Category Archives: Books

CEI Book Club: Peter Navarro and Greg Autry, Death by China

Trump economic adviser Peter Navarro has a longstanding animus against China. It is important to know Navarro’s thoughts on China. He played a major role in pushing for the 25 percent tariffs on 1,108 Chinese goods currently being implemented (see this release from the United States Trade Representative for details). Those goods are worth a total of $50 billion. China announced retaliatory tariffs on $50 billion worth of U.S. goods, and another round of U.S. action is likely, possibly against $200 billion worth of Chinese goods. If a trade war is in fact brewing, Navarro will have played a large role in starting it.

In 2011, Navarro and coauthor Greg Autry published Death by China: Confronting the Dragon—A Global Call to Action. Navarro has written other books on China, such as 2008’s The Coming China Wars and 2015’s Hidden Dragon, coauthored with Gordon G. Chang. But Death by China is Navarro’s best known book. As with my previous critiques of Navarro’s thought, this review will start with some general observations about Death by China, then analyze specific parts of the book.

A striking theme in Death by China is that its tone and thought are very macho—and juvenile. The language is very strident, a strategy adolescent males often use to display confidence. It is easy and psychologically rewarding to belittle one’s opponent and feel bigger in comparison. It is also a way to distract attention away from the arguments at hand. This is handy if one lacks confidence in the arguments or in one’s ability to defend them.

Death by China is a sterling, if non-academic example of an attitude Deirdre McCloskey criticizes in “The Boys in the Sandbox,” the opening chapter of her book, The Vices of Economists—The Virtues of the Bourgeoisie:

It’s like an aunt watching her three-year old nephew and his friends playing in a sandbox. They are so earnest in their play, so full of confidence and life, so sure that what they are playing with is reality. The aunt would have to be a monster to be happy they are wrong. (p. 13)

It is opposite the strategy Homer and Herodotus used in The Iliad and The Histories. They humanized their antagonists and put noble words in their speeches. They made their Trojan and Persian opponents strong and cunning so that when the Greeks won, their victories were even more impressive. Navarro and Autry instead call their enemies “morally degraded Chinese ‘black hearts’” (p. 16) who were “raised in an ethical vacuum.” (p. 59) They contrast China with “the truly civilized nations of the world like the United States, Great Britain, France, and Japan.” (p. 104)

Of 16 chapters, all but two titles contain the word “death.” On the plus side, the table of contents provides several possible titles for heavy metal albums and horror movies, with chapters such as “Death by Red Hacker” and “Death by Darth Liu: Look Ma, There’s a Death Star Pointing at Chicago.” That chapter calls for the creation of a military space force, another juvenile idea, about which more below. The opening chapter simply asserts, “It Isn’t China Bashing if It’s True.”

One of the Internet’s guiding rules is a variant of Godwin’s Law, in which the probability that any philosophical argument will turn to Nazi Germany approaches 1 the longer it goes on. The rule is simple: the first person to invoke Adolf Hitler, or Nazi Germany, automatically loses the argument (unless, of course, that is actually the topic of discussion). By that rule, even the publisher’s blurb on the book’s Amazon page loses its argument:

Death by China documents the myriad ways that a powerful, wealthy, and corrupt Chinese Communist Party emboldened by a growing nationalistic frenzy is becoming the biggest threat to global peace, prosperity, and health since Nazi Germany.

The word “Nazi” appears six times in the book itself. But Navarro and Autry also use other language to make the same comparison—for example writing of the “most rapid military buildup of a totalitarian regime since the 1930s” (p. 112), and referring to Chinese submarines as “U-boats” (p. 123).

Navarro and Autry go out of their way to tell the reader about “the profound portrait of today’s China so accurately painted in the book.” (p. 263) For the most part, it isn’t. But Navarro and Autry do make some good points. Let’s look at those before turning to areas where their arguments fall short.

The Chinese government has a horrible human rights record, and Navarro and Autry give many examples, from Tiananmen Square to the Falun Gong persecutions to unsafe working conditions. As much as life in China has improved since Mao Zedong’s death in 1976, the Chinese government still has a long way to go before its treatment of its people can be called humane.

Chinese government officials cannot abide political disagreements that pose no threat to their power. They persecute many non-threatening religious beliefs and mistreat ethnic minorities, as well as domestic and foreign businesses. And the Great Firewall around China’s Internet is one of the world’s most egregious examples of censorship. China still has a prison camp system, the Laogai—interested readers should turn to survivor and Laogai Research Foundation founder Harry Wu’s Bitter Winds: A Memoir of My Years in China’s Gulag.

China’s economic policies also still have a very long way to go. As economist Jagdish Bhagwati often says about illiberal countries, the problem is that Adam Smith’s invisible hand is nowhere to be seen. The state still owns, whether de facto or de jure, a large percentage of businesses. Corruption is high, ranking 77thin the world in Transparency International’s 2017 Corruption Perception Index. Regulatory enforcement and punitive measures are applied arbitrarily, often with no apparent rhyme or reason, discouraging long-term investment. The government often requires Chinese control of foreign business investments. And the Chinese government and even many private businesses are guilty of widespread intellectual property theft.

Navarro and Autry also rightfully point out that China’s currency manipulation is bad policy, arguing that “a stronger yuan would put significantly more purchasing power in the hands of a woefully underdeveloped Chinese consumer.” They correctly argue that a floating yuan would provide a better deal for Chinese consumers, as well as their foreign trading partners, than the current policy of pegging the yuan to the dollar.

Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson argue in Why Nations Fail that countries with extractive rather than inclusive political institutions will find limits to their growth. Extractive institutions are those that enable include expropriation of private industries, high corruption, suppression of political dissent, and arbitrary regulations. Inclusive institutions, by contrast, incentivize political accountability, open democratic elections, judicial integrity, and consistently enforced property and other rights. As impressive as China’s reform program has been to date, its government is still more extractive than inclusive. Its growth is likely unsustainable without continuing political and economic liberalization. If that process were to stop or reverse, the Chinese people will never truly be free or become as rich as the United States, Western Europe, or the nearby Asian Tiger economies.

Navarro and Autry might disagree with Acemoglu and Robinson, though. Acemoglu and Robinson’s argument that China’s economy stands on fragile ground without liberalization doesn’t play into Navarro’s theme of China as the biggest threat to U.S. national security since the Nazis.

Regarding national security, President Trump recently made headlines when he proposed creating a new military branch called the space force. The idea may have come from Death by China, in which Navarro and Autry warn of China’s military aspirations in space:

Options run the gamut from boulders hurled off the moon with enough energy to destroy a metropolis on Earth, EMP pulse bombs designed to disable our electronic infrastructure, and directed energy weapons fired from space to orbiting H-bombs and space planes capable of raining nuclear death on any city in the world. (p. 162)

The boulder idea is straight out of Robert Heinlein’s 1966 science fiction novel, The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress. They also worry about China’s ability to destroy satellites:

When a few kilograms of gravel are thrown into orbit, they will attack the satellites like meteor showers and incapacitate the expensive GPS constellation. (p. 168)

The trouble with this fear is that such an attack would not advance Chinese interests. Debris does not discriminate, and China has its own satellite network to worry about. So while it could easily take out America’s military and commercial satellites, it would have to be willing to sacrifice its own satellites. The rest of the world would lose its satellites too, which would anger more than a few countries. Such is Navarro and Autry’s justification for the U.S. to establish a military space force.

There are also some errors of fact. For example, China is not “a country originally founded on anti-colonial, Marxist principles.” (p.4) China was first unified under the Qin dynasty in the third century B.C. Karl Marx was born in 1818. Mao and his fellow communist revolutionaries changed China’s flag and renamed it the People’s Republic of China, but they did not create a new country.

A common theme throughout the book is a decline in American manufacturing. According to the data, U.S. manufacturing is near an all-time high, both in terms of real output and in value added. Increased worker productivity can increase manufacturing output as manufacturing employment is reduced. This is actually good news; the U.S. economy gets spectacular output, plus more time and talent left over for other, additional purposes.

This is why manufacturing’s decline as a percentage of total U.S. GDP is also a good thing. Not only is U.S. manufacturing healthy and growing, but the rest of the economy is growing even faster. It turns out that non-manufacturing jobs are more lucrative on average, so the more of those, the better. Our diversified economy is better able to withstand economic shocks than less diversified countries like China, which not only has much smaller per capita output, but relies on manufacturing for 29 percent of its GDP, compared to less than 12 percent in the U.S. (See data here.)

Death by China also bemoans that current U.S. policy is “allowing a mercantilist and protectionist China to destroy the American manufacturing base and vitiate our economy.” (p. 124) Economists have long pointed out that mercantilism and protectionism are self-harming policies. When China raises trade barriers, it hurts itself. Its export subsidies take money away from Chinese taxpayers and transfer it to much wealthier U.S. consumers, who benefit from artificially low prices. Americans give up less to get more, and have more money left over for other purchases. All this is at Chinese expense.

Chinese currency manipulation has a similar effect. American consumers have to give up less money to get more stuff. This is a good deal for U.S. consumers, but a bad deal for Chinese consumers, who must give up more and get less to the same degree. And this speaks nothing of the opportunity costs and distorted decision making that accompany distorted prices.

Navarro and Autry also worry about America’s trade deficit with China. They argue against an exhaustive literature explaining why trade deficits are worse than useless as a measure of economic health, going all the way back to Adam Smith and David Ricardo. Countries don’t trade with each other, individual people do. Navarro and Autry assume the opposite. Their aggregate thinking is a common analytical mistake. People won’t make deals with other unless both parties expect to be made better off. Add up all these win-win deals, and it turns out that a lot of people are making win-win deals.

Moreover, this would be the case whether the trade deficit is positive or negative, and whether it is small or large. The trade deficit simply does not measure economic well-being. If anything, it inversely correlates with unemployment. When times are good and unemployment is low, the trade deficit tends to be high. It usually shrinks during recessions, when unemployment is high.

Navarro and Autry fall for the zero-sum fallacy, writing that in U.S.-China trade, “one country wins at the expense of the other’s income, jobs, manufacturing base, and prosperity.” (p. 219) Post-Mao China has experienced rapid growth, and currently enjoys per capita income of about $8,827—the highest it’s ever been. This is up from $959 as recently as 2000. In the U.S., per capita income also grew, increasing more than $22,000 over that time. These numbers are from a World Bank dataset measured in constant U.S. dollars, available here. For one country to have more, it is not necessary for another to have less. Economic growth is just that—growth. The pie gets bigger.

Navarro and Autry are convinced that China is responsible for sky-high American unemployment, writing again and again about China’s “weapons of jobs destruction,” and predict massive unemployment. As of this writing, unemployment is 3.8 percent, which is historically quite low. The unemployment rate will go up and down as the economy goes boom and bust, but overall, trade does not affect the number of jobs. It affects the types of jobs.

Trump’s recent steel and aluminum tariffs, which Navarro has publicly defended, will according to a Trade Partnership study save roughly 33,000 jobs in the steel and aluminum industries, and cost about 179,000 jobs in downstream industries—in the short run. In the long run, employment effects are about nil. Many of those steel workers will probably eventually lose their jobs anyway and find different work elsewhere. Displaced workers in downstream industries will find different jobs, too. But artificial restrictions and distorted prices imposed by the tariffs mean that those jobs will likely create less consumer value, on average, than if the government had left well enough alone. And jobs that create less value tend to pay less. China’s unfair trade policies are a direct result of its autocracy. While Navarro and Autry are right that China needs to both open its markets and free its political system, the trade policies they suggest will not solve the problem.

Other statistics in Death by China are misleading. The late Hans Rosling warns about lonely numbers in his book Factfulness, coauthored with Ola Rosling and Anna Rosling Rönnlund:

Never believe that one number on its own can be meaningful. If you are offered one number, always ask for at least one more. Something to compare it with. Be especially careful about big numbers. (p. 130)

Navarro and Autry give just such a lonely number when they argue that, “On [President George W.] Bush’s watch alone, the United States surrendered millions of jobs to China.” (p. 10) Let’s give that large, lonely number some company. In January 2001, when Bush took office, the U.S. labor force was 143.8 million people. When his term expired in January 2009, it was 154.2 million people, despite the economy being in recession. The data are here.

So even if “the United States surrendered millions of jobs to China,” those losses were outweighed by gains elsewhere, most of which have nothing to do with trade policy. Technological change and changing consumer tastes cause more than six times as much job churn as trade, according to a Ball State University study. The size of the labor force is tied more closely to population size than anything else. Today, after nearly another decade of rapid Chinese economic growth, the U.S. labor force stands at 161.5 million people, a net gain of nearly 18 million since Bush took office. Navarro and Autry have misled the reader about the significance of their lonely number.

Navarro and Autry give another lonely number: “a staggering 750,000 Chinese have settled in Africa over the past decade.” (p. 98) Again, they give no other numbers to compare this to. I’ll fill in the gap. In 2011, the year of Death by China’s publication, Africa had a population of just over 1 billion. Adding 750,000 people to that 1 billion is an addition of less than one person in 1,000, or about 0.075 percent.

Put another way, the city where I grew up, Racine, Wisconsin, has a population of about 77,000. The “staggering” migration Navarro and Autry describe is equivalent to about two Chinese families moving into my hometown per year for 10 years. Now that we have compared Navarro and Autry’s lonely number with other relevant numbers, we can better see how meaningful it is as a guide to policy.

On the next page, Navarro and Autry express worry about “Africa, where there are already over a million Chinese farmers. That’s right, over a million Chinese farmers” (italics in original). They don’t say if any, or how many, of those people are double-counted from the 750,000 number on the previous page. And they again decline to give this lonely number some companions.

Navarro and Autry also tell numerous scare stories about consumer products, quoting on p. 44 from a 2007 Chicago Tribune story that “Despite 55 complaints, seven infants left trapped, and three deaths, it took years for the Consumer Product Safety Commission to warn parents about 1 million flawed cribs.” They do not put these scary numbers in context. In 2007, the overall mortality rate for children under 5 in the U.S. was 7.8 per 1,000 per year. That’s a rate of 0.78 percent per year. Three deaths out of a million flawed cribs is 0.0003 percent. This number, which is 3,846 times less than the general child mortality rate, overstates the danger. And the Chicago Tribune story does not specify how many of those million cribs were Chinese-made. Navarro and Autry do not provide a comparison for mortality rates from cribs made in China versus those made in other countries.

America’s child mortality rate is less than half what it was when China began its economic reforms in 1978. Back then in it was 16.3 deaths per 1,000 children under five. By 2015, the number was 6.5 per 1,000. So by that measure, children in the U.S. are more than twice as safe as they were before Chinese products began flooding American store shelves.

Navarro and Autry also point out appalling environmental conditions in China, noting that, “as China has established itself as the world’s manufacturing floor, it has also turned itself into a toxic waste dump and the world’s most polluted country.” Here they have a point, though it might not be valid for much longer. Initial stages of industrialization are indeed very polluting. But when per capita income reaches a level of $4,500 or $5,000 per person, something changes.

At that level of development, families can begin to stop worrying about where their next meal will come from. They can afford sturdier housing, some health care and transportation, and can afford to send their children to schools instead of the farm or the factory. People can afford to care about environmental quality, and do. From that point on, environmental quality tends to improve as a country gets richer.

Economists who graph pollution against per capita income call this U-shaped curve the environmental Kuznets curve. This pattern has held in country after country, and researchers are finding that that it is also holding true in China. One 2016 study in the journal Energy Policy looks at 28 different measures of environmental quality in China and finds that:

[T]he Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis is well supported for all three major pollutant emissions in China across different models and estimation methods. Our study also confirms positive effects of energy consumption on various pollutant emissions.

This makes sense. According to World Bank data, China reached that $4,500 threshold in 2010, one year before Death by China’s 2011 publication. So as Navarro and Autry were writing their book, China was at the very nadir of the environmental Kuznets curve. By 2017, per capita income in China had reached $8,827 per person, and continues to climb.

The U.S. reached its $4,500 per person environmental Kuznets curve threshold in 1968, just six years after Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring was published, which Navarro and Autry cite. Today, per capita income in the United States exceeds $59,000, and environmental quality has greatly improved. Even since Death by China’s publication, China’s environment has improved enough to show up in the data, though it clearly still has a long way to go. My colleague Iain Murray’s chapter on the Aral Sea in his book The Really Inconvenient Truths gives another example of this process.

Death by China also contains contradictions. I already mentioned how Navarro and Autry apparently believe in some kind of Schrodinger’s China: they belittle Chinese people as backward and poor while also portraying them as an unstoppable high-tech economic juggernaut. Which is it?

Navarro and Autry also write that “one of the advantages that China has over America is its ability to focus on the long term and think in terms of generations rather than individuals.” (p. 162) But they also have “an almost perfect lack of future vision.” (p. 184) Which is it?

Navarro and Autry are right that China has a repressive government and that its people deserve freedom. They are also right that the Chinese government doesn’t always play fair in international trade. But China has little to gain from military action against the United States, and everything to lose. The right way to encourage China to drop its protectionist and mercantilist policies is not for the U.S. to adopt those same policies, as we are currently doing. It is for us to drop our own trade barriers and liberalize our own economy, and reap the benefits, regardless of how China reacts. Veronique de Rugy of the Mercatus Center recently made this case in a brilliant New York Times column:

President Trump should take a page from Hong Kong. As that territory’s experience demonstrates, and as economists have long argued, lowering trade barriers regardless of other governments’ trade policies fuels domestic economic growth. So if Mr. Trump insists on acting unilaterally, he should cut rather than raise tariffs.

The U.S. would gain economic strength from unilateral free trade, and have more resources to address conservatives’ national security concerns. And we can turn to China and say, “economic and personal freedom is what made us rich. And it is how we are becoming richer still. You’re more than welcome to join us. Here’s how you do it.”

Death by China’s sensationalist tone, weak arguments, erroneous economic reasoning, contradictions, and confusions do a disservice to both the U.S. economy and the cause of Chinese freedom. But Navarro has the president’s ear, and Trump is already enacting some of Death by China’s policy prescriptions. Better for cooler heads to prevail over frustrated men competing over who can appear more hawkish against non-threats.

The Perils of Economic Planning

The real world is too complicated to plan for, or to control. A very Hayekian insight from p. 97 of Ronald Coase and Ning Wang’s How China Became Capitalist:

Many institutions result from human action but not human design; some are intentionally created, with unintended consequences that may overshadow their intended goal.

An Honest Politician

From page 427 of Douglas Irwin’s Clashing Over Commerce: A History of U.S. Trade Policy:

When asked why he had supported President Hoover’s bid for a flexible tariff provision but now opposed Roosevelt’s similar request, Harold Knutson (R-MN) replied: “Frankly, I know the purpose of this legislation is to lower rates. If I thought for a minute that it was proposed to raise rates to meet the present conditions, I would vote for this legislation and be glad of the opportunity to do so.”

Both sides have good points in the strategic debate over achieving short-term results vs. the long-term sanctity of process and procedure. I personally lean towards preserving process, even when it leads to defeats on policy issues. Never give yourself powers you wouldn’t want the other side to have, and all that. Kudos to Knutson for being the rare man in Washington who made plain where he stood, even if it’s opposite me.

Dad Jokes in Economics

Even trade economists are not immune to making the occasional awful pun.

“Poland’s exports of golf carts to the United States were challenged on anti-dumping grounds… the Poles did not even play golf, so there were no domestic prices to work with: the Poles had put the cart before the course.”

-Jagdish Bhagwati, Protectionism (1988), p.51.

What’s Driving the New Economy: Reviewing ‘Tomorrow 3.0’

Modernity is the most beautiful process in the world. As Deirdre McCloskey explains in great detail, since 1800 or so life expectancy has doubled, infant mortality is down more than 90 percent, incomes are up at least 16-fold, transportation is anywhere from ten-fold to a hundred-fold faster, we can instantly communicate with loved ones even if they’re thousands of miles away, and virtually the entirety of human knowledge and culture are available to nearly everyone for free or close to it, thanks to the Internet.

We truly do live in amazing times. And according to Michael Munger, who directs Duke University’s multidisciplinary PPE program (it stands for Philosophy, Politics, and Economics), we are on the cusp of a revolution that could accelerate the ongoing betterment of humankind. He makes his case in the new book Tomorrow 3.0: Transaction Costs and the Sharing Economy.

If the first major revolution in human history was the Agricultural Revolution and the second was the Industrial Revolution, Munger’s new book argues that a third, technology-based revolution is just getting underway. Imagine an economy that has an Uber for nearly everything, and renting and sharing are more common than ownership.

Munger uses the example of a power drill. Most people have a bunch of tools sitting in their garage or basement, sitting idle almost all the time and doing little more than taking up space. The average drill, for example, might have a cumulative lifetime use of a half hour, even if it’s owned for decades. This drill, along with unused cars, housing, and more, is idle capital that people could be making use of. So what’s stopping them?

Transaction costs are. A student of the late Nobel economist Douglass North, Munger observes about his old teacher that “for Doug North, it did not really matter what the question was. The answer always starts with ‘transaction costs.’” Transaction costs are the costs of doing business. In addition to the price of a good, the consumer pays, with time if not money, the cost of finding a good in the first place, waiting in line for it, verifying its quality, shopping around for a good price, and so on. According to Munger (and Doug North and Ronald Coase, no doubt, if they were still with us) transaction costs are key to understanding the third economic revolution now underway.

Going back to the drill example, Munger says, “I don’t need a drill. What I need is a hole in this wall, right here.” If you own the drill, problem solved. Just fetch it from the closet when you need it. But what about the other 99 percent of the time when the drill does nothing but collect dust? Drill-less people who need holes in their walls could be using it, and you could profit from it. Everyone would benefit.

So why don’t these win-win arrangements happen more often? Because the transaction costs are too high. The new economy being born doesn’t depend so much on making stuff as it does on lowering transaction costs so win-win deals can happen more often and more easily.

The drill owner needs to solve three problems—triangulation, transaction, and trust. Triangulation is finding a renter in the first place, and figuring out how to get her the drill. Transaction is making sure money changes hands. And trust is being confident that the other person will make good on their end of the deal. Both owner and renter have to solve all three of these transaction cost problems, or else they will never get together in the place.

Companies like Uber and Airbnb work by lowering transaction costs. If I need a ride, Uber’s app can connect me with a driver in seconds. That solves the triangulation problem, especially compared to waiting for a cab in the rain during rush hour. Uber also solves the problem of the transaction itself. It has both the rider and drivers’ credit card info, making payment so easy neither rider nor driver even need to carry a wallet. And the trust problem is solved by a ratings system that incentivizes both rider and driver to treat each other honestly and well.

In the years to come this type of business model will expand, lowering transaction costs across the economy, opening new opportunities people haven’t even thought of yet, and making life cheaper and more convenient for nearly everyone. It will also greatly reduce waste and idle capital. People won’t need as much stuff, and the stuff there is will be used much more intensively and efficiently.

It is too early to see all the positive and negative consequences this third revolution will have, but change is inevitable. Modernity is a never-ending process; people are always looking for ways to make things better. The transaction cost revolution is the next step, and it is already changing lives. With Munger’s help and a little Econ 101 knowledge, that change will be much easier to navigate.

The Goal of Economics

From p. 5 of Frank Knight’s 1951 book The Economic Organization:

Civilization should look forward to a day when the material product of industrial activity shall become rather its by-product, and its primary significance shall be that of a sphere for creative self-expression and the development of a higher type of individual and of human fellowship. It ought to be the first aim of economic policy to reduce the importance of economic policy in life as a whole.

An Economist’s Love Letter to Books

 
“No university will ever have at one time four economists of the quality of Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Irving Fisher, and Alfred Marshall, to say nothing of a dozen of their best colleagues—but they can all reside in one’s library. Their subtle minds are ever ready to instruct and tease and baffle.”
 
George Stigler (U. Chicago, 1982 Nobel laureate), Memoirs of an Unregulated Economist, p. 219.

The Level of Political Discourse Has Never Been Very High

From pages 140-41 of Nobel laueate George Stigler’s 1988 autobigoraphy, Memoirs of an Unregulated Economist:

I have recently reread it [F.A. Hayek’s 1944 book Road to Serfdom], and I simply cannot understand why it became popular. I mean this as a compliment to Hayek… Hayek has always been both a gentleman and a scholar.

2016: The Year in Books

Fatherhood means less time for reading than before, so this list is shorter than in previous years (2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015). The tradeoff is well worth it, as is introducing our daughter to Dr. Seuss and other great authors. Here is what I found time for this year:

  1. Charles C. Alexander – Our Game: An American Baseball History
    A thorough history of baseball from the the 1840s up to about 1990. It hits all the stages: mid-19th century amateurs such as the legendary New York Knickerbockers, the 1876 birth of the National League, its early competitors and eventual merger with the American League, the deadball era, the liveball era, segregation and the Negro Leagues, integration, expansion, the DH rule, player strikes, free agency, and more. But the book weakens when it gets to the mid-1970s. Alexander forgets to tell a story, and instead coldly lists the stats of the top teams and star players in a given year, along with verbal descriptions of the box scores from each year’s World Series. This stage of the book offers little else, with only occasional digressions into the Bronx Zoo, the Big Red Machine, the 1981 strike, and a few other compelling stories.
  2. Mary Beard – SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome
    Highly recommended. A lengthy and entertaining survey of Rome from its alleged 753 B.C. founding up to about 200 A.D., just after where Gibbon’s Decline and Fall begins. Beard is a distinguished classicist with a healthy sense of skepticism. She is knowledgeable about archaeology as well as texts, and regularly refers to new findings. As for the title, SPQR abbreviates “Senatus Populusque Romanus,” or “The Senate and People of Rome.” It roughly meant “this is mine,” and was stamped everywhere in the ancient world. Fitting.
  3. Jason Brennan and Peter Jaworski – Markets without Limits: Moral Virtues and Commercial Interests
    Their thesis is the best kind: simple but deep. If you can give something away for free, you can sell it for money. This implies legal markets in organ transplants, prostitution, drugs, surrogate pregnancy, and other controversial areas. Things that are inherently wrong–slavery and child pornography, for example–remain wrong. This is because “the problem isn’t the market in those things; it’s those things themselves.” (p. 224).
  4. Jason Brennan – Political Philosophy: An Introduction
    A quick-reading take on the major problems facing political philosophers, from natural rights to political legitimacy and authority, to the advantages and disadvantages of utilitarianism. It also contains several valuable insights on John Rawls’ thought. The link goes to a menu of free electronic versions.
  5. Sean B. Carroll – The Serengeti Rules: The Quest to Discover How Life Works and Why it Matters
    How do ecosystems know how many of each species to maintain? From predators to prey to plants to microbes, a delicate balance has maintained itself for literally billions of years. But how? Carroll’s answers are mainly uninspired environmentalism-by-rote. A deeper answer to his question lies in an ongoing equilibrating process that never ends. The equilibrium point is never actually reached, even though every ecosystem is constantly moving that direction. Random outside events, from rainfall to drought, from migration to climate change to meteor strikes, constantly shift where that equilibrium point lies. The parallels to economics and its ongoing spontaneous order vs. central planning debate are obvious. It is also obvious that Carroll’s focus on only one academic discipline has left him almost entirely ignorant of that debate. His unintentional message may be the profound conservatism that animates the environmental movement. Whether it’s climate, overpopulation of one species, or underpopulation of another species, everything should stay just as it is at this flashpoint in Earth’s 4.7 billion-year history. As Pangloss said in Voltaire’s Candide, we live in the best of all possible worlds.
  6. John Cleese – So, Anyway…
    Cleese recounts his long and varied career in comedy, but only until he became famous. It ends at the early days of Monty Python, and does little more than mention Fawlty Towers and A Fish Called Wanda. Though tactless at times, Cleese offers excerpts from a number of his early scripts that had me laughing hard enough to earn several quizzical looks from my wife. That is this book’s real treat.
  7. Tom Haudricourt – Brewers Essential: Everything You Need to Know to Be a Real Fan!
    Less a narrative history than a series of vignettes of Milwaukee baseball. Covers everything from the Atlanta Braves’ 1953-65 tenure in Milwaukee, including a 1957 World Series victory over the Yankees, to profiles of Brewers players from Henry Aaron to Robin Yount to Gorman Thomas, on down to the 2007 season. The author is a Brewers beat writer for the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.
  8. Robert Heinlein – Starship Troopers
    The movie was awful, but the book is pretty good. It’s both military-themed and violent, neither of which play to my tastes. But Heinlein’s creativity about lifestyles and forms of government, and his rare-for-his-time rejection of racism, nationalism, and isolationism are refreshing. He does it mostly without editorializing; he lets some of his characters express disgusting views without comment, trusting his readers to know better. Other characters are far more progressive. And the final battle scene is one of the most memorable bits of fiction I’ve ever read.
  9. Israel Kirzner – Competition and Entrepreneurship
    Markets are not places or things; they are ongoing processes. Entrepreneurs and consumers continually adapt, compete, enter, exit, and evolve in a never-ending dynamic process. From that conceptual framework, Kirzner offers insights on equilibrium theory, monopoly, Schumpeterian creative destruction, the roles of information and advertising in markets, and short run-vs.-long run thinking. The author, now mostly retired, is Ludwig von Mises’ most accomplished student and a longtime NYU economics professor, as well as a practicing rabbi. His name still pops up in Nobel speculations every year, and he is considered one of the award’s biggest snubs.
  10. Michael Kranish and Marc Fisher – Trump Revealed: An American Journey of Ambition, Ego, Money, and Power
    This quickly-written biography is a team effort by several Washington Post journalists. It came out shortly after Trump won the GOP nomination, and before he won the election. The book is not hostile or politically motivated, but Trump does not come off well. His braggadocio and insecurity apparently emerged early in life–as did his flexible approach to business and personal ethics.
  11. Don Lavoie – Rivalry and Central Planning: The Socialist Calculation Debate Reconsidered
    On its surface, this book is a history of the 1920s-1930s ivory tower socialist calculation debate. It is actually far less dry. That debate, as Lavoie makes clear, is just one chapter in an ongoing debate between spontaneous order and central control that has raged for almost the entire history of civilization. Lavoie mostly focuses on the main 1920s and 1930s combatants, with Lange and Lerner on the central planning side, and Hayek and Mises on the spontaneous order side. Both sides have arguments more nuanced than can be summarized in this capsule review. But Lavoie’s deep understanding of both sides and surprisingly clear writing make this book a highly recommended read.
  12. Janna Levin – Black Hole Blues and Other Songs from Outer Space
    Gravitational waves are one of the most important discoveries in physics in decades. Levin, a Ph.D physicist, explains the science with both clarity and detail. But the book’s real emphasis is the messy, unpredictable process of scientific discovery. Personality conflicts, funding problems, land-use regulations, and more all put in appearances. Gordon Tullock’s The Organization of Inquiry is a good complementary work on scientists’ behavior.
  13. Deirdre McCloskey – How to be Human*: *Though an Economist
    A collection of essays on economists and economics itself. She praises qualities such as having outside interests, reading books (many economists don’t, sticking to journal articles), humility, and having physics department values, not math department values. By this she means that economists should use quantitative methods to study real-world phenomena, like a physicist–as opposed to using math for its own sake, like a mathematician. Don’t use arbitrary numerical standards for statistical significance, use your human judgment. She develops this last theme in greater detail with Stephen Ziliak in The Cult of Statistical Significance.
  14. Deirdre McCloskey – Bourgeois Equality: How Ideas, Not Capital or Institutions, Enriched the World
    The conclusion to Deirdre’s brilliant Bourgeois trilogy. Why are some countries rich, and others poor? Most economists will say secure property rights, limited corruption, stability, and other good institutions are the answer to getting rich. Yes, Deirdre says, but those are not enough. People need to value such things before they can emerge. Rhetoric, persuasion, and public opinion are the root causes to those positive institutions. Her thesis goes at least one level deeper than the average economist in explaining the last two centuries’ Great Enrichment, and all of her books deserve at least one close reading. This one is no exception.
  15. Carl Menger – Principles of Economics
    This 1871 textbook revolutionized the profession. It contains one of the first explanations of the subjective theory of value, which replaced the labor theory of value favored by John Locke, Adam Smith, and Karl Marx. Menger, along with Walras and Jevons, also sparked the marginal revolution in economics with this book. Finally, Menger’s theory of the emergence of money is an early example of what economists today call spontaneous order. Because of these accomplishments, Menger is considered the founder of the Austrian school of economics. The link goes to a free PDF.
  16. Jared Meyer – Uber-Positive: Why Americans Love the Sharing Economy
    A short primer not just on Uber’s business model, but on the sharing economy in general. This business model will play a big role in the economy going forward, so might as well learn about it now. Jared’s book is the best introduction there is.
  17. Isaac Moorehouse, ed. – Why Haven’t You Read This Book?
    Isaac and his collaborators flip the burden of proof. Instead of asking yourself why you should move across the country, get a new job in a field you’re passionate about, climb a mountain, travel the world, and so on, why shouldn’t you? Why not? What’s stopping you? An inspirational way to think outside the box.
  18. Johan Norberg – Progress: Ten Reasons to Look Forward to the Future
    Media reports focus on the here, the now, and the rare. Every plane crash makes headlines for days, but the 40 million flights that land safely every year are ignored. Do the math; there is no reason to be scared. Norberg takes this numerate perspective, and pairs it with a conversational, easy-reading prose style. For two centuries and counting, life expectancy has been going up, disease rates have been going down, and new technologies are continually making people’s lives better, to the point where mass prosperity is finally starting to reach the developing world. Moreover, violence, war, and terrorism are rarer threats than ever, despite their wall-to-wall sensationalist coverage. That is what is really newsworthy.
  19. Daniel Okrent – Nine Innings
    On June 10, 1982, the Milwaukee Brewers and Baltimore Orioles played a baseball game. This book chronicles that game from start to finish. Rather than a simple play-by-play narrative, Okrent breaks up the action with frequent vignettes on the players’ backstories and playing styles, including Hall-of-Famers such as Robin Yount, Paul Molitor, Cal Ripken, Eddie Murray, and Rollie Fingers. Okrent also explains how managers and GMs go about their jobs, delves into the history of the game, and even shows how groundskeepers slyly try to give the home team an edge. Some of the tangents are too long, and this book would be better if it was about 50 pages shorter. It is still beautifully written, and a classic baseball book.
  20. Jeff Pearlman – Gunslinger: The Remarkable, Improbable, Iconic Life of Brett Favre
    Not a hagiography, and a much better book for it. The reader gets a flavor of what it’s like to grow up in the deep South, and how Favre’s family life may have played into his loutish behavior when he was young. One also learns how combining raw talent with a relentless work ethic can create amazing accomplishments.
  21. Murray Rothbard – Man, Economy, and State, with Power and Market
    Two books which together comprise a long and thorough economics textbook. In a way, it’s a more approachable version of Mises’ Human Action, and begins with what is probably the clearest explanation of Mises’ theory of human action (praxeology) ever written. This makes it a valuable read for any aspiring economist. The trouble is Rothbard’s distasteful stridency and capital-C Certainty. This is actually the book’s most important lesson. The sheer number of times words such as “all,” “none,” “always,” “never,” “fallacious,” and the like evince a simpliste, Manichaean, and black-and-white way of thinking that serious scholars should avoid. The link goes to a free PDF. Worthwhile, despite (or because of) my criticisms.
  22. Matt Taylor – Metallica: Back to the Front: A Fully Authorized Visual History of the Master of Puppets Album and Tour
    The lengthy opening chapter details all four members’ early lives, their early history as a band, and ends with bassist Cliff Burton’s death in a bus accident while on tour in Sweden. He was 24. The rest of the book is a scrapbook-style collection of memories, with interviews, pictures, hand-written notes and lyric sheets, and recollections from the band.
  23. Abigail Tucker – The Lion in the Living Room: How House Cats Tamed Us and Took Over the World
    Lots of good stuff about feline biology and evolution. Our little friends aren’t entirely domesticated, unlike many dog breeds and even certain kinds of foxes. Later parts of the book are weaker, with scare stories about cats’ impact on birds and other wildlife, and some comical recommendations about how to make our homes more accommodating. These range from keeping the thermostat at 85 degrees to getting rid of computers and televisions, which emit high-frequency noises that we can’t hear, but cats can. An hour-long documentary with the same title is much better.
  24. Congressman X – The Confessions of Congressman X: A Disturbing and Shockingly Frank Tell-All of Vanity, Greed and Deceit
    Most people aren’t nearly cynical enough about politics. This anonymously written rant by a current Democratic member of Congress is a good antidote. Pairs well with works by Ronald Kessler and Peter Schweizer.
  25. David Zimmerman – In Search of a Hero: The Life and Times of Tony Canadeo, Green Bay Packers Gray Ghost
    A biography of the hall-of-fame Packers running back who played in the 1940s and 1950s. Canadeo grew up in Chicago and went to college at Gonzaga in Spokane, Washington, where he earned the nickname “Gray Ghost” because of his prematurely gray hair, as well as his elusive running style. After his playing days ended, he served for more than 30 years on the Packers’ executive committee, and played a role in hiring Vince Lombardi, who won five championships, including the first two Super Bowls.
  26. Paul Zimmerman – The Thinking Man’s Guide to Pro Football
    One of the most renowned sports journalists of all time, Dr. Z’s book is filled with fantastic storytelling, a clean prose style that writers of any genre can learn from, and a keen eye for the little things about the game. His love for overlooked aspects of offensive line play–he was a lineman in college–shows throughout.

Regulatory Discretion: Both Good and Bad

From p. 137 of Cornell political scientist Theodore Lowi’s 1969 book The End of Liberalism: Ideology, Policy, and the Crisis of Public Authority:

The move from concreteness to abstractness in the definition of public policy was probably the most important single change in the entire history of public control in the United States.

Lowi’s point concerns the separation of powers. In theory, Congress passes a law directing a regulatory agency to regulate something in a specific way, then the agency does so. The executive branch executes legislation; hence its name.

This is not how things work in practice. More and more, Congress delegates its legislative powers away to the executive branch. On issues ranging from health insurance subsidies to power plants to Internet infrastructure, executive branch agencies act unilaterally. And when they cite congressional statutes, they do so abstractly, not concretely, just as Lowi said nearly 50 years ago.

An example: the text of the Clean Air Act says nothing about CO2 emissions. But a few years ago, the EPA issued a cap-and-trade regulation for CO2 emissions, even though Congress explicitly rejected a bill to do so. The EPA justified its decision on the abstract principles on which the Clean Air Act is based. The fact that the text of bill, as amended over the years, does not mention CO2 emissions as a pollutant, did not matter to the EPA.

There is a role for discretion in regulatory matters. Discretion makes it possible to avoid regulatory abuses, clear needless bureaucratic hurdles, and avoid obvious stupidities such as suspending children from school for wielding Pop-Tart “guns” in cafeterias.

But Lowi makes a good point: discretion is a double-edged sword. Without a clear separation of powers, its outer edge can spill blood by executive order just as easily as the inner edge can cut innocents loose from government-mandated ropes.