UPDATE BELOW
My piece on Richard Thaler appeared in the Wall Street Journal, electronic edition Monday evening and print edition on Tuesday. The Journal titled it “This Year’s Nobel Economist Makes Sense of Irrationality.”
This one took way less time to research because I’ve followed his work for decades–we were young assistant professors together at the University of Rochester in the mid-1970s–and have written about it over the last 9 years. I don’t always agree with him but I think he showed a lot of courage in pursuing his passion when economists around him at the U. of R. were pretty hostile. I wasn’t hostile, just skeptical. I’m less skeptical now about his insights.
Where we part company is that he hasn’t taken advantage of the low-hanging fruit to the extent he can: applying his model of humans to government officials.
Here are the last two paragraphs of my article:
In Mr. Thaler’s influential 2008 book “Nudge,” written with Harvard law professor Cass Sunstein, he advocated “libertarian paternalism”–having government set default rules but allowing people to opt out at low cost. One example is making helmets mandatory for motorcyclists. The libertarian twist? Messrs. Thaler and Sunstein tout writer John Tierney’s idea to let daredevils opt out by taking an extra driving course and showing proof of health insurance.
Mr. Thaler has yet to apply in a serious way his theory of irrationality to government officials. Their bad decisions are even worse because citizens bear most of the costs. It would be great if Mr. Thaler explored this area more. Someone should nudge him.
By the way, I thought co-blogger Scott Sumner’s criticism earlier today was brilliant. Specifically, Scott wrote:
I had thought that the point of behavioral finance was to try to identify areas where the publics’ intuition is in some sense “wrong” and design public policies to nudge them in the right direction. In that case, shouldn’t we be encouraging price gouging, not discouraging it? Especially with public policy. Perhaps President Trump could “name and shame” companies that run out of essential supplies because of an unwillingness to price gouging. (Yes, not likely, I’m just trying to show the logical implications of behavioral economics.)
UPDATE
My manners have actually improved with age, but last night, maybe because I was tired after getting up at 2 a.m. PDT earlier that day, I displayed zero manners. I should have thanked Alex Tabarrok. In recent years, he has been willing to take a quick look at the draft of my WSJ piece and give me comments, with a turnaround of about half an hour. He did that yet again this year. I used two of his four critical comments.
Also, I should thank my lovely wife, Rena Henderson. She’s a professional editor and she also turned it around within half an hour. She made one major suggestion that I didn’t take. So that’s my responsibility.
READER COMMENTS
Bill Conerly
Oct 10 2017 at 12:10pm
David, great article, and you’ve done a great job on past articles.
I’m curious about your prep for the assignment. I assume you know the work of some Nobels much better than you know about others. Do you learn more about the likely candidates in the weeks before the announcement, or just wing it when the day comes?
David R Henderson
Oct 10 2017 at 12:25pm
@Bill Conerly,
David, great article, and you’ve done a great job on past articles.
Thanks, Bill.
I’m curious about your prep for the assignment. I assume you know the work of some Nobels much better than you know about others.
Yes. In this case, the research was a piece of cake. I know Dick’s work so well, and have written about it a few times, that the main research I did was to read the two items the Nobel committee published, quickly persuading myself that there wasn’t much I had missed. The research is much harder usually and so I’ve leaned more and more on two sources in the last 8 or 9 years: the above-mentioned Nobel committee’s write-ups and the posts by Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok on Marginal Revolution.
Do you learn more about the likely candidates in the weeks before the announcement, or just wing it when the day comes?
I gave up on that because it never worked.
15 years ago, I would narrow the candidates down to 3 or 4 and, days in advance, go to the school library and bring back 2 or 3 books by each of the 4, assuming I didn’t already have them. It was a waste of effort. The committee NEVER chose any of the ones I predicted. So writing in the late 1990s and early 2000s was harder than now. The Nobel committee didn’t have the site it has now, Marginal Revolution didn’t exist, and I didn’t have time to go to the school library.
Much easier now.
Philo
Oct 12 2017 at 4:20pm
If she almost made the suggestion, then you almost incurred responsibility for not taking it!
David R Henderson
Oct 12 2017 at 6:18pm
@Philo,
Oops. Good catch.
Comments are closed.