured some government action above the minimal state, such as a basic social safety-net, but I don’t think that should disqualify him. He was a moderate libertarian, to be sure, but I don’t think level-10 Rothbardian anarchists should be taken as the archetype.

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By: Matt Nolan http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19247 Thu, 23 Apr 2009 03:07:06 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19247 @Greg Ransom

Greg,

The point of a caricature is to identify a difference and then exaggerate it completely – that is exactly what I have done here.

Generally, libertarians do believe that redistribution is less important than everyone else – by saying “it is neither fair or unfair” you are putting a much smaller weight on the issues importance than a lot of other political schools. As a result, I think that supports the above extreme characterisation.

Statists generally believe that market prices don’t function properly, all the time, and all over the place. They think the allocation mechanisms that everyone right of centre discusses are oversimplistic. As a result, I drew a caricature of them being against market prices – this is also a gross oversimplification.

However, by doing this I am able to illustrate the areas where the economists that write here, and other economists I’ve met, differ from these two schools of thought. By identifying where difference usually occurs it is easier to frame and discuss debates – and figure out what we disagree on.

As a caricature I don’t think this is inaccurate – I wouldn’t use it to define libertarians or statist that I met, but I would use it to try and frame the area where our disagreement may lie.

By doing so I would hopefully avoid personally insulting people – as you seem to be interested in doing here.

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By: Matt Nolan http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19246 Thu, 23 Apr 2009 02:56:21 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19246 @Greg Ransom

Hi Greg,

“The market process is a discovery process, it is not an “allocation mechanism””

In a dynamic sense the discovery process is PART OF the allocation mechanism – there is no disjoint here. Thinking of the importance of the discovery process is important – but throwing it into our simple distinction would have simply muddied the water and added no value.

““Initial endowments” of “resources” are neither far nor unfair. The market process and life itself have dramatic elements of “luck” within it, and any system without top-down rule governed “social justice” distribution regime doesn’t produce what can be called strictly speaking “fair” or “unfair” results. The idea of “redistributing initial endowments” is itself incoherent — wealth and value must be continually discovered, re-configured, and created. Part of it is genetically “given”, although not give any fixed position of value within an ever changing social order.”

I have no disagreement – but a society can decide it think different outcomes are fair and unfair, and transfer regarding it. Saying that it is hard to tell what is unfair or fair doesn’t mean that it isn’t an important issue – because given the current scope of government I would say it is something people care about.

“I wrote this in about 90 seconds. How much thought did you put into yours?”

I’m sorry if I upset you with my post – but watch your tone.

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By: Matt Nolan http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19245 Thu, 23 Apr 2009 02:51:38 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19245 @Bill Bennett

I think I would call it closer to the American definition – but it isn’t really a definition at all.

All it is is a pointed caricatures merely representing extreme points in a broader sense of political beliefs.

The Libertarian represent pure freedom from government in this sense – as our initial allocation is fair, and then any market based transaction will provide optimal outcomes.

The “economist” believes in the allocation through prices as well – but tempers this by a belief that the allocation of resources can be struck by things like luck and a poor initial dealing. In this case, a society may want to transfer between the haves and have nots – but ultimately the idea of market prices is untouched.

The Statist doesn’t see market prices as useful for allocation.

The purpose of this divide was to express the debates I’ve faced against the left and the right over time. Generally, on the right it is an argument about the “fairness of some endowment”. On the left it tends to be around the effectiveness of prices as a measure of value.

This caricature is a simple, but easy to observe, way to view this. It misses the subtles of differences in political schools – but it provides a clear indication of two major areas of disagreement.

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By: Matt Nolan http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19243 Thu, 23 Apr 2009 02:38:48 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19243 @Peter Cresswell

I think the concept of initial allocations is what drives the main difference here though.

Fundamentally, if prices represent the social cost and benefit and if information is available then we should leave the market untouched as an allocation device. But if one person has almost all the resources, it is possible that we could come up with better social outcomes if we were to perform a single lump sum transfer from this person.

This is where Rawl’s idea that we want a society that society would want if they did not know what sort of endowment they would start with comes in.

Of course – we can’t observe that, so we have to hope that the democratic process gives us some idea. From there we can treat social welfare as part of the social contract.

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By: Matt Nolan http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19241 Thu, 23 Apr 2009 02:33:57 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19241 @Tom M

Indeed – good question.

From the second welfare theorem we know that the government can move around initial resources however they want and then let the market run – and we will have a pareto optimal outcome. By doing that they choose a point that satisfies there conception of equity.

In this case the economy is running – so the idea of initial allocation is vague. Simply put, it means that there is some allocation of resources which is not the result of individual effort and market action that differs from what society believes is fair.

Even if things are all perfectly in place, random shocks can shift the allocation – and a central authority could in “theory” move the allocation back.

It is justifiable for a government to have this role if society demands it – however, it is a hard role to define.

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By: Matt Nolan http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19240 Thu, 23 Apr 2009 02:29:35 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19240 @goonix

Indeed they are not at odds – there is actually a continuum of beliefs surrounding the appropriate “initial allocation”. The key point is that both sides very much agree that market pricing (accounting for social costs where need be) is the way to go.

As a result, debates on this side will tend to be around “initial allocation” (a hard concept to think about in a dynamic economy)

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By: Tom M http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19191 Wed, 22 Apr 2009 21:35:14 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19191 @Greg Ransom
FYI, Hayek, strictly speaking, is not a libertarian. His views on such matters are quite different to those of most libertarians, at least academic ones. I don’t think Matt’s summary is too bad, as a caricature.

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By: Greg Ransom http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2009/04/22/caricature-of-the-libertarian-economist-statist-divide/#comment-19188 Wed, 22 Apr 2009 16:25:22 +0000 http://www.tvhe.co.nz/?p=3654#comment-19188 empty

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