Naked Economics: Undressing the Dismal Science pdfdrive com


Our system uses prices to allocate scarce resources



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Naked Economics Undressing the Dismal Science ( PDFDrive )

Our system uses prices to allocate scarce resources. Since there is a finite
amount of everything worth having, the most basic function of any economic
system is to decide who gets what. Who gets tickets to the Super Bowl? The
people who are willing to pay the most. Who had the best seats for the Supreme
Soviet Bowl in the old USSR (assuming some such event existed)? The
individuals chosen by the Communist Party. Prices had nothing to do with it. If a
Moscow butcher received a new shipment of pork, he slapped on the official
state price for pork. And if that price was low enough that he had more
customers than pork chops, he did not raise the price to earn some extra cash. He
merely sold the chops to the first people in line. Those at the end of the line were
out of luck. Capitalism and communism both ration goods. We do it with prices;
the Soviets did it by waiting in line. (Of course, the communists had many black
markets; it is quite likely that the butcher sold extra pork chops illegally out the
back door of his shop.)
Because we use price to allocate goods, most markets are self-correcting.
Periodically the oil ministers from the OPEC nations will meet in an exotic
locale and agree to limit the global production of oil. Several things happen
shortly thereafter: (1) Oil and gas prices start to go up; and (2) politicians begin
falling all over themselves with ideas, mostly bad, for intervening in the oil
market. But high prices are like a fever; they are both a symptom and a potential
cure. While politicians are puffing away on the House floor, some other crucial
things start to happen. We drive less. We get one heating bill and decide to
insulate the attic. We go to the Ford showroom and walk past the Expeditions to
the Escorts.
When gas prices approached $4 a gallon in 2008, the rapid response of
American consumers surprised even economists. Americans began buying
smaller cars (SUV sales plunged while subcompact sales rose). We drove fewer


total miles (the first monthly drop in 30 years). We climbed on public buses and
trains, often for the first time; transit ridership was higher in 2008 than at any
time since the creation of the interstate highway system five decades earlier.
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Not all such behavioral changes were healthy. Many consumers switched
from cars to motorcycles, which are more fuel efficient but also more dangerous.
After falling steadily for years, the number of U.S. motorcycle deaths began to
rise in the mid-1990s, just as gas prices began to climb. A study in the American
Journal of Public Health estimated that every $1 increase in the price of gasoline
is associated with an additional 1,500 motorcycle deaths annually.
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High oil prices cause things to start happening on the supply side, too. Oil
producers outside of OPEC start pumping more oil to take advantage of the high
price; indeed, the OPEC countries usually begin cheating on their own
production quotas. Domestic oil companies begin pumping oil from wells that
were not economical when the price of petroleum was low. Meanwhile, a lot of
very smart people begin working more seriously on finding and commercializing
alternative sources of energy. The price of oil and gasoline begins to drift down
as supply rises and demand falls.

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