Congratulations, Rickey Henderson

Rickey Henderson is now a Hall of Famer.

Seeing the news made me smile; he’s always been known as one of baseball’s quirkier characters. In that spirit, here is a link to the unofficial 25 Best Rickey Henderson Stories.

My favorite is number 4:

In 1996, Henderson’s first season with San Diego, he boarded the team bus and was looking for a seat. Steve Finley said, “You have tenure, sit wherever you want.” Henderson looked at Finley and said, “Ten years? Rickey’s been playing at least 16, 17 years.”

Probably too good to be true.

But so what? The game could use more oddballs like Rickey. It’s more fun that way. That’s what baseball is all about.

Sometimes Questions Are Better than Answers

Adam Cohen’s piece in today’s New York Times, “Republicans’ Latest Talking Point: The New Deal Failed,” is profoundly interesting. I have no idea if the article is representative of Cohen’s thought. But I’m led to believe that he is the type of person who, while very intelligent, did not ask many questions in school.

The standard high school civics textbook paints a glowing picture of the New Deal. So does public opinion. The inquisitive mind does not just take that at face value. It asks questions. Seeks answers. Comes to its own conclusion.

Maybe Cohen did all that, and decided the New Deal was a good thing. I am skeptical that he went to the trouble.

Why? Start with his first argument. It is simply lazy. It is a partisan’s argument. He quotes Fox News and the Wall Street Journal, and declares, these people vote Republican! Of course they’re wrong!

Yes, Republicans are wrong on many issues. Most issues, in fact. At least from my perspective. But Republican = wrong is just lazy. One must take an argument seriously to determine its merit.

His second argument is also lazy. It appeals to public opinion. This is a fallacy. A quarter of voters didn’t even know which party controlled Congress last election. 55% of Americans reject something as basic as evolution. Public opinion is not to be trusted, in other words. Better to come to your own conclusions. Better to ask questions.

Cohen’s most compelling argument is also his least rigorous: anecdote. He tells a story of a man helped by New Deal spending. Note that he left out stories of people hurt by that spending. Both kinds of anecdotes are right there in the open. Cohen is guilty of cherrypicking.

Then there are the errors of fact. Cohen claims that President Bush rolled back the regulatory state. But 33,055 new regulations passed under Bush’s watch. That’s not a typo. I’ll spell it out. Thirty-three thousand and fifty-five new regulations. Look at the data. Bush didn’t roll back anything.

Cohen is simply mistaken. He didn’t ask questions. He just assumed that Republican = deregulation. He didn’t ask if that was actually true.

As an economist, here’s the real doozy:

“The anti-New Deal line is wrong as a matter of economics. F.D.R.’s spending programs did help the economy and created millions of new jobs. The problem, we now know, is not that F.D.R. spent too much priming the pump, but rather that he spent too little. It was his decision to cut back on spending on New Deal programs that brought about a nasty recession in 1937-38.”

Really?

First, the theory. Let’s ask: what was the impact of FDR’s programs? Every dollar spent on them was a dollar that was taken out of the economy, then put back into it. This is not how an economy grows. Growth requires the creation of new wealth, not the redistribution of old wealth.

And the data? One of President Obama’s top advisers, Christina Romer, showed that both the Depression and the 1937-38 dip were largely monetary phenomenons. Not fiscal. Monetary. Look at the data.

What about that fiscal policy? Another economist, Price Fishback, demonstrated that New Deal fiscal policy had almost no net effect on the economy. Again, look at the data.

If one asks questions and looks at the data, one finds that the New Deal did not actually help the economy. Partisan affiliation has nothing to do with it. Neither does public opinion.

Theory and data do. All you have to do is ask them.

Sadly, most media outlets – and their customers – do not want to ask questions. That requires too much thought. Too much effort. Worse, such things can’t fit into soundbites. No, we want people who have answers.

Google Searches: Mankind’s Doom

An environmental activist frets that using Google’s search engine increases greenhouse gas emissions.

One more item to catalogue from the New Religion’s post-reductio phase.

Naomi Klein, Anarchist?

Carl Oberg takes an interesting look into the mind of Naomi Klein.

The main point: it’s all about power.

She doesn’t like it when other people wield it; power corrupts. Klein gets around this problem by taking a page from Plato’s Republic. Just give power to people who think as she does. Then, magically, power won’t corrupt.

Nationals Park

Nationals Park turns out to have cost more than planned. Not a big surprise. But disappointing all the same. The original figure was $611 million; the final cost is $693 million.

What really caught my eye was that “The team refused to pay rent for much of the year because it claimed the facility wasn’t finished.”

Bear in mind that the Nats only paid for $20 million of the $693 million. Not only did they pay less than 3% of construction costs, but they’ve apparently been shirking on their rent, too.

Try pulling that with your landlord and see what happens.

I won’t. I like having a roof over my head. What a sweetheart deal.

Letter in Time Magazine

One of my favorite games as a child was the whack-a-mole game at Chuck E. Cheese. As an adult, I play a similar game with economic fallacies. Whenever one pops up, knock it down.

In that spirit, my colleague Drew Tidwell and I fired off a letter to Time Magazine recently; one of their columnists fell for the old broken window fallacy. Drew and I must have done a good job knocking down that economic mole, because Time ran our letter in their latest issue. You can read our lightly edited missive here (second letter down).

Or if the link doesn’t work, here’s the text:

Kinsley’s latest missive in time falls prey to one of the oldest traps in economics–Frédéric Bastiat’s broken-window fallacy. Just as a broken window creates work for the glazier at the expense of the window owner, money that Kinsley hopes to inject into the economy must first be taken out of it. Add in collection costs and the usual political malfeasance, and we have a net loss to the economy. There’s more: Kinsley argues that last summer’s high oil prices were essentially a tax on consumers; the money just went to oil companies instead of the government. But he forgets that oil companies do not have control over their prices. If they did, then why would oil prices ever drop? Kinsley’s logic does not follow. Ryan Young and Drew Tidwell, Competitive Enterprise Institute, WASHINGTON

The Economist as Sisyphus

President Obama is now claiming that unemployment could climb above 10% without his stimulus program.

This is a weird claim. For every job the stimulus creates, some other job disappears. Suppose one of those jobs pays $50,000 per year. That is $50,000 that taxpayers now do not have to spend. The less they spend, the fewer jobs that their spending can create.

By its very nature, the stimulus cannot create anything, at least on net. It has opportunity costs at least equal to any benefit it has. Add in transaction costs, and the economy stands to worsen from the stimulus. That’s why Obama’s claim is such an strange one.

All this has been said a million times, here and elsewhere. But according to polls, 56% of Americans still don’t get it.

Is it the economist’s job to repeat himself until that figure improves? Or is that a Sisyphean task? Opportunity cost ignorance goes back to at least the Roman Empire. There is no compelling reason to be believe it will ever go away.

State Bailout: Grant or Loan?

Harold Meyerson’s latest Washington Post column, “A Page from the Hoover Handbook,” is, as far as economic illiteracy goes, one of the worst I’ve seen in a while.

It may be impolite to point out others’ mistakes. But we can learn from them in doing so. In that spirit, and with no disrespect to Meyerson, let’s take a look at where he went wrong.

Democrats want the federal government to give grants to states. Republicans want those grants to be loans instead. Meyerson very strongly sides with the Democrats here. But there is no intellectual reason to prefer one side over the other. Both sides favor the same thing.

Here’s why. Suppose the Democrats win. The money goes to states as a grant. It is transferred from taxpayers to the federal government. Then the federal government transfers it to various state governments.

The federal government’s debt then increases by the amount of the grants. Bond buyers loan the federal government the money. Taxpayers then repay the bond buyers’ loans in the future.

Now suppose the Republicans win. The money goes to states as a loan. It is transferred from taxpayers to the federal government. Then the federal government transfers it to various state governments. Sound familiar?

State government debt then increases by the amount of the loans. Bond buyers loan the state governments the money. Taxpayers then repay the bond buyers’ loans in the future. Only the names change. Meyerson has no real reason to favor grants over loans. Only partisanship.

State governments have spent themselves into trouble. The way out of trouble is to spend less. If a family hits hard times, they cut back their spending. Now several state governments have hit a rough patch. But they want to cut back our spending. Not their own. How is that fair? How does that help the economy?

Health Care Spending Up

Health care spending in 2007 went up to $2.2 trillion. That is 16.2% of GDP. All in all, we’re talking $618 per person per month — more than what a lot of people pay for rent.

The good news: the rate of increase is slower than in years past. The bad news: it’s still faster than real wages plus inflation.

The worse news: continued movement toward a third-party payment system will further reduce incentives to contain costs. People aren’t as careful spending other people’s money as they are their own.

Journalism vs. Economics

“[J]ournalism may be the greatest plague we face today — as the world becomes more and more complicated… our minds are trained for more and more simplification.”

-Nassim Taleb, Fooled by Randomness, p. 39.

Most people turn to the television and the newspaper to learn about the world. At the same time, most people don’t have much time to spend consuming news. We have short attention spans. Jobs to go to. Children to raise.

More to the point, a lot of people just don’t care very much. Many journalists — and even more of their consumers — have limited intellectual curiosity. We have better things to do.

This affects the quality of news reporting. The dominant format in print and broadcast media is now the soundbite. It’s short. It’s catchy. You can listen to an entire soundbite on the morning news and still get to work on time. Several of them in fact, on a variety of topics.

But soundbites leave little room for subtlety. For nuance. For shades of gray.

This is a tragedy. Ours is a world full of not just grays, but colors. Vibrant colors, arrayed across an entire spectrum, shining through all of space and all of time. It’s beautiful.

There is little beauty in the harsh, monochrome soundbite. Worse, the soundbite crowds out analysis of anything that takes much longer than a news cycle to materialize. This is the soundbite’s biggest failure. Our world is going through slow but profound changes that a soundbite couldn’t possibly capture.

Take the economy. Because we’re probably in a recession right now, headlines are screaming about economic instability. Volatility. Crashing, churning. A recent CNN/Money article describes “jaw-dropping” market volatility. A Google search of “increasing market volatility” yields 442,000 results.

Journalists should stop screaming. The economy is actually less volatile than it used to be. Don’t take my word for it. Look at the data. Booms are longer now. Recessions are shallower. It’s right there in the data.

But we probably won’t hear about this trend in the news. That’s because it is sixty years in the making. It didn’t happen over a news cycle. It happened over generations.

You’ll hear all about the Dow’s latest ups and downs — down 81 points today, by the way. But here’s something you’ll probably never hear on CNBC or Fox News: the Dow has never had a 15-year period where it lost money. Ever. Including the Great Depression. Your IRA is safe.

If you really want to learn about our world or its economy, listen to the data. They are far more eloquent than any talking head.