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  • Economists talk a lot about unintended consequences and

  • it's important to understand what we mean.

  • We don't mean that individuals don't intend to achieve things

  • when they go out in the world and act.

  • Of course they intend things, good things, bad things.

  • What we do mean is that these actions of many individuals typically come together

  • to create a larger outcome.

  • And it's that larger outcome that no one intends.

  • Sometimes these are good, beneficial.

  • Sometimes these larger outcomes are undesirable.

  • One of my favorite examples of a bad unintended consequence is

  • the consequences caused by rent control.

  • Rent control is a policy of government to keep the rental rates

  • of apartments artificially low.

  • Landlords are prohibited by law

  • from charging prices higher than the rent control prices.

  • Well, one unintended consequence of that piece of legislation, of that policy.

  • Is to make rental units more scarce than they would otherwise be.

  • By telling landlords, look you can't raise your price to certain levels, that means

  • that some people who would otherwise become landlords don't become landlords.

  • They choose not to rent out their units.

  • They choose not to rent out some rooms in their house.

  • They choose not to build.

  • Rental units that they might otherwise have built.

  • And so one unintended consequence of rent control is to reduce the supply of

  • rental units.

  • Now, the people who impose rent control, that's clearly not their goal.

  • They don't wanna make rental units less available.

  • They wanna make rental units more available because they wanna, presumably,

  • they wanna increase the availability of rental units to people who rent.

  • But one unintended consequence is the opposite.

  • Rental units shrink in supply.

  • When I teach Econ 101,

  • I tell my students on the first day, intentions are not results.

  • The intentions behind the policy will not necessarily determine what the results

  • of that policy are.

  • One example of the unintended consequence that is exactly the opposite

  • of the intention comes from the Endangered Species Act.

  • The intention of that act is to enable endangered species to flourish.

  • Ones' consequence in many cases is to cause the endangered species to be

  • killed off more quickly than otherwise.

  • If you're a land owner and you find an endangered species on your property,

  • you know that the Environmental Protection Agency will,

  • as a result of that finding, impose restrictions on your land.

  • One consequence of those restrictions is it reduces the value of your land,

  • what you can do with it, the price you can sell it for.

  • So what a lot of land owners do when they find what they think to be endangered

  • species on their property, is they kill the species and they shut up about it.

  • It's called shoot, shovel, and shut up.

  • Kill the species, shovel to bury it, and say nothing about it.

  • Now clearly that's not the goal of the Endangered Species Act.

  • The take-home lesson from this is that you judge a policy not by its stated goals.

  • It's easy to state good goals.

  • You judge a policy by the incentives

  • that that policy will likely give to the people that it affects.

  • And it's a very important one for policy makers, is to be really modest and humble.

  • We live in this incredibly complex world.

  • When we take any action we know that the consequences of

  • those actions are going to extend out very far.

  • We can see those consequences only a little bit in front of us.

  • We can't trace them out fully.

  • And it applies whether or

  • not you believe in big government, tiny government, medium-sized government.

  • Yes, it's difficult.

  • In many cases, to trace out how the incentives will have real-world effects.

  • But that difficulty does not excuse us from the task of pursuing it.

  • We can't just simply say, oh, the intentions of the policymakers are good,

  • therefore we can be assured that the results will be good.

  • That's cheating.

  • We just can't do that.

  • That's very bad public policy.

Economists talk a lot about unintended consequences and

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