A broad range of policies sends the message that people are too dumb to make reasonable decisions on their own. There are undoubtedly people who might benefit from advice, or from sensible rules, or from being protected from themselves. But policies that attempt to protect people from themselves risk reducing self-reliance more generally.
Laws against false and misleading advertising are one example. Some business do attempt to swindle their customers. But prohibiting false and misleading advertising gives people an excuse not to worry about this issue. Government enforcement of the ban is highly imperfect, however, so many questionable claims occur every day. Thus unless people use common sense they can easily be misled despite existing law.
Numerous other policies also reduce self-reliance: prohibitions on “bad stuff” like drugs; nutritional guidelines; regulation of decency content on television; safety regulation; food labeling laws; and licensure restrictions for doctors and lawyers.
Government intervention therefore promotes the false message that people do not need to think for themselves because the government has taken care of it. No matter how large government becomes, however, it cannot be everywhere or make every decision. So unless people use common sense, or rely on private institutions that provide good rules of thumb, they will make many bad decisions or be taken advantage of in many situations.
There's no end to this twaddle.
Self-reliance is often expensive, but you don't see Miron noting that. The regulations Miron decries, such as food labelling, generally reduce information or other transaction costs.
Salaried employment, such as Miron's, is another example of a missed opportunity for self-reliance: why doesn't he simply have private students?
Modern society is made from interdependence, not self-reliance. The whole ediface of knowledge is interdependent: I'd love to see how far Miron got with only self-reliance there.
Now of course, it is possible for lost self-reliance to be harmful. But once again, Miron has no numbers for us, just vague hand-waving. As I predicted.
Posted by: Mike Huben | July 22, 2006 at 10:16 PM
Self-reliance would indeed be dangerous and expensive, in many cases. We should instead rely on family, friends and neighbours for advice and guidance, based on their own experience, passed on from their own family, friends and neighbours, et cetera.
Posted by: I typed this without the need for a government minister to sit next to me | July 24, 2006 at 07:22 AM
Mike,
Let's see, you start with an insult, then go on to complain that the post was not about the topic you had in mind, all of which means exactly nothing. You approach substance with, "Modern society is made from interdependence, not self-reliance. The whole ediface of knowledge is interdependent: I'd love to see how far Miron got with only self-reliance there." Or you could be deliberately misconstruing Miron's usage of self-reliance, conflating it with individual autarky. I wonder... Then you claim that he has failed to provide numbers to justify a claim about a sign, rather than a magnitude.
Here's a suggestion that you may or may not care to take. When some libertarian says something you disagree with, skip the insults, identify the claim you disagree with and provide an argument that passes the same criticisms to which you would subject the claim you are disagreeing with.
Posted by: James | July 25, 2006 at 01:54 AM
James, the day I take your advice on arguing is the day I'm diagnosed with Alzheimers.
Twaddle is not an insult: it is an accurate diagnosis. Miron seems to be working directly from my satirical Libertarianism in One Lesson. Two especially:
This whole series consists of Count only the benefits of libertarianism, count only the costs of government.
And the series itself is an examplke of Five of a factoid beats a full argument.
Posted by: Mike Huben | July 26, 2006 at 07:07 PM
Mike,
You are certainly free to argue as you please, or change styles of argument to suit whatever mental conditions you are diagnosed with.
One thing I did want to clear up: I don't want to give the mistaken impression that my suggestion offered above is my own original idea. Many prominent critics of libertarian ideas (e.g. Amartya Sen, R. Musgrave, Duncan Kennedy, Allin Cottrell, etc.) seem to argue this way, and among other things it makes their writing more helpful because one doesn't need to sift through insults trying to figure out what the actual point of disagreement is. That said, I recognize that you might have adopted your chosen approach because you know something that these guys don't.
Posted by: James | July 29, 2006 at 01:14 AM