Obama on Auto-Defrosting Refrigerators
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
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I'm the guy
who just last week managed to find a plumber who would increase
the water pressure in my entire house, defying government controls
and thereby causing all appliances to work better. It's not surprising
that this was necessary. Government regulations have made a mess
of our daily lives. Whether it is banning effective products or
mandating inferior functionality in our appliances and fixtures,
government's role here is indisputably to degrade our quality of
life.
So I was stunned
to hear President Obama claim exactly the opposite in a speech
to the US Chamber of Commerce. He ridiculed those who predicted
disaster from government regulations as far back as 1848. "It
didn't happen," he said. "None of these things came to
pass." Then he went further to say that government regulations
"enhanced" industry and "made our lives better."
Regulations "often spark competition and innovation."
What immediately
came to mind is a picture of a race in which some overlord is clamping
shackles on the runner's feet. No, that does not stop the race.
The runners develop innovative ways to keep going. Nor does competition
stop; it might even become more intense as runners develop new skills
they would otherwise not need. All that's true, and yet we wouldn't
look to this race as the one that is going to set new speed records.
Everyone would be better off without shackles.
But Obama's
claim really goes further than saying that somehow industry overcame
the costs of regulation. He suggested that we are actually better
off than we would otherwise be due to regulations. And he gave
the specific example of automatically defrosting freezers. He really
did. Here is the statement:
The government
set modest targets a couple decades ago to start increasing efficiency
over time. They were well thought through; they weren't radical.
Companies competed to hit these markers. And they hit them every
time, and then exceeded them. And as a result, a typical fridge
now costs half as much and uses a quarter of the energy that it
once did and you don't have to defrost, chipping at that
stuff and then putting the warm water inside the freezer and all
that stuff. It saves families and businesses billions of dollars.
Well, this
is a precise claim, and it can be checked out. Thanks to many commentators
on the Mises Blog and LvMI's
Facebook page, who did some extensive sleuthing, here is what
we found.
In 1928, the
US Patent Office issued a
patent for "defrosting of the cooling element or unit of
a refrigerating system." Still, invention is one thing and
marketing and production is another. It took a very long time for
these to be seen in real life. More and more patents were issued
all throughout the 1920s and 1930s. Most likely, the innovations
occurred before this time and would have sped more quickly into
the consumer market without the patents, but regardless, an article
in Chain Store Age in 1947 writes as follows:
"Auto
Defrost," a recently developed electronic circuit for automatically
controlling water defrosting of refrigeration coils has been announced
by the Bush Mfg. Co., Hartford [founded 1907], Conn. Advantages
claimed for this device are its low price, its ease of installation
on existing water defrost systems, and it works independently
from the refrigeration system.
Recall that
Obama spoke of how the relevant regulations came about "a couple
of decades ago." Well, his timing is off by some 63 years!
What's more, these items were already reaching a retail market by
1948.
A March 13,
1948, edition of the Billboard posted a story datelined from
Oakland, California:
Frosted
Food O'Mat, Inc., of this city is readying a new ice cream vending
machine, designed for grocery stores, super markets, and department
stores. Dispenser will be offered both as a coin-operated and
a manual device. The vendor will hold up to six flavors, and its
makers claim that it has an automatic defroster.
By 1951, these
items were already being pushed in homes. An advertisement in Popular
Science reads as follows:
Von Schrader
Mfg., Co: Amazing Attachment MAKES OLD REFRIGERATORS INTO MODERN
Automatic Defrosters! Thirty Million Prospects. Sell without "selling
pressure" on sensational Free Trial Plan. Just plug it in
and leave it. Frees women from drudgery and mess of defrosting.
Saves electricity. Keeps food longer, better. Gives longer life
to refrigerator
Women buying by the thousands!

By 1958, it
seems like the great innovation was already old news. An advertisement
in Life Magazine from 1958, this time from Westinghouse,
references a "frost-free, Auto-Defrost Refrigerator" as
if it was nearly a standard feature. The main pitch here is that
the refrigerator has "cold injector" that chills food
faster. It is also styled in the "Shape of Tomorrow."
Now, this is
interesting to me since I can remember problems with freezers in
my own lifetime, so it is not automatically crazy to believe that
something happened in the regulatory environment of the early 1970s
that would have prompted the universalization of frost-free freezers.
During this period there began a government push for energy efficiency,
and makers were required by government to meet certain targets,
just as the president says.
But there is
a serious problem. An automatic defroster increases, not decreases,
the overall energy use of refrigerators and freezers. As this
government report said in 1998: "Refrigerators with automatic
defrost have higher occupant consumption (on a label-normalized
basis) per unit of occupant activity than refrigerators with manual
defrost."
In other words,
the more straightforward way to meet regulations would have been
to take defrosting devices out, not put them in! The devices therefore
exist not because of standards but in spite of them.
All evidence
suggests that the truth is precisely the opposite of what Obama
claimed. Frost-free freezers came about in the normal market way.
A company found a way to package it as a luxury good available in
some markets. Another company saw the advance and emulated it, offering
it to still other markets (though the process was likely slowed
by the government regulation called the patent). Other companies
saw the potential for solving a monstrous household problem and
began making them more cheaply and more efficiently, as the target
market gradually went from luxury to mainstream. Over time, the
improved product was ubiquitous.
This is pretty
much the story of every innovation in the history of the world.
Whether it is the spinning wheel or the smart phone, private companies
innovate in order to outdo their competitors in serving the consumer.
They all have reason to become ever more excellent in the service
of others. They learn from each other and improve on what exists
(in the absence of patents).
It is hard
to imagine the alternative scenario that inhabits Obama's mind.
It goes something like this: Private enterprise comes up with a
technology that it can fob off on customers and people like it fine
but for some maddening problem. Private enterprise doesn't care.
So long as the profits are there, the problems persist. No one in
the private sector has reason to change anything. Stasis prevails.
Government
regulators, who are constantly scouring around consumer markets
to find ways to innovate and improve products, notice the problem
and issue some mandate. After some careful deliberation, they march
into manufacturing plants with guns:
Listen
up: our citizens have a problem with their freezers. They are
building up ice. We want you to find a way, some way, to fix this
problem. You have until next winter to figure it out. If you do
not, you are dead meat.
Industry complies
under the gun, scrambling to improve products only because government
bureaucrats demand it. Under government edict, enterprise makes
the thing, and problems go away. This process is repeated for thing
after thing and we are gradually made better off, thanks to the
central planners and wise public servants who know better than everyone
else. Under this model, the entire developing world might be improved
in a matter of months!
This is of
course sheer fantasy. So is the claim of Obama that we should be
grateful to regulators for all the blessings that flow to us. How
many iPhone apps have bureaucrats invented? Will the president's
next claim be that bureaucrats gave us the Wii?
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
February
11, 2011
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
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