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Japanese
Earthquake
by
Walter Block
Recently
by Walter Block: May
a Libertarian Take Money From the Government?
The usual Keynesian
suspects have come out from under the rocks of economic illiteracy
which they inhabit, to claim that the Japanese earthquake of 2011
will actually help the economy of that country. See here
and here
(I owe these examples to David Kramer and Manuel Lora). We need
not spend too much time refuting this broken window fallacy yet
again. Bastiat and Hazlitt have already done so. Perhaps it will
suffice to point out that these advocates of the benefits of destruction
are guilty of a performative contradiction. If it is so advantageous
for a city to be destroyed by a tsunami, why don’t these Krugmanites
obliterate their own properties? That is, they could enrich not
only themselves, but society as a whole, by taking the wrecking
ball to their homes, yachts, automobiles, factories, fancy restaurants,
night clubs. Yet, we never see any such thing happening. If it is
argued that this can only be done on a massive, not an individual
scale, then we would expect entire communities, such as the Peoples’
Republics of Santa Monica, Ann Arbor, San Francisco, Cambridge Mass,
the upper west side of New York City, etc., wherever "progressives"
congregate, to engage in such activities. We await with baited breath
these occurrences. The fact that the Keynesians continue to drive
around in their cars, inhabit their homes ought to put paid to this
malicious and erroneous theory. And this would indeed likely occur,
if we did not live in a world where the mainstream media still hold
sway.
Another error
takes this form: All thanks to the Japanese government. It had the
wisdom and foresight to mandate strict building codes, which safeguarded
its people. Japanese skyscrapers were built so as to bend, not snap,
in the wind. All of their edifices withstood the challenges of the
earthquake to a far greater degree than would otherwise have been
the case, due to these benevolent statist regulations. For example,
states a USA Today editorial
of 3/14/11 entitled "Japanese earthquake sends sobering message
for USA" (the message: we have to strengthen, and attain greater
compliance with our own building codes): "If any country understands
this interplay of earthquakes, waves and buildings it is Japan,
which has developed stringent building codes…." According to
this fallacious argument, the Haitian government fell down on the
job of inculcating such building codes. The latter country lost
a greater proportion of its population with a lower intensity earthquake
than the former, with a higher count (8.9) on the Richter scale
because it did not enact strict building codes.
Nothing could
be further from the truth. The reason the Japanese suffered relatively
fewer losses had little to do with statist real estate regulations.
Rather, they were able to build better because they were richer,
and "wealthier is healthier." And why, in turn, were the
Japanese more prosperous than the Haitians? This was at least in
large part due to the fact that the country in the Far East had
a far freer economy than the Caribbean nation. (The Fraser Institute
study of 2008 ranked Japan as the 27th most economically
free country out of 141 nations they surveyed, while Haiti took
96th place.) Economists all the way from the Salamancans
to Adam Smith to Mises to Hayek to Rothbard have demonstrated why
it should be the case that to be economically freer is to be more
affluent. Private property rights, free market prices, allow for
economic growth, rational calculation, proper allocation of resources
and spread of vital economic information. They provide incentives
for innovation. In contrast, central planning, socialism, government
regulation, the mixed economy, are recipes for economic stultification.
Mises, in his book Socialism,
has done more than anyone else to drive home this point.
Why should
wealthier be healthier? Because, in a word, the richer is an economy,
the more wherewithal it has with which to purchase all sorts of
things, safety among them, and, usually, preeminently so.
But are not
government building codes of help too, in this context? Are they
not at least sufficient, if not necessary? No. This may be seen
by assuming that Haiti had adopted the selfsame earthquake protection
building codes operational in Japan (or in the U.S.). What, then,
would have occurred in Haiti, had they engaged in this "progressive"
legislation? Nothing, that is what. Namely, if these regulations
were scrupulously adhered to, either no building would have occurred
at all, or very little, and the people would not have been sheltered
at all (or to an inadequate degree, leading to many more deaths.)
It is the same
old story. An economy, such as that of the US, or the UK, or Japan,
benefits from economic growth. As it does, regulations mandating
good things that would have occurred anyway are promulgated, in
order to falsely take credit for them, when they are due to the
greater wealth. For example, this occurred with child labor laws,
maximum hours legislation, regulations stipulating minimum numbers
of years of education, etc., and, in the present case, requirements
that dwellings be constructed more safely. These gains would have
been registered in any case; they are due, solely, to economic progress,
which takes place in spite of such bureaucratic regulations, not
because of them. The proof of the pudding? Suppose that the UK banned
child labor in the early 17th century. Would the kiddies
all been placed in nice schools? Not a bit of it. They would have,
instead, starved in droves, because the economy simply was not well
enough developed at that time so as to afford this luxury of universal
schooling.
One objection
to the foregoing is that people, even rich ones, are simply too
stupid to insist upon earthquake-protected buildings. If so, then
by what magic do they become smart enough to elect politicians who
will then turn around and force the populace to do what it refuses
to do in the first place? This premise, moreover, must be rejected
at the outset. Even ordinary folk are smart enough to purchase fire
insurance (if they have a mortgage, and there is even a vestige
of free enterprise, their bank will insist upon this). Why, not,
then, expect the average man to be willing to pay a bit more for
housing with built-in protection against earthquakes, vis-ŕ-vis
residences that do not boast of these benefits?
Private insurance,
moreover, would not cover geographical areas located in dangerous
areas subject to storms, flooding, or lying below sea level (e.g.,
New Orleans). Or, rather, would charge prices that fully reflect
these threats. Government "insurance" in sharp contrast,
typically bails out those foolish enough to again and again locate
in these areas, as if the phenomenon of moral hazard did not exist.
Thus, the state subsidizes irrational geographical location decision-making,
unlike private insurance that can be bankrupted if it erred in any
such manner.
March
21, 2011
Dr.
Block [send him mail] is a
professor of economics at Loyola University New Orleans, and a senior
fellow of the Ludwig von Mises Institute. He is the author of Defending
the Undefendable and Labor
Economics From A Free Market Perspective. His latest book
is The
Privatization of Roads and Highways.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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