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Interests,
Incentives and Institutions
By
Joseph Stiglitz
An economists
experience of government failure
As a long-time student
of the public sector, I welcomed the opportunity to come to
Washington as a member of the Council of Economic Advi-sers
and later to become the Chairman of the Council, partly because
it gave me an opportunity to study at first hand this immensely
important part of our economy and society and to test my ideas
against the reality of government in action.
To be sure, I came
also as an activist, if not with a fully articulated agenda,
at least with a view about what it was that government should,
and should not be doing. My reference point was the fundamental
theorems of welfare economics which, as some describe them,
proved that the market left to itself would produce efficient
allocations. Many saw in these theorems the vindication of
Adam Smiths faith in the invisible hand leading the
self-interested decisions of each person to maximise the well-being
of the nation as a whole. Today, many of us look at the fundamental
theorem not as a description of the world, but as an explication
of the conditions under which a market equilibrium will be
Pareto efficient.
These conditions are
quite strong. The importance of some of the more explicit
assumptions like the lack of externalities and the
completeness of markets has long been known. In the
last two decades, we have explored much more seriously the
consequences of the informational assumptions implicit in
the belief that markets are efficient. In particular, it has
been shown that in the presence of imperfect information or
incomplete markets, the economy will not be Pareto efficient;
in other words, there will always be some intervention by
which the government can make everyone better off (Greenwald
and Stiglitz, 1986).
Some of my friends
who had spent a spell in Washington suggested that I would
return a bit wiser for the experience, a bit more jaundiced
about the role of government. That seems a shared experience:
a better understanding of government failures to counterbalance
the market failures that have occupied so much of my thinking
as a professional economist.
In this article I
want to share with you some of my thoughts about the possibilities
and limitations of government. These thoughts are focused
around a simple question: Why is it so difficult to implement
even Pareto improvements?
Four reasons why
potential Pareto improvements fail
The list of failures
is a long one ranging from the more obvious ones in
trade and agriculture policy to those in social, health, and
environmental policy. In reality, many of the policies I describe
are near-Pareto improvements, which bring diffuse benefits
to a large group but at a well-defined cost for a narrowly
defined group. In some of these cases, feasible compensation
was proposed to make it a strict Pareto improvement; in other
cases, it was not.
The traditional answer
to these questions is Mancur Olsons Logic of Collective
Action (1971) which argued that it is hard to overcome
the free rider problem in organising a large group to defend
itself against a concentrated interest. This answer, however,
is incomplete because it does not explain why policies that
harm no one or involve compensation fail to be adopted. My
four hypotheses, in attempting to understand the unique nature
of governments powers and limitations, address this
issue.
1. The inability
of government to make commitments
Policy-making is a
dynamic process, with todays decisions shaping options
and coalitions in the future. In the naive view, a Pareto
improvement is a one-shot, static policy change. In reality,
it is part of a sequence of policies, and although a reform
may be favorable to all groups in earlier stages of that process,
it may undermine one or a few groups interests in later
stages. These disadvantaged groups, of course, are often far--sighted
enough to anticipate that in the long run they will be worse
off and thus act accordingly to oppose a seeming Pareto improvement.
Early on in the Clinton
administration, we put forward a National Action Plan to address
the problems of global warming. Among the myriad of actions
was a small one which represented a Pareto improvement: making
better use of the nations hydroelectric sites. The government
enterprises that currently run many public dams sell electricity
at far below the fair market price. The plants set prices
at or slightly above their cost of production but, because
hydro-electricity is much cheaper to produce than the more
common coal-generated electricity, the prices of the government
enterprises are lower than the marginal cost of electricity
produced by the entire generating system. In many cases, the
government enterprises lack the budget to finance additional
investment which would allow them to produce more electricity,
still at a price far below the cost of coal-generated power.
Our proposal addressed
these concerns by allowing private firms to bid for the right
to make these incremental investments and sell the additional
electricity at market prices. We designed the proposal to
be a Pareto improvement, ensuring that current recipients
of subsidised electricity would continue to receive
the amount of electricity previously produced at the existing
prices. The proposal was good for our budget (substantial
revenues were anticipated from selling the rights); it was
good for the economy (marginal cost pricing combined with
replacing expensive
electricity with cheap electricity); and it was good for the
environment (increasing the non-carbon-emitting production
of electricity). And since those who were already getting
electricity at subsidised prices from the government would
be able to continue doing so, no one would be hurt.
But of course, the
answer depended on what implicit property rights people
thought they already had and how this initiative might affect
existing property rights. If those who currently had access
to subsidised electricity thought that eventually they would
be able to get an increased supply at the subsidised price
by public investments in upgrades of existing sites, then
the change was, from their perspective, a change for the worse.
Probably more important
was the principle: once the principle of opportunity cost
pricing was accepted, once it became clear that, in effect,
those who were obtaining hydro--electricity at cost
but far below market price were in effect being
subsidised, it would be only a matter of time before the subsidy
was eliminated. Our modest initiative was viewed as the thin
edge of the wedge, a slippery slope down
which those who benefited from the current setup simply did
not want to risk going.
There were two problems.
The first was that the reform would make the effective subsidy
transparent and, in doing so, would undermine its political
viability. The second was that we could not make a credible
commitment that these subsidies would be continued. The two
problems are related: the increased transparency made it less
likely that the subsidies would be continued and put further
pressure on our inability to make commitments.
The problem of commitment
stems from the inherent nature of government itself. Government
is the primary enforcer of contracts. It uses its monopoly
on the legal use of force to create the possibility of private
commitment. There is no one, however, whose job it is to guard
the guardian. The government cannot make commitments because
it always has the possibility of changing its mind, and earlier
agreements cannot be enforced.
The inability to make
commitments causes another set of inefficiencies: the cost
of creating next-best credibility-enhancing mechanisms. While
those in government at one date cannot commit future governments,
they can affect the transaction costs of reversing the policies.1 Public choice scholars such as James Buchanan
(1975, 1991) have argued that the Constitution represents
a form of commitment, since it increases the costs of some
policy reversals such as those pertaining to civil rights.
My analysis suggests three extensions to these arguments:
first, there are a range of forms of actions which affect
transactions costs and thereby make change difficult; second,
these transaction costs, by making change difficult, can impede
what would appear to be Pareto improvements; and third, while
some transaction costs may have been desirable for those who
created them, changes in the world may make them obstacles
to efficient reform.
The issue of commitment
is especially important in establishing the compensations
which are frequently associated with Pareto-improving policies.
For example, in the United States an elaborate set of government
arrangements keeps the price of milk well above its competitive
market price. An attempt to expand this legally sanctioned
cartel--like arrangement was pushed forward under the euphemism
of self-help, but the cartel arrangements
lack of budgetary cost and nice-sounding title did not make
it any less objectionable. A cartel by any other name is just
as odious. The annual welfare cost is huge and would have
been even greater under the proposed expansion. Poor children
are hit especially hard the higher price of milk, for
instance, seriously erodes a substantial fraction of the value
of the government subsidy for Women, Infants, and Children
(WIC) and for school lunches.
It should be possible
to eliminate this cartel and still be able to compensate dairy
producers with direct non-distortionary payments that leave
them better off. Dairy farmers would be reluctant to agree
to this change because the direct compensation is more visible
than price fixing, and thus more vulnerable to political pressure
for cuts later on. Even if the government promised to maintain
the dairy payments, in the absence of a commitment mechanism
it is unlikely that the dairy industry would believe those
payments would be as politically secure as price fixing, especially
if they can get away with a sweet-sounding name such as self-help.
Capitalising the value of the cartel profits and receiving
that amount as lump-sum payments at the termination of the
program eliminates that risk but introduces a new one: the
industry cannot commit itself not to try to reinstate the
cartel at some later date.
Another example is
provided by our attempt to rationalise the U.S. air traffic
control system, and to institute congestion pricing. The failures
of our current system have moved from amusing stories
government computers that still use vacuum tubes that have
to be purchased in Poland to real fears of an inability
to handle the demands of the coming decades. We devised an
effective set of reforms that included user fees more closely
reflecting market prices. But the owners of corporate
jets and small planes who currently get close
to a free ride were an effective lobby in stopping
these reforms, because they realised that the move to a more
market-based system would inevitably entail their having to
pay their fair share. There was simply no commitment that
we could make that had any credibility.
The limitations on
the ability to make commitments are reflected too in how Congress
goes about its business. Congress recognises, for instance,
that gridlock caused by local interests might prevent military
base closings, although
the country as a whole would benefit from these closures.
It set up a base closure commission, committing itself to
vote the entire set of recommendations of the commission up
or down. Similarly, Congress has recognised that special interest
pressures would, under normal procedures, make ratification
of trade treaties as negotiated all but impossible
and that foreigners recognition of this would make trade
negotiations all but impossible. Accordingly, Congress has
repeatedly passed fast track legislation, committing
itself to vote trade agreements up or down, without amendments.
2. Coalition formation
and bargai-ning
The second hypothesis
for the failure to gain near-Pareto improvements is based
on the theory of coalition formation and bargaining. One of
the strongest objections to those who believe that Coase-style
bargaining will reach efficient outcomes is that with imperfect
information, such bargaining often results in suboptimal outcomes
(Farrell, 1987). To convey information about bargaining resolve,
fallback positions, and so on, there is often recourse to
inefficient signals. Bargaining in life is also not a one-shot
episode. Each round affects the fallback position for the
next. Although the two sides in, say, a labor dispute may
not fully realise it, each is solving a complicated dynamic
program problem with uncertainty and imperfect information.
Strikes are a manifestation of bargaining inefficiency
in the private sector; the failure to enact Pareto improvements
is a manifestation in the public.
One vivid example
comes from the attempts to reform one of the most glaring
inefficiencies in our environmental laws, the legal framework
for dealing with toxic wastes: Superfund, as it is commonly
called. For toxic waste sites with more than one responsible
party the vast majority of targeted sites transaction
costs represent 20 percent or more of the total cost to responsible
parties (Probst et al., 1995). For insurers the numbers are
even higher. According to a Rand study, only 12 percent of
total insurance company outlays have been spent cleaning up
toxic waste sites, while 80 percent has been spent on their
clients and their own legal fees (Acton and Dixon, 1992).
These seem like unnecessarily large transaction costs. Surely
there must be an alternative which can benefit the environment,
provide strong incentives not to pollute in the future, and
have economic benefits today, with only the lawyers being
worse off.
We were convinced
that such an alternative existed, and carefully crafted an
approach that incorporated a new legal framework and clean-up
standards, combined with an effective way of disposing with
the myriad of outstanding insurance cases. We worked hard
and long with environmentalists, the affected businesses,
and the insurance industry to forge a consensus that was not
just sound and fair, but perceived that way by the affected
parties. That consensus helped the measure sail through the
House Committee on a 40-3 vote, a rare display of bipartisan
unity on such a controversial subject. It failed, however,
to be enacted before the midterm elections in 1994.
When the new Republican
Congress arrived, the grand coalition fell apart. The business
community believed that they could get a better bargain; in
fact, all that they got was continued stalemate. They realised
that they were in a new dynamic bargaining game and that the
solution that worked for the previous game might be improved
upon. It was, they hoped, no longer an equilibrium. Each side
was holding out very much like a strike, where massive
amounts of resources are wasted while waiting for a resolution
of the bargaining problem in part to demonstrate
resolve, in part in the hope that the political dice would,
in the coming years, roll in their favor.
The awareness of the
dynamic nature of the bargaining game has further repercussions.
Legislation can help crystallise some groups, and attenuate
the strength of others. It affects the coalitions which are
formed, and thereby the outcomes of political processes. Participants
in the political game today realise this, and hence actions
which in the short run might look like a Pareto improvement
can look far riskier from a long-term, dynamic perspective.
3. Destructive
competition
Superfund also illustrates
another explanation for the failure of Pareto improvements
to be enacted. In market economies, we are used to extolling
the virtues of competition. Yet we recognise that in the absence
of perfect competition, sometimes competition can be destructive.
In imperfectly competitive markets, firms can get ahead not
just by producing a better product at lower costs, but also
by raising the costs of their rivals (Salop and Scheffman,
1983). Destructive competition is most prevalent in zero-sum
games where the gains of one are at the expense of another.
Political games, with position to be won or lost, are particularly
prone to this kind of behavior. Competition in political markets
is far from perfect, and the scope for destructive competition
is therefore all the greater.
4. Uncertainty
about the consequences of change
Finally, imperfect
information can create an impediment to mutually productive
bargains. In some models of the stock market, no trading takes
place because of information asymmetries. By indicating ones
willingness to sell at x, an informed seller shows that the
stock is really worth less than x (ignoring risk aversion);
buyers, knowing that the seller would only sell if they were
overpaying, thus refuse to trade. These information asymmetries
limit trade even when differences in risk preferences and
circumstances might, with symmetric information, lead to mutually
advantageous exchanges (Akerlof, 1970). The reason is simple
the buyer is never sure whether the seller is willing
to sell because of inside information which lets the seller
know that the buyer is overpaying, or whether there are grounds
for a mutually beneficial exchange.
Similarly in politics,
there is often a generalised scepticism about proposals offered
by an adversary that leads politicians to think that anytime
an adversary makes a proposal, it must involve the adversary
benefiting at their own expense. This scepticism derives not
just from the standard asymmetric information in economic
models, but also from the fact that many people lack the training
or patience to understand the consequences of policies.
There is a certain
sense in which the zero sum view of the world
is true. Competition for electoral votes or House seats is
truly zero sum: if the Democrats gain, then the Republicans
lose. If your objective is simply vote maximisation, then
you will not find any opportunities to cooperate. Furthermore,
if you define your gains in relative terms how much
I won compared to how much another group won then any
game turns into a zero-sum game: my relative gains are your
relative losses. The fact that the political game with
a winner and a loser is zero-sum leads many politicians
to see all of the world in a similar vein. The fact that information
is imperfect and the games we play are often not transparent
means that there is always uncertainty. Your gain may indeed
be at my expense.
But policy, as opposed
to politics, is not zero sum. Some policies are Pareto improvements.
One of the hardest tasks of economists is to explain this
a task made all the more difficult by much of the political
rhetoric. Nowhere is the problem greater than in the area
of international trade, ironically an area where economists
have the most developed and convincing arguments for mutual
gains. The main political argument for free trade is that
it creates jobs. The Administration even had an official number
that was used to convert the value of exports into a number
of jobs. Unfortunately, this rhetorical justification could
be easily turned against us, and it was. At one Congressional
hearing, a Senator asked me if each $1 billion of exports
created 20,000 to 25,000 jobs, then would it not also be true
that each $1 billion of imports cost America 20,000 to 25,000
jobs. I had to restrain myself from pointing out that our
imports are probably more labor- intensive than our exports
and thus that each $1 billion dollars of imports probably
cost even more than 25,000 jobs.
What I did point out,
however, is that the economic justification for free
trade is not that it creates jobs this is a matter
for macroeconomic policy combined with flexible labor and
product markets but that it allows us to take advantage
of our comparative advantage, resulting in higher wages and
lower prices (Congress of the United States, 1997). In contrast,
the rhetorical link between trade and jobs puts the discussion
squarely back in the zero sum framework. Similarly, when we
look to our trade deficit as a measure of our success, we
are again forced back into the zero sum framework for
the worlds trade surpluses by definition must be zero.
It is perhaps ironic that the one area in which economists
have true opportunities for Pareto improvements is the one
which the political process most often looks at from a zero-sum
perspective.
The uncertainty about
the consequences of policies has an important implication:
complicated policies and arguments have little place in political
discourse. The public has neither the background nor the patience
to digest a complicated message, so this simplicity
constraint makes it more difficult to put together politically
appealing reforms which are Pareto improvements. For academics,
this is a hard pill to swallow: we pride ourselves in the
subtlety of our arguments, not in their obviousness, in the
cleverness of our solutions, not necessarily in their simplicity.
For analysts of government behavior, this simplicity
constraint is hard to model, but this makes it no less
real. We note, however, that the simplicity constraint can
move: a few years ago, public discourse involving extended
discussions of adverse selection and moral hazard effects
would be unthinkable, yet today they are commonplace.
While political rhetoric
may contribute to our problems, and the necessity of keeping
it simple may make finding Pareto improvements all the more
difficult, the manner in which so much decision-making occurs
the secrecy, the midnight committee meetings
exacerbates our problems. In the next section I will discuss
steps we can take to build a climate of openness and transparency
that allows good policies to be recognised and promoted.
Secrecy vs. openness
in decision-making
Secrecy aggravates
the government failures identified above. First, it makes
it harder to establish credible commitments. Those excluded
by secrecy from the process feel fully justified in trying
to change the outcomes. Moreover, proposals arrived at in
secret are less likely to have paid due attention to the concerns
of those left out, and in doing so they have increased the
incentives of those groups to overturn the results should
an occasion to do so arise in the future. Second, secrecy
aggravates the problem of positional goods and destructive
competition. It short-circuits the consensus process and makes
it more likely that outcomes will lead to a greater divergence
between winners and losers. Third, by making information scarce,
it contributes both to the perception and reality of asymmetrical
information, and puts into play a dynamic which is more likely
to lead to biased and unrealistic information.
In a world of secrecy,
you will always suspect that some interest group is taking
advantage of the secrecy to advance their causes over yours,
to steal, if not directly from you personally, more broadly
from the public. Why else the secrecy? There is plenty of
evidence to support these anxieties: the special tax provisions
put into every tax bill at the last moment are perhaps the
most glaring example.
This penchant for
secrecy extended into the Clinton administration. Why, I wondered,
was there such a focus on secrecy in a Democratic administration,
in a democratic society? We were no worse than previous administrations,
and I suspect we did better than most, but why couldnt
we do still better? Whatever our position, eventually it would
have to be debated in the open, in Congress. If our positions
were well thought out, then surely we would be able to withstand
pressures from the special interest groups that would, in
any case, eventually be mobilised. Should a committed democrat
(or Democrat) believe that it requires stealth to advance
policies that are in the national interest?
The one argument that
may have some merit is that hiding information may sometimes
provide a tactical advantage in the political bargaining game.
But my own experience is that all too often, secrecy is neither
justified by national security interests, nor as a prerequisite
for rational and thoughtful debate, nor even as a tactical
necessity in a broader strategy, but rather, secrecy serves
as a cloak behind which special interests can most effectively
advance their interests, outside of public scrutiny. There
is an old expression that sunshine is the most powerful antiseptic.
Incentives for
secrecy
Other forces besides
special interests and the fear of exposing policy mistakes
help maintain the climate of secrecy. Secrecy creates rents,
because the hidden information is potentially valuable. Whenever
a valuable commodity exists, markets are created. Those on
both sides of the market have an incentive for continuing
with the artificially created scarcity. In this market, there
are at least two active parties: government officials and
the press. Their exchanges do not directly involve money,
but they are just as real. A reporter who gives good coverage,
walking carefully the line between pandering and honest reporting,
gets access to leaks. Part of the exchange was
an occasional puff piece. We could tell which reporter was
in the hands of which administration official.
If all that was at
stake was an occasional puff piece, these would be innocent
gift exchanges. But, at least from my vantage point, all too
often the reporting was distorted, the world seen through
a particular lens, not the balanced kind of reporting that
is required for informed public decision-making. Less secrecy
would not only increase the flow of information; it would
reduce the rent-creating and rent-seeking activities which
lead to a distorted flow of information.
Ironically, one of
the most powerful arguments for secrecy was premised on the
continued existence of secrecy itself. When the press got
wind of an intra-administration dispute over a policy issue,
it would often turn the issue into a big story, writing about
it as if the administration were confused and divided. Although
these were mostly big stories only for the cognoscenti inside
the Beltway, they were enough to worry many White House officials.
Their answer was ever tighter control to ensure that further
stories did not appear. Since it was impossible to entirely
eliminate articles about intra-administration disputes
the incentives to leak were too powerful this
approach just increased the cost of the stories that did appear.
If instead they had increased the number of stories
increased transparency they would have found that the
press and public would come to a better understanding of the
deliberative process or, more likely, simply become too bored
to raise much of a problem.
Expertise and democratic
values
There is another arena
in which democratic processes and rational decision-making
seemingly come into conflict, in which the resolution is not
so apparent. For a large number of issues, expertise is required.
This is, of course, the case in the running of any complicated
business. Good managers either have the expertise themselves,
or know how to hire it. It is not apparent, however, that
the political process sorts well for those who have these
abilities. Indeed, I was struck by the non-scientific tone
of political discourse; since expert arguments
could not be well evaluated by the electorate, they had little
play among those whose focus was on the electorate.
In recognition of
this problem, we have established independent agencies in
many areas to move critical parts of decision-making at least
slightly further from the political scene. Ultimately, there
is political responsibility for the performance of these agencies,
such as the Federal Trade Commission or the Securities and
Exchange Commission. Deciding how far to remove what decisions
is a key issue in a world of increasing complexity.
Conclusion
Having spent so much
time looking at the implications of information problems for
market failure, it was natural for me to address the issue
of explaining government failures through an analysis of information
problems there. In this article, I have stressed the difficulties
of achieving Pareto improvements. What I have really shown
is how hard it is to construct these Pareto improvements amidst
the problems of commitment and the dynamic bargaining games
that characterise the political process.
Those who said that
I would leave the White House with a more jaundiced view of
the role of government were only partly correct. While special
interests do often dominate over the general interests and
while seeming near-Pareto improvements are often resisted,
these failures do not undo the great achievements of the public
sector, from mass education to a cleaner environment. These
failures should focus our attention on re-examining both how
and what the government should do.
Making government
processes more open, transparent, and democratic, with more
participation and more efforts at consensus formation is likely
to result not only in a process that is fairer, but one with
outcomes that are more likely to be in accord with the general
interests. Maybe eventually we will be able to bring Coase
to the public sector, so that Pareto improvements will actually
be adopted.
References
Acton, Jan Paul, and
Lloyd Dixon 1992, Superfund and Transaction Costs,
RAND Institute, Santa Monica, California.
Akerlof, George 1970,
The Market for Lemons: Quality Uncertainty and the Market
Mechanism, Quarterly Journal of Economics 84(3):
488-500.
Buchanan, James M.
1975, The Limits of Liberty, University of Chicago
Press, Chicago.
Buchanan, James M.
1991, Constitutional Economics, Basil Blackwell, Oxford.
Congress of the United
States 1997, Hearing before the Joint Economic Committee:
The 1997 Economic Report of the President, February
10, Government Printing Office, Washington.
Farrell, Joseph 1987,
Information and the Coase Theorem, Journal
of Economic Perspectives 1(2): 113-29.
Greenwald, B., and
J.E. Stiglitz 1986, Externalities in Markets with Imperfect
Information and Incomplete Markets, Quarterly Journal
of Economics 101(2): 229-64.
Olson, Mancur 1971,
The Logic of Collective Action, Harvard University
Press, Cambridge, Mass.
Probst, Katherine,
Don Fullerton, Robert Litan, and Paul Portney 1995, Footing
the Bill for Superfund Cleanup, The Brookings Institution
and Resources for the Future, Washington.
Salop, Steve, and
D. Scheffman 1993, Raising Rivals Costs,
American Economic Review 73: 267-71.
Vickers, John, and
George Yarrow 1988, Privatisation: An Economic Analysis,
MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.
Notes:
1
One example of this effect in action comes from Vickers and
Yarrow (1988). They argue that the British government
deliberately sold shares in some privatised enterprises at
below market prices to a broad spectrum of the population
in order to create a forceful constituency which would resist
renationalisation.
About the Author:
Joseph
Stiglitz
is Senior Vice President and Chief Economist, World Bank,
Washington, D.C. He was a member of the Council of Economic
Advisers from 1993-95, and chairman of the CEA from 1995 through
February 1997. He is on leave from Stanford University. This
paper is an extract from the Distinguished Lecture on Economics
in Government delivered to a joint session of the Society
of Government Economists and the American Economic Association
in Chicago, Illinois, on January 4, 1998, and published in
the Journal of Economic Perspectives for Spring 1998; reprinted
by permission.
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