econ 522 economics of law dan quint spring 2013 lecture 3
TRANSCRIPT
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Logistics
Efficiency: “all available Kaldor-Hicks improvements made” roughly, maximizing total value, or total surplus, or total payoffs, to
everyone in society… …where everything is translated into dollars, so we’re able to
add/compare across people
Means that… each scarce resource is owned by whoever values it most goods are produced whenever their value is greater than their cost and so on
Monday, we defined efficiency
Externalities People make choices based on private cost and private benefit Efficiency is based on social cost and social benefit When social cost > private cost, negative externality
people will do something more than efficient amount When social benefit > private benefit, positive externality
people will do something less than efficient amount
Barriers to trade, taxes
Monopoly/private information
Also Monday, we discussed some forces that lead to inefficiency
Positive statements – fact or theoretical prediction
Normative statements – value judgment “Should” the law be designed to achieve efficient outcomes? Do we “want” the legal system to be efficient?
We began with Posner, who’s a big fan of efficiency Yes, normative goal of legal system should be efficiency “Ex-ante consent” – everyone would have agreed to efficient rules before
they knew “which role they would play” (Like lottery ticket with highest expected payoff – no use complaining if you
don’t like your outcome) Even with asymmetries, efficient rules could be better for everyone
(landlord/tenant example)
Finally, we posed the question, should efficiency be the normative goal of the law?
The “lottery ticket” analogy requires risk neutrality Is a 50% chance at $1,000,000 and a 50% chance at nothing… …really as good as $500,000 for sure? If $500,000 is “worth more to you” when you’re broke than when
you already have $500,000, this argument doesn’t work
Counterpoint to Posner: Hammond (1982) Efficiency is really a special case of utilitarianism, and subject to
the same limitations “Value” = “willingness to pay” $1 worth the same to everyone
But Posner’s argument has important limitations
efficiency is not equity efficiency is not fairness efficiency is not maximizing happiness
“Suppose that pituitary extract is in very short supply… and is therefore very expensive. A poor family has a child who will be a dwarf if he doesn’t get some of the extract, but the family cannot afford the price [or borrow the money].
A rich family has a child who will grow to normal height, but the extract will add a few inches more, and his parents decide to buy it for him.
In the sense of value used in this book, the pituitary extract is more valuable to the rich family… because value is measured by willingness to pay, but the extract would confer greater happiness in the hands of the poor family.”
- Posner, Economic Analysis of Law
This highlights some of the things efficiency is not
Cooter and Ulen (textbook ch. 1)
Efficiency should not necessarily be the goal of society
But efficiency should be the goal of the legal system
If redistribution is desirable, it’s better to make the legal system efficient, and address distribution through taxes Cooter and Ulen offer four reasons why the tax system is a better
way to redistribute wealth than the legal system
A more pragmatic defense of efficiency as a goal for the law
1. Taxes can target “rich” and “poor” more precisely than the legal system can
2. Distributional effects of legal changes are harder to predict
3. Lawyers are more expensive than accountants
4. More narrowly-targeted taxes cause greater distortion than broad-based taxes
Four reasons the tax system is a better way to redistribute wealth than the legal system
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Two goods: beer (x), pizza (y)
One consumer, with $60 and utility u(x,y) = x0.5 y0.5
a. Given prices p for beer and q for pizza, calculate demand.
(x,y) = (30/p, 30/q)
Beer and pizza are produced at $1 per unit, and perfectly competitive markets
So without any taxes, p = q = $1
b. Calculate demand, and utility, with no tax.
(x,y) = (30, 30) u(x,y) = 300.5 300.5 = 30
c. Calculate demand and utility with $0.50 tax on beer.
(x,y) = (20, 30) u(x,y) = 200.5 300.5 = 6000.5 24.49
d. How much revenue does $0.50 tax on beer raise?
20 X $0.50 = $10
e. Calculate demand and utility with $0.20 tax on both goods.
(x,y) = (25, 25) u(x,y) = 250.5 250.5 = 25
f. How much revenue does $0.20 tax on both goods raise?
25 X $0.20 + 25 X $0.20 = $10
g. Which is the better way to raise revenue?
To make this last point, an example
We’ve seen two arguments in favor Posner: it’s what we all would have agreed on ex-ante C&U: if you want to redistribute, it’s better to do it through taxes
But there are definitely some problems with efficiency Distribution matters; not everything is monetizable; people might care
about procedural fairness
My take In this class, we’ll mostly focus on the positive questions But in the background, I think of efficiency as a “pretty good”, but
definitely imperfect, measure of “goodness”
So, summing up… is efficiency a good goal for the law?
Let’s first dispense with the straw man. I’ve never heard of an economist who believes that every efficient policy is good, and I’ve heard of very few who believe that every inefficient policy is bad.
It’s true that most economists do seem to believe that any good policy analysis should start by considering efficiency. That doesn’t mean it should end there.
I think economists are right to emphasize efficiency, and I think so for (at least) two reasons. First, emphasizing efficiency forces us to concentrate on the most important problems. Second, emphasizing efficiency forces us to be honest about our goals.
– Steven Landsburg
http://www.thebigquestions.com/2010/08/30/efficiency-experts
A nice blog post about why policy evaluation should at least start with efficiency…
Politician: Here’s my program to make the health care system work better by subsidizing health care for the poor.
Economist: Your program costs a billion dollars and delivers half a billion dollars worth of benefits. That’s inefficient.
Politician: So what?
Economist: Well, the “so what” is that maybe you could take that billion dollars and deliver a full billion dollars worth of benefits instead if you spent it a little differently. Why not just hand the cash out to poor people?
Politician: Because I don’t want to help all poor people. I only want to help sick poor people – and this is the only way I can think of to do that.
Economist: Ah. So your goal here is not to make the health care system work better at all. Instead it’s to transfer resources to sick poor people.
Politician: I guess so.
Economist: That’s fine. Now we can have a healthy debate about whether that’s what we want to do.
“Emphasizing efficiency forces us to be honest about our goals”
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I don’t have many “absolute beliefs” about economics Some people do
I hope that doesn’t make things too confusing
Before we move on, a quick digression…
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I don’t have many “absolute beliefs” about economics Some people do
I hope that doesn’t make things too confusing
Relatedly, if I don’t see economics as a set of rules to memorize, how do I know what I know?
I need to see a model, or an example, that demonstrates it
Before we move on, a quick digression…
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Today, we focus on static games Also known as simultaneous-move games
A static game is completely described by three things: Who the players are What actions are available to each player What payoff each player will get, as a function of
his own action, and the actions of the other players
Any complete description of these three things fully characterizes a static game
A brief introduction to game theory
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(Story)
Players: player 1 and player 2
Two actions available to each player: rat on the other, or keep mum
Payoffs: u1(mum, mum) = -1
u1(rat, mum) = 0
u1(mum, rat) = -10
u1(rat,rat) = -5
Same for player 2
A classic example: the Prisoner’s Dilemma
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In two-player games with finite actions, one way to present game is payoff matrix
-1, -1 -10, 0
0, -10 -5, -5
Mum Rat
Mum
Rat
Player 2’s Action
Player 1’s Action
Player 1’s Payoff Player 2’s Payoff
Always Player 1
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We solve a game by looking for a Nash equilibrium
Nash equilibrium is a strategy profile (an action for each player) such that: No player can improve his payoff by switching to a different action… …given what his opponent/opponents are doing
Nash Equilibrium
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If any player can improvehis payoff by changing hisaction, given his opponents’actions, then it is not a Nashequilibrium
Is (Mum, Mum) an equilibrium? No, if player 2 is playing Mum
player 1 gains by deviating
A strategy profile is a Nash Equilibrium if no player can gain by deviating
-1, -1 -10, 0
0, -10 -5, -5
Mum Rat
Mum
Rat
Player 2’s Action
Pla
yer
1’s
Act
ion
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My best response to a particular play by the other player is whichever action(s) give me the highest payoff
To find Nash Equilibria… Circle payoff from player 1’s
best response to each action by his opponent
Circle payoff from player 2’sbest response to each action
Any box with both payoffscircled is an equilibrium
Because each player is playinga best-response to his opponent’s action…
…so neither one can improve by changing his strategy
In two-player games, we find Nash equilibria by highlighting best responses
-1, -1 -10, 0
0, -10 -5, -5
Mum Rat
Mum
Rat
Player 2’s Action
Pla
yer
1’s
Act
ion
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Another classic: Battle of the Sexes
(Story)
Circle player 1’sbest responses
Circle player 2’sbest responses
We find two equilibria: (ballgame, ballgame) and (opera, opera) Game theory usually doesn’t have that much to say about which
equilibrium will get played when there are more than one
Some games will have more than one equilibrium
6, 3 0, 0
0, 0 3, 6
Baseball Game Opera
BaseballGame
Opera
Player 2’s Action
Pla
yer
1’s
Act
ion
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Growth model
(Story)
Circle player 1’sbest responses
Circle player 2’sbest responses
Two equilibria: (invest, invest)and (consume, consume) Some papers explain differences in growth across countries by
saying some are in “good” equilibrium and some are in “bad” one
Sometimes, there will be a “good” and a “bad” equilibrium
2, 2 0, 1
1, 0 1, 1
Invest Consume
Invest
Consume
Player 2’s Action
Pla
yer
1’s
Act
ion
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Scissors, Paper, Rock for $1 Look for Nash
Equilibria by circling best responses
No square with both payoffs circled
No equilibrium where each player plays a single action
In this class, we’ll focus on games with a pure-strategyNash equilibrium
Some games don’t have any equilibrium where players only play one action
0, 0 1, -1
-1, 1 0, 0
Scissors Paper
Scissors
Paper
Player 2’s Action
Pla
yer
1’s
Act
ion -1, 1
1, -1
Rock
1, -1 -1, 1Rock 0, 0
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We already saw one reason Tragedy of Commons – overuse of land is held in common
For another example, imagine two neighboring farmers
Each has two choices: farm his own land, or steal crops from his neighbor Stealing is less efficient than planting my own crops
Have to carry the crops from your land to mine Might drop some along the way Have to steal at night move slower
If I steal your crops, I avoid the effort of planting and watering
Why do we need property law in the first place?
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Suppose that planting and watering costs 5, the crops either farmer could grow are worth 15, and stealing costs 3
With no legal system,the game has the following payoffs:
We look for equilibrium
Like Prisoner’s Dilemma both farmers stealing is the only equilibrium but that outcome is Pareto-dominated by both farmers farming
Why do we need property law in the first place?
10, 10 -5, 12
12, -5 0, 0
Farm Steal
Farm
Steal
Player 2
Pla
yer
1
34
Suppose there were lots of farmers facing this same problem
They come up with an idea: Institute some property rights And some type of government that would punish people who steal
Setting up the system would cost something Suppose it imposes a cost c on everyone who plays by the rules
So how do we fix the problem?
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So how do we fix the problem?
10 – c, 10 – c -5 – c, 12 – P
12 – P, -5 – c -P, -P
Farm Steal
Farm
Steal
Player 2
Pla
yer
110, 10 -5, 12
12, -5 0, 0
Farm Steal
Farm
Steal
Player 2
Pla
yer
1
MODIFIED GAMEORIGINAL GAME
If P is big, and c is not too big, then 12 – P < 10 – c In that case, (Farm, Farm) is an equilibrium
Payoffs are (10 – c, 10 – c), instead of (0, 0) from before
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Anarchy is inefficient I spend time and effort stealing from you You spend time and effort defending your property from thieves Instead of doing productive work
Establishing property rights, and a legal process for when they’re violated, is one way around the problem
So the idea here…
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Cooter and Ulen: property is
“A bundle of legal rights over resources that the owner is free to exercise and whose exercise is protected from interference by others”
Property rights are not absolute Appendix to ch. 4 discusses different conceptions of property rights
Any system has to answer four fundamental questions: What things can be privately owned? What can (and can’t) an owner do with his property? How are property rights established? What remedies are given when property rights are violated?
Overview of Property Law
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BUT…
Answers to many of these seem obvious
source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21088150/