Gasoline Rationing?
by
George Reisman
by George Reisman
A
noted economist, Prof. Martin Feldstein of Harvard University, has
written an article for the supposedly pro-free-enterprise Wall
Street Journal, in which he proposes a system of government
gasoline rationing as a means of improving the environment and promoting
national security. (The article, titled Tradeable
Gasoline Rights, appears in the June 5 issue, on p. A10.)
Surprisingly,
or perhaps not surprisingly, the word rationing does
not appear in Prof. Feldsteins article. Yet that is exactly
what he proposes.
Prof. Feldstein
would have the government issue what would essentially be ration
coupons to motorists, the total amount of which would equal its
chosen level of aggregate gasoline consumption. In purchasing gasoline,
it would be necessary for the purchaser to supply the necessary
coupons along with the money price of the gasoline.
The nature
of the process is perhaps somewhat obscured because of the electronic
form in which it would take place. Instead of physical ration coupons,
such as existed back in World War II, there would be government
issued ration debit cards that would incur an electronic
deduction with every gallon of gasoline purchased at the pump.
But what undoubtedly
is most responsible for leading Prof. Feldstein astray is his enchantment
with the idea of what he calls tradeable gasoline rights,
or TGRs. His use of this term is what permits him to bypass
and avoid the word rationing.
So let us be
clear. What Prof. Feldstein proposes is gasoline rationing with
a market in the ration coupons.
Some alleged
defenders of free markets are attracted to such schemes because
they would provide an important measure of flexibility in comparison
with government rationing pure and simple: namely, individuals could
obtain additional rations by buying additional coupons.
But the actuality
is that in the long run they are a much worse system. Straightforward
rationing at least has the virtue of being so bad and painful that
people want to get rid of it. But the kind of scheme that Prof.
Feldstein proposes would create a major new government entitlement
to millions of people, who would never be willing to give it up.
These would be all those individuals who found it preferable to
sell their gasoline ration coupons rather than use them. They would
derive a more or less significant amount of money from the sale
of their coupons and soon look upon the proceeds as a regular part
of their incomes. This group would have a vested interested in maintaining
the system forever.
Feldstein actually
approves of the creation of this new entitlement and regards it
as a powerful political selling point. He says, the TGR system
creates winners as well as losers and declares, in the final
paragraph of his article, [t]hat a majority of households
could benefit from the TGR system . . . is both an economic and
a political advantage. It would be an efficient way to reduce gasoline
consumption that Congress could actually pass.
Prof. Feldstein
does not realize that there must always be a net loss under any
such arrangement. If because the government arbitrarily restricts
the supply of gasoline, I must pay an extra $100 a month, say, to
someone else, in order to obtain his ration coupons, there is something
more involved than my loss of $100 and his gain of $100. There is
the loss of gasoline. The economy as a whole is poorer to the extent
of the governments forced reduction in its supply. In the
absence of the governments reduction, I would have had my
$100 and my gasoline. With its interference, not only does someone
else have my $100, but someone else is without gasoline.
Furthermore,
it never occurs to Prof. Feldstein that comparable benefits
to many or most households might be achieved in other ways as well,
such as by creating TER, TFR, and TCR systems i.e., tradeable
electricity rights, tradeable food rights, and
tradeable children rights and any and all manner
of other systems of tradeable rights, i.e., systems
in which the government adopts a scheme of rationing but allows
trade in the coupons. It should not be difficult to see that before
long, however the money might be shuffled around, the net effect
would be that virtually everyone would have less, for the simple
reason that there was less of more and more things.
If one is serious
about improving the environment and promoting national security,
there is a simple rational solution. And that is to allow
economic freedom in energy production.
Opening up
the North Slope of Alaska, the whole state of Alaska, indeed, the
whole territory of the United States, including the continental
shelf, to oil and gas exploration and production, abolishing the
restrictions on the strip mining of coal, and allowing the construction
of new atomic power plants, would sharply increase the supply of
petroleum while reducing the demand for it. (This last would occur
because of the greater availability and lower price of the alternatives
afforded by natural gas, coal, and atomic power.)
The connection
to national security should be obvious. Namely, the resulting dramatically
lower price of oil would cause a corresponding dramatic reduction
in the oil revenues of the Arab governments that finance terrorism.
The money available to finance terrorism would thus be radically
reduced.
The improvement
in the environment that would result is obscured by the fact that
people have lost sight of what the environment means. It is not
nature in and of itself, apart from its connection to human life
and well-being. Rather, it is the surroundings of man, his
external material world, deriving its value from its contribution
to his life and well-being. When the chemical elements that constitute
the petroleum deposits of the North Slope of Alaska, or anywhere
else, are removed from their original location, and appropriately
broken down and combined with other chemical elements, brought from
elsewhere, and then brought to human beings throughout the United
States and around the world in the form of gasoline, the relationship
between those chemical elements and human life and well-being is
improved. In the ground they did nothing to serve mans life.
As gasoline, they allow human beings to move their persons and goods
quickly and easily from one location of their choice to another.
Indeed, judged
from the perspective of physics and chemistry, all of production
and economic activity has as its essential purpose the improvement
of mans environment. For it consists precisely of the
systematic change in the location and combination of the chemical
elements in ways that make them stand in a more useful relationship
to mans life and well-being. It is the adaptation of mans
environment to man, hence, its improvement.
This last represents
such a radically different perspective on the environment than has
become prevalent in the last few decades that most readers will
require much more discussion before being convinced of it, or even
being willing to consider it, than I can possibly provide in the
space of this brief article. So I must close by referring to my
extensive discussions of the subject in Chapter 3 of my book Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics.
The
adoption of a policy of economic freedom for energy production depends
on confronting and overcoming the doctrine of natures intrinsic
value and its role in the environmental movement. That is what this
chapter of my book provides. It serves to cut the ground from beneath
all proposals, whether Feldsteins or others, that seek
to address alleged environmental problems by means of the violation
of economic freedom.
June
9, 2006
George
Reisman [send him mail]
is Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics at Pepperdine
University's Graziadio School of Business & Management in Los Angeles,
and is the author of Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2006 George Reisman
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