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Votes
of Idiots
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
H.L Mencken
once described democracy as simply a battle of charlatans
for the votes of idiots. Writing in 1937 for the Baltimore
Evening Sun, Mencken theorized that by now the incurable
idiots may conceivably constitute an absolute majority of the population.
Alas, another election season is upon us to prove his prophetic
point.
Of course,
this is about the time democracy fans will throw out the old Churchill
saw: It has been said that democracy is the worst form of
government except all the others that have been tried. But
few realize that Churchill quickly added: The best argument
against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average
voter.
For those true
believers who need a couple hundred pages of arguments that reinforce
the Sage of Baltimores and the Prime Ministers view,
George Mason University associate economics professor Bryan Caplan
has obliged with The
Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies.
No one will
accuse Caplan of being as clever a writer as Mencken but
then nobody is. And despite leaning in the direction of free markets
ideologically, the author takes great pains to draw from economists
across the political spectrum as well as taking an unwarranted swipe
at what he calls market fundamentalists, or the followers
of Ludwig von Mises and Murray Rothbard as being way outside
the economics mainstream (Caplans emphasis).
A few pages
later, the professor makes fun of William Greiders childhood
faith in democracy, writing that if an economist waxed
poetic about his childhood faith in the free market, he would be
tagged a market fundamentalist, and his credibility would plummet.
But, near the books end, Caplan writes, even economists,
widely charged with market fundamentalism, should be more pro-market
than they already are.
But he doesnt
believe they should completely be pro-market? One wonders where
Caplan draws the line, and how he draws it. Its also amazing
that the book has not a single mention of Hans-Hermann Hoppes
Democracy:
The God That Failed, a book of genuine importance
according to Thomas Woods who describes the book as a stimulating
and intellectually exciting interdisciplinary analysis of the present
situation of Western civilization.
Despite
his market fundamentalist digression and omissions, the author makes
some valuable insights in The Myth of the Rational Voter,
and has sprinkled the book with more than a few juicy quotes, such
as: The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure
and the intelligent are full of doubt, from Bertrand Russell.
The fact is
people hold irrational biases. And they vote these biases because
it doesnt cost them anything. So while a voter will care most
about the price and the quality of a good or service in the marketplace
because they are directly paying that cost, in the voting booth,
the voter/consumer can vote his or her anti-foreign, make-work or
pessimistic biases for nothing. Unfortunately, all of these biased
votes have severe negative ramifications for the economy.
The odds against
affecting any single election with ones votes are massive;
thus the votes, no matter how irrational, dont directly cost
the voter anything. Since delusional political beliefs are
free, Caplan explains, the voter consumes until he reaches
his saturation point, believing whatever makes him feel
best. Economists often make the point that being a bigot in
the marketplace costs money, but in the voting booth the cost vanishes
because a single vote against Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton because
he is black or she is a woman will not decide the election.
Caplan also
addresses Hollywoods left-leaning millionaires. Arguably,
voting for high-taxing democrats will cost Susan Sarandon and Tim
Robbins more money in taxes than the average Joe or Jane. But their
votes wont swing an election, and thus they will pay
a few expectational pennies to enhance their self-image.
On
the supply side, the author goes to the man who wrote the book on
politics Machiavelli. Caplan explains that when the cost
of systematic error is high, politicians make shrewd and clear-eyed
decisions. Thus, elected officials appeal to voter biases and dont
necessarily care how policies work because voters dont
care.
Voters dont
want politicians with economics training; they want lawyers telling
them what they want to hear. Thus, 70 percent of presidents and
half the House and Senate have been lawyers.
To fix all
of this, Caplan naïvely thinks economics professors can correct
human biases in economics class, thus making the public better voters.
I side with Mencken: The voters are incurable.
July
8, 2008
Doug
French [send him mail]
is associate editor for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2008 Doug French
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