"Texas cattle ranchers make enormous sacrifices to husband and insure the safety and well-being of their herds: running down stray cattle in the snow to care for and feed them, hiring veterinarians to safeguard their health, taking them to feed yards in time to fatten them up prior to selling them to slaughterhouses. The result of these sacrifices is that New Yorkers can enjoy having beef on their supermarket shelves. Idaho potato farmers arise early in the morning. They do backbreaking work in potato fields, with the sun beating down on them. Similarly, the result of their sacrifices is that New Yorkers can also enjoy having potatoes on their supermarket shelves. Why do Texas cattle ranchers and Idaho potato farmers make these sacrifices? Is it because they love New Yorkers? Only the most naïve would chalk their motivation up to one of concern for their fellow man in New York. The reason Texas cattle ranchers and Idaho potato farmers make those sacrifices is that they love themselves. They want more for themselves. In a word, they are greedy!"
Tuesday, November 17, 2020
Self - interest
I come across as selfish. And I laugh it off most of the times since it
takes about 2000 words to explain that it is rather self-interest. I usually
sum up situations quickly and determine what the best outcome would be. So to
laugh it off rather than explain how self-interest is so valuable seems like
the best thing to do most of the time.
“It is not from the benevolence of the
butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their
regard to their own interest.” That was from economist Adam Smith in the Wealth of Nations. I’ve always felt that
if everybody was as selfish as me, we’d be better off. And the reason I’ve
stuck to that belief is because I believe that persons who cannot put their own
interests first naturally cannot have my best interest foremost in their minds.
Walter
Williams, economist from George Mason University, shares a similar view:
Ok, if you like the word greedy, I can
use that instead. But you get the drift. Whether you dance from self-interest
to selfish to greed in search of a better political word, the bottom line is we
are better off collectively if we each individually strive hard1. I
was not taught any of this during my undergrad years studying economics.
Instead I was encouraged to think how the rich (those that supply us with what
we need or want, be it Amazon, Walmart, Facebook) must be taxed more so we can
address the inequality of wealth. And when I looked around me, I did see
inequality and I concluded, since I live in a capitalist economy, that our
style of business was to be blamed. I did not simultaneously realize that I was
in my 20s and that my prefrontal cortex was not fully developed. This is the
part of the brain that curbs impulsive behavior and exhibit rational thought. If you didn’t know, now you may understand why
teenagers act the way they do.
1To argue that everyone should be selfish is specific to
striving for excellence. Period.
It can also explain why the
18-29 age-group favored the Democratic Party than the Republican. Now, please do not mistake my words. I am not inferring
that young people are stupid. I’ll leave that to Kamala Harris (Click
here and forward to minute 16 -18). I’m
simply positing that this age group lacks knowledge and experience, like I was
in college. And when the inexperienced is egged on by politicians who speak
from both corners of the mouth, or by educators with their own agenda, yes, bad
decisions are made.
With time comes experience and I’m able
to look at the facts and draw conclusions devoid of irrational thought. I
figured in the comfort of a classroom where the arithmetic has no tangible benefit
beyond a passing grade, the younger folks favor liberal policies to
redistribute wealth. But when they step in the workforce and see the benefit of
self-interest, a split emerges. One group work and sometimes fail but never
give up while the other fail and quit, complaining about the unevenness of the
system. It is the members of this latter group – the complainers – that fixate
on redistribution of resources. They failed at generating wealth so they vote
politicians in who will support them in balancing the apparent broken system. Higher
taxes, for instance, is championed. That’s the only way student loan forgiveness can
be funded. The United States government has no other way.
The problem with higher taxes and
student loan forgiveness, as two examples of addressing disparity in wealth, is
that the benefits only show up in the short run. Arthur Laffer, an economist in
the Reagan administration is remembered for illustrating on a napkin the inverse relationship between high
tax rates and total tax revenue. Put simply, total tax revenue fall as businesses
restrict investment and move overseas to circumvent high income tax rates. This analysis is known as the Laffer Curve. So, the complainers
ought to know that what we’re dealing with is not novel. We’ve been dealing
with this phenomenon for over a century. Wealth disparity naturally occurs when
people serve their own interests in a society that has minimal government
intervention. Vilfredo Pareto, an Italian economist, first observed it in the
early 20th century. He noticed an inequality: 20% of the population
owned 80% of the wealth. Since then many similar observations in different
areas followed a pattern which later became known as the 80/20 rule. If you
were to google the 80/20 rule, you can find hundreds of examples like 20% of
criminals commit 80% of crimes; 20% of customers account for 80% of total
profits; 20% of the most reported software bugs cause 80% of software crashes; 20%
of patients account for 80% of healthcare spending, and so on. And it is not
always 80/20. That’s just an average.
I am not a complainer. I am in the
former group. I’m the type that fail and try again. So, instead of blaming the
system, I try to see how I can make it work for me. And with this 80/20 rule, I
made my personal observations and adjusted accordingly, with much success in managing
people and the few resources I have. I have a few shirts and a couple pants and
three pairs of shoes. I also have very few friends; so few I can count them on
one hand. The reason being is that I am aware that if I’m to overstock on clothes
and shoes I’ll only wear 20% of them 80% of the time. It’s better to just give
away the excess. And if I have 20 friends, I know that probably only 4 will be
good enough to invite to my home. I realized that I can achieve the same amount
of output at work by being there 3 times a week. My employer, like many, pays
their employees to be at work for 5 days a week. Let’s not misstate the facts.
None of us work 100% of the time we are at work. And we can achieve the same
result if we were organized better.
Matter of fact, we can acquire more skills in fields we enjoy in the 3-4
days we are not at work. (And it matters not that the days we work are longer
when the week is shorter. Days are days irrespective of the day define as 8
hours or 12. It’s like life on earth. There is no difference if we die at 50 or
80 with respect to contribution. Dr. King died at 39 but his contribution to
black people is invaluable. It is what we do with the time we have that
matters.) And you can expand this to see how this plays out in our current
affairs as well. If a politician win about 12 States, that’s enough in terms of
electoral and popular votes to win the presidency. You don’t have to actively
campaign in all 50 States.
Now for the complainers that don’t
accept the 80/20 rule as a natural occurrence in a free society, what do we do
about this phenomenon when it shows up, say, in sports? A few athletes perform
exceedingly well. That’s why I can call names of basketball, football,
baseball, and soccer players even though I do not watch any of those sports. When
the game or tournament begins, every player from every team starts out the same
way – at zero. A hierarchy develops, the most skilled gets their name on front
page news. And particularly in
basketball and football here in America, most of those skilled folks are black
men. Are we supposed to rid this inequality by telling some black players to
stand down so the white players can shine?
Kamala Harris, via Twitter days before
the recent election, claimed that while we live in a free society, one group
gets a head start. If that idea was tweeted 100 years ago, it probably would
have been true for most colored people. Now, it is true for those who
constantly point it out – the complainers. I noticed in that claim the group
that got a head start was depicted by a white man. I wondered if it is
symbolism for Jeff Bezos. If it is, I’m getting closer to understanding these
complainers. See, I know if I continue doing what I do I’ll be a millionaire in
about 20 years. It takes time and lots of work to get there. But I’m not
shooting for a net worth of 150 billion. I’ll have to be exceptional. I’m not.
A million is comfy and I’ll see where I can go from there. But I must reach
there first. And it is no different for the complainers. You cannot bypass
failure and years of hard work and get straight to Bezos territory. Not many
knew of Bezos in the early 2000s and less knew that name in the 1990s. And if
he had put his feet up with just Amazon selling books (remember those days?) not
only would we be worse off during COVID with all these brick and mortar stores
closed, but Bezos would have been ordinary, like millions of the well-to-do in
this land. It is this plateau of “ordinariness” that most Americans find
themselves.
On this plateau, relative to the rest
of the world, we have the best healthcare, food, homes, transportation, and
most of all, a strong currency. What we seem to be losing is knowledge. Arthur
Laffer, referenced above, wasn’t the one who first came up with the idea of high-income
taxes as a deterrent for investment. It was Ibn Khaldun, a Muslim scholar some 600 years prior, in
1377 that mentioned it in his famous 1200 paged book, Muqaddima. To
Laffer’s credit, he did admit that it was Ibn Khaldun
who first conceived the idea. But we do not call it the Khaldun Curve. We call
it the Laffer Curve because people like Laffer picked up books and read them
while the complainers among Muslims kill each other and blow things up. The Muslims
are painted today as intolerant and prone to terrorism. And that’s what happens when you have other people
telling your story; they push through their self-interest. The complainers
here at home should take note. Get off the streets and pick up a book. Have self-interest.
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Self - interest
I come across as selfish. And I laugh it off most of the times since it takes about 2000 words to explain that it is rather self-interest. I...
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I come across as selfish. And I laugh it off most of the times since it takes about 2000 words to explain that it is rather self-interest. I...
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I bought a Santa Claus suit a couple years back. I failed at every opportunity convincing the kids I’m the fat man from the North. I go the ...
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