The Candy
Economy
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
Dale
Steinreich once
wrote that Halloween has a "socialist tenor" because "menacing
figures arrive at your door uninvited, demand your property, and
threaten to perform an unspecified 'trick' if you don't fork over.
That's the way the government works in a nutshell."
And
yet, for overall kid excitement, Halloween seems to surpass Christmas,
at least from what I can observe. The kids spend months preparing
their costumes, and thrill to ever detail of the ceremony: pumpkins,
scary things, and of course candy. For the children, too, there
is the attractive fact that parents are not all that happy about
Halloween with its goblins, gore, and gluttony.
But,
a deeper lesson to be drawn is that there is also an economic dimension
to Halloween that goes far beyond simply demanding property with
menaces, however light-hearted.
Unlike
at Christmas, where kids must only be good little citizens all year
in order to be showered with gifts from their beneficent Guardians,
at Halloween, kids must actually work in real time for their candy.
Because
there is no taboo in place about trading one's proceeds, the kids
also have a chance to participate in genuine market experiences.
For
starters, they work hard on their costumes, under the very real
expectation that those who hand out candy tend to be more generous
to those with better costumes. Nor is the labor done there, for
it clearly continues with the long walk around the neighborhood,
with the prospect that each house visited will yield a gain of only
one or two candies, at most.
This
in itself forms an interesting feature of the ritual, since all
of these same kids have lots of candy back at home that is being
given out to other kids even as they tramp through the cold October
evening. What could be the point of seeking out abroad what you
already have at home?
There
are two reasons: first, though the kids may not consciously recognize
it, they surely appreciate the candy more if it represents something
they have to go seek out for themselves, and second, by mixing their
labor with the process of candy acquisition, they have a greater
sense that the candy partakes of qualities of duly earned, private
property.
No
child really believes that the bowls of candy at home really belong
to him or her, but, by contrast, the candy that the child collects
from the neighborhood is said to be his or hers exclusively, even
if mom or dad still oversees the overall patterns of distribution.
The
candy you collect is yours, a product of your own efforts, and nothing
can quite replace that feeling of merited ownership. And yet, the
real thrill is far from over.
What
children truly adore about Halloween is what takes place after the
candy has been brought back to home base: the trading. Here is where
the excitement begins.
No
child can fully control what he or she is given, so it is up to
that child to make exchanges with others in order to obtain what
he or she really wants, and to do so in a strategic manner so that
overall wealth is enhanced.
This
process of trading began at our house at 8pm and lasted for about
30 minutes, at which point, the children concluded that they had
come as close as was possible to what they wanted most and so, that
there was no more trading left to do.
During
the 30 minutes of active haggling, nine kids sat around the dining
room table and participated in a hectic, yet orderly if complex interchange,
bearing a good deal of resemblance to a Wall Street trading floor.
Some
traders shot up and shouted prices, deals, proposals, results, changes
in preferences, new resource discoveries. Other traders remained
quiet and moved with great subtly and surprise. The more strategic
the plan, the more impressed the other kids were by it.
It
was fascinating to watch as the trading began slowly and as the
first barter relationships began to form.
One
for one; two for one; three packages of Nerds for one popcorn ball;
two Snickers for one candy necklace; a Blowpop for two pieces of
caramel; and so on.
All
children brought to the table their own subjective sense of what
was valuable a sense which was strongly influenced by the corresponding
opinions of the other players, but one which also added to it a
degree of prediction concerning just how the subjective values of
others would stack up.
It
wasn't long before barter relationships, even those involving 3
or 4 simultaneous transactions, did not suffice.
What
those around the table needed was some means to achieve indirect
exchange. They needed to hit upon a good which everyone would desire
to posses because of its more certain, onward marketability among
all the other kids.
This
entity did not need to be highly valued from the outset by everyone
present. What the kids only needed to notice was that there was
something which a sufficient number of their group tended to want
more than any other competing candy on offer.
It
was a short step from there to the dawning of a realization would
occur to one or two kids. These would then try to acquire that particular
candy, not to consume it themselves, but to use it to trade it for
whatever other candy they really wanted to enjoy.
As
more and more of the participants copied them, this one candy would
come to play a role in more and more indirect exchanges. Child A
would accept it from Child B for a less desired kind of candy and
would instantly swap it again with Child C who happened to have
the goodie he or she really preferred, but who hadn’t wanted any
of A’s originally proffered treats.
This
way, this one candy would come to posses a quality none of the others
had. It would come to be money.
In
general, money, whatever specific form it takes, tends to have a
high value per unit of weight and yet it should be spilt into units
small enough to cope with any scale of exchange. It should ideally
have a fixed supply. Above all, it must be the one thing most readily
accepted in settlement of a trade because the acceptor knows it
is something which can, with the highest available degree of certainty,
be used to facilitate additional future trades.
There
is no way to know ahead of time what will fulfill this role; only
the market process itself will reveal make this choice.
In
our house, the popcorn ball would not work since there were only
four of them and these were not divisible into smaller units. The
Twizlers did not pass the test because only one child had any knowledge
of what they tasted like and hence no one else had any concept of
their value.
Though
this problem might seem an intractable one, as it happened, it only
took a few minutes for everyone to discover what would become money
for the evening: a micro-size Three Musketeers bar.
Before
people realized the true measure of its usefulness, a 3M would trade
for as little as a Smarty package. But, then, it began to rise in
value selling for the Smarty and a Tootsie Roll.
Once
it became clear that 3M was the commodity of the most use in exchange,
it didn't matter whether you actually liked it or not. You were
happy to trade the candies you didn’t much care for in order to
obtain a 3M simply because this could then be traded again for something
which really did make your mouth water.
Once
the 3M became money, its own value was seen to rise as a consequence.
What was occurring was that this extra property of "tradability"
was being added to the underlying demand for it as a consumption
item.
Indeed,
by the end of the session, this value reached such a height that
it became an instant legend as, at its peak, one solitary 3Mcase
changed hands for no less than three Tootsie Rolls and a tootsie
Pop!
Once
this money was settled upon, it became much easier to price such
candies as Reese's and KitKats, which had previously had an illiquid
and uncertain market.
Now
they began to sell for one-half and one-quarter of a 3M, despite
the fact that they had started out with much the same intrinsic
value as a snack item. From there on, their prices hovered within
a narrow trading range, roughly comparable to that of a small Tootsie
Roll, while Snickers did slightly better than all of them.
Extreme
scarcity led to very high prices anything up to four 3Ms in the
case of JollyRancher hard candy. Skittles, too, were highly prized
and sold for as many five 3Ms. Reese's "Inside Out" sold at a premium
over the plain variety.
However,
showing that scarcity is not just a numerical concept, the parents
of all these kids had long discouraged gum chewing, so despite the
gum’s similar rarity, no-one wanted it.
In
fact, the price quickly fell to zero where it was eventually given
away free to the one child who was permitted to chew it.
Thankfully
for the future of civilization, even that child soon lost interest
in it!
Interestingly,
the advent of money also encouraged the kids to think beyond the
immediate trading round. Instead, they began to acquire a surplus,
to be saved for successive rounds where it was hoped better terms
might be on offer.
The
kids soon adopted different strategies.
Some
started saving ("hoarding") 3Ms to trade them in at the end of the
trading session, speculating that the goods price of 3M would continually
rise.
Others
would acquire this valuable thing solely in order to consume it
(this money, after all, originated as a consumable good and so it
remained).
But
mostly and this was the satisfying part for those anxious to observe
the entrepreneurial discovery of money kids would acquire 3Ms solely
to facilitate other exchanges.
Outside
observers of a Misesian bent imagined the following: let's say someone
arrived at the scene and threw down 100 3Ms on the table. All kids
know precisely what would happen. The goods-price of 3Ms would tumble.
Each one would purchase far less than it had before.
The
"inflation" might be so extreme that 3Ms might even cease to be
money—the good everyone wants to acquire in order to acquire other
goods—and some other candy might take its place instead.
Imagine
the chaos that would ensue, as the kids came loudly to bewail their
recent exchanges of worthwhile candy for this now devalued commodity.
Imagine
the loss of innocence as they saw honest bargains frustrated and
vowed to be more cautious of extending their trust upon the market.
Imagine
the general loss as trading once more became scattered and choices
were again restricted as the idea of money fell into disrepute.
But,
fortunately, no Halloween bogeyman from the Federal Reserve Candy
Factory came to ruin their game. So the kids could remain free to
trust in the soundness of their candy unit.
At
last, the kids became exhausted by this frenzy and the market closed not
because someone sounded a bell, but simply because, in general,
everyone came to see that each was as satisfied as they were likely
to be with what they had.
This
was the Misesian "plain state of rest."
In
Mises's words: "people keep on exchanging on the market until no
further exchange is possible because no party expects any further
improvement of its own conditions from a new act of exchange. The
potential buyers consider the prices asked by the potential sellers
unsatisfactory, and vice versa. No more transactions take place."
Once
the trading had ended, the status of the 3Ms promptly reverted to
that of a purely consumable item, since the end of the trading game
signaled the loss of their monetary properties, leaving them just
a plain candy, much like any other.
Some
kids left with a far lesser quantity of candy than when they first
arrived, but that did not prevent them feeling far wealthier because
now what they owned was a much closer approximation to their ideal
mix.
As
for the other kids, well, they were astounded to discover that their
own bags were far heavier than before, that they too felt wealthier and
that nobody was complaining to mom about the fact!
Indeed,
all children left the table with smiles and happiness, each feeling
as if he or she had gotten a great deal after all.
What
a stunning achievement!
After
all, the available physical resources were unchanged. Nor had anyone
planned or policed the trading. It had all happened spontaneously.
One
was left wondering at the true magic of that Halloween namely,
at the transforming effect of something as simple as the opportunity
for free exchange, for the chance to derive mutual benefit from
the difference in tastes between individuals.
In
this, at least, Halloween was all about treats, and, despite what
the opponents of the exchange economy will tell you, there was no
trick about it anywhere you looked.
(Thanks
to Sean Corrigan for comments!)
November
2, 2004
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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