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  • Natural disasters, terrorist attacks, and wars have one thing in common: They involve

  • a lot of destruction. But every time there’s a natural disaster or a terrorist attack or

  • a war, it can be virtually guaranteed that someone is going to come along and say that

  • there’s a silver lining in all of this. It’s good for the economy because it’s

  • going to create jobs. When there’s a natural disaster or a terrorist attack or a war, we

  • have to spend money replacing all the stuff that gets destroyed. This is an application

  • of what we call the broken window fallacy.

  • Frederic Bastiat corrected this fallacy in his early 19th century essay, That Which Is

  • Seen and That Which Is Unseen. The key point is destruction does not create prosperity.

  • Destruction destroys prosperity. Imagine someone who owns a shop. The shop has a glass window.

  • Now a kid comes along and throws a rock through the window so the window’s broken, shattered

  • glass everywhere. The shopkeeper’s upset. Why? Because his window’s been broken. He

  • has to go and pay the glassmaker in order to get the window replaced.

  • Now some people might come along and say well, no, look, you should all be smiling because

  • this is going to create jobs. You spend money on new glass. The glassmaker earns this money.

  • He can then spend it at restaurants, and he can spend it on new clothes. He can spend

  • it on things that he likes. That’s going to create jobs for other people. This money’s

  • going to circulate, and were all going to be richer as a result of the fact that

  • this kid has thrown a rock through a window and now weve had to replace a window.

  • Let’s think for a moment about what the policy prescription would be if it were in

  • fact true that this is a good idea. What we should do instead of trying to prevent people

  • from breaking things, instead of trying to prevent people from destroying property, we

  • should in fact be enlisting armies of kids with rocks to go around breaking windows to

  • destroy things because, after all, if this were to require a new spending that would

  • make us richer, that would make us better off, that would be the path to prosperity:

  • destroying things, breaking things and then spending money to replace them.

  • What were doing when we indulge this kind of thinking is were focusing our attention

  • on what is seen but were not taking account of what is not seen. What we don’t see is

  • what the shopkeeper would have used that money for if he hadn’t had to replace his window.

  • He might have used it to buy a suit. This would have created an opportunity for a tailor.

  • The tailor then could have spent the money on something else. He could have used it to

  • buy groceries. This would have created opportunities for grocers. Maybe he would have saved it;

  • then the money could be lent to someone who wants to start a new business. He could have

  • done something else that would have created job opportunities for other people. The world

  • would have still had the window and it would have had the benefit of all of this additional

  • activity that would have gone on had the window not been broken in the first place. On net,

  • society is worse off to the tune of one window.

  • Whenever we actually destroy resources, that’s precisely what were doing. Were destroying

  • stuff. Were not creating wealth. It’s important to remember that it’s production

  • that creates prosperity and not destruction.

Natural disasters, terrorist attacks, and wars have one thing in common: They involve

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