Human Machinations, Technophobic Trepidations

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human-machine collaboration Are robots likely to replace labor at an increasing rate? Or, are robots and labor sufficiently complimentary as inputs that there will be a continuing role for humans in production? The first argument has been made by pessimists and Luddites for at least two centuries, often hysterically, and they have been consistently wrong, as Mark Mills demonstrates in “The Data Are Clear: Robots Do Not Create Unemployment!

Of course, “labor” has many facets: there is physical labor, there are skilled crafts, and there is so-called knowledge work; many other categories and sub-categories can be delineated. Mills makes the simple distinction between “drudgery” and higher-level “cognitive chores,” and he notes that automation has primarily functioned to eliminate the former. He also emphasizes that over time, automation has actually given rise to various cognitive chores that were never imagined prior to the substitution of capital for human drudgery. In this sense, new forms of labor are seen to be complimentary to capital. So, at once, the automation of tasks is both “labor-saving” and generative of new human functionality. There is every reason to believe that this process will continue to play out as robots begin to collaborate with humans in more complex ways.

Mills links to this interesting paper by David Autor of MIT, which the author Autor recently presented at the Federal Reserve’s annual conference in Jackson Hole, WY. The paper offers an interpreted history of the labor market over the five decades since the computor revolution. He summarizes the thrust of his thinking on the subject by appealing to the paradox that “our tacit knowledge of how the world works often exceeds our explicit understanding.” This implies that technological advance can and does tend to create expansive opportunities for humans. Autor says:

… journalists and expert commentators overstate the extent of machine substitution for human labor and ignore the strong complementarities. The challenges to substituting machines for workers in tasks requiring adaptability, common sense, and creativity remain immense.

Autor and Mills both note that automation necessarily leads to reduced demand for certain types of labor, and that the process can lead to severe dislocations and losses for many individuals in the short run. Autor also notes that some lower-level tasks are not yet especially amenable to automation, and that workers in such occupations are unlikely to benefit as automation takes place elsewhere. This serves to emphasize the importance of gaining the kinds of complex skills that can be of value in collaboration with more intelligent machinery. In other words, investment in human capital will be as valuable as ever.

Fractured Fiscal Fairy Tales: Moot Multipliers

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crowding_out

Scott Grannis asserts that the multiplier associated with fiscal stimulus is roughly zero, and evidence over the past few years suggests that he may be right. He appeals to a form of the classic “crowding out” argument: that debt-financed increases in government spending absorb private saving, leaving less funding available for private capital investment. In the present case, federal deficits ($7.4 trillion since 2009) have soaked up more than 80% of the corporate profits generated over that time frame. Profits are a major source of funds for private capital projects, risky alternatives against which the U.S. Treasury competes.

There are other reasons to doubt the ability of fiscal policy to offset fluctuations in economic activity. Transfers, which have grown dramatically as a percentage of federal spending, can create negative work incentives, thereby diminishing the supply of labor and adding cost to new investment. The growth of the regulatory state adds risk to privately invested capital as well as hiring. Government projects also offer tremendous opportunities for graft and corruption, at the same time diverting resources into uses of questionable productivity (corn, solar and wind subsidies are good examples). Many federal programs in areas such as education fail basic tests of success. Federal bailouts tend to prop up unproductive enterprises, including the misbegotten cash-for-clunker initiative. Even government infrastructure projects, heralded as great enhancers of American productivity, are often subject to lengthy delays and cost overruns due to regulatory and environmental rules. Is there any such thing as a federal “shovel-ready” infrastructure project?

In recent years, research has found that spending multipliers are small and often negative in the long run, contrary to what statists and old-time adherents of Keynes would have you believe. Empirical multipliers tend to be smaller in more open economies and under more flexible exchange rate regimes. Of growing importance to many developed economies, however, is that spending multipliers tend to be zero or even negative in the long run when government debt is high relative to GDP. This is broadly consistent with the classic crowding-out explanation for low multipliers, whereby public debt burdens absorb private saving. U.S. government debt-to-GDP is now well above 60%, an empirical point of demarcation separating high and low-multiplier countries. Finally, some economists believe that fiscal stimulus is frequently offset by countervailing monetary tightening under an implicit policy of nominal GDP targeting. Scott Sumner describes this as the story of the past few years, as neither the fiscal expansion of the 2009 stimulus plan nor the contraction of the fiscal cliff and sequestration had much if any observable impact on economic growth.

Politicians, the mainstream press and eager Keynesian economists are seemingly always ready to pitch fiscal policy and higher federal spending as the solution to any macroeconomic problem. Sadly, that is unlikely to end any time soon, because the story they tell is so simple and tempting, and they are blind its insidious nature.

Rhett Butler and the War on Drugs

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Rhett

Prohibiting the consumption of any good is always likely to have undesirable effects. One typically unintended consequence is the tendency for less costly varieties of the good to disappear in favor of expensive variants, which provide rewards to suppliers that better compensate for the legal risks inherent in their trade. Some have dubbed this the “Rhett Butler effect,” after the dashing blockade runner in Gone With The Wind. This effect is discussed in “Why Rhett Butler’s Weed Is So Strong“,:

… in the context of the North’s blockades against the South, blockade runners could profit more from delivering smaller and lighter-weight luxuries to Confederate ports. The South thus found itself flush with things like ‘bonnet ribbon, playing cards, corset stays and . . . all kinds of personal items.’” 

In the context of alcohol prohibition and, more recently, the so-called war on drugs, prohibition has created a systematic tendency for the potency of contraband to increase. Art Carden quotes Milton Friedman on this point: “crack would never have existed…if you had not had drug prohibition.” The unfortunate result is that drugs become more powerful and often more dangerous and addicting. The cost also rises on average, which may create incentives for desperate users to engage in other nefarious activities.

Federalization of Militarized Local Police?

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police_toys

A few days ago, I discussed Glenn Reynolds’ ideas about controlling police militarization and improving interactions between local police and their communities. An additional concern is the federal funding that ultimately makes the local acquisition of military hardware possible. This funding is provided through various grants and programs, with Homeland Security playing a major role. And while no one has done a full accounting, it is some very serious scratch, certainly running into billions of dollars each year. When the federal government controls major flows of funding, it also buys great potential influence on the policies and procedures of local police.

I am certain that Reynolds did not intend to suggest that requiring officers to wear cameras should be a federal initiative, with the feds wielding potential reductions in funding as a cudgel. Yet that is exactly what Claire McCaskill and others are now suggesting. Where could this lead? Local police may have exposed themselves to the risk of federalization. Do we want local policing to be held under the purview of federal overlords? I think not. Developments like this lie at the heart of the decay of federalism. Local authorities should always view funding from the central government suspiciously. Autonomy over local policing should be guarded carefully by responsive local communities. 

Punitive Taxes Chase Off a Rational King

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burger-king-fireplace 

The counterproductive U.S. corporate tax code was a major incentive for Burger King’s prospective merger with the Canadian doughnut chain Tim Hortons. The merger will allow BK to change its domicile to Canada, thereby reducing its tax bill. This is known as a corporate “tax inversion.” Canada’s tax system is less punishing because its corporate tax rate is lower than in the U.S., and Canadian taxes are based on territorial earnings, rather than global earnings as in the U.S. Megan McArdle explains that the latter is the more important consideration: “If we’re worried about inversion, then the U.S. government should follow the lead of other developed countries, and move to territorial taxation.”

The corporate income tax represents double taxation of income paid out as dividends and imposes, at least partly, a double tax burden on shareholders even when earnings are retained. Greg Mankiw believes that the corporate income tax should be abolished.

“The burden of the corporate tax is ultimately borne by people — some combination of the companies’ employees, customers and shareholders. After recognizing that corporations are mere conduits, we can focus more directly on the people.”

On the topic of “economic patriotism” and so-called “corporate desertion,” Mankiw quotes Learned Hand:

“Anyone may arrange his affairs so that his taxes shall be as low as possible; he is not bound to choose that pattern which best pays the treasury. There is not even a patriotic duty to increase one’s taxes.”

Mankiw also proposes a consumption tax as a replacement for federal income taxation, which has great merit, but it is a very ambitious plan and probably at odds with current political realities.

Drugs, Race, and Weaponry On The Local Beat

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SWAT_cartoon_FTW_by_the_lagz

Here’s an interesting puzzle regarding drug use, drug arrests and race. It’s not good. The only theory mentioned at the link doesn’t feel like a complete explanation, but one thing is certain: the drug war is not good for anyone, and it’s especially hard on blacks. 

The conduct of police has been called into question by events in Ferguson, Missouri, both in terms of prosecuting their day-to-day law enforcement duties and whether the “militarization” of local police is a healthy development. Glen Reynolds has some good suggestions for ensuring safer and more productive interactions between police and the public. He forgot to mention that we should end the war on drugs, but I’m sure he’d agree!

Drugs, Race, and Weaponry On The Local Beat

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SWAT_cartoon_FTW_by_the_lagz

Here’s an interesting puzzle regarding drug use, drug arrests and race. It’s not good. The only theory mentioned at the link doesn’t feel like a complete explanation, but one thing is certain: the drug war is not good for anyone, and it’s especially hard on blacks. 

The conduct of police has been called into question by events in Ferguson, Missouri, both in terms of prosecuting their day-to-day law enforcement duties and whether the “militarization” of local police is a healthy development. Glen Reynolds has some good suggestions for ensuring safer and more productive interactions between police and the public. He forgot to mention that we should end the war on drugs, but I’m sure he’d agree!

IRS Parlance: “Difficult To Retrieve” = “Destroyed”

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 IRS Records

DOJ attorneys told Judicial Watch on Friday that the federal government backs up all emails “in case of a government-wide catastrophe.” According to these attorneys, the real reason that the IRS has not provided Lois Lerner’s emails is that retrieval from back-up tapes would be “onerous.” Here is Judicial Watch’s statement on the discovery, which includes this quote from Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton: “You can bet we are going to ask the court for immediate assistance in cutting through this massive obstruction of justice.”

The latest revelations are related to the ongoing Judicial Watch v. IRS lawsuit over IRS abuses being heard by U.S. District Court Judge Emmett Sullivan. In July 10 ruling, Judge Sullivan gave the IRS 30 days to provide details regarding the missing emails. Following the agency’s response, which seemed less than forthcoming, “Judge Sullivan authorized Judicial Watch to submit a request for limited discovery into the missing IRS records after September 10.”

Police Fatalities Down; Violent Crime Down; Heavy Armor Up

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police

The ongoing situation in Ferguson, Missouri is volatile and probably dangerous for both police and protesters. This is mainly attributed to agitators from outside the community with a different, more violent agenda than the local protestors. Fortunately, as far as I know, no one else has been severely injured or killed in Ferguson in the aftermath of Michael Brown’s death. The unrest, however, has highlighted a controversy over the recent militarization of local police in the U.S. One justification offered for the acquisition of surplus military hardware is the danger often faced by police in the line of duty. Yet the statistics cited in “By the Numbers: How Dangerous Is It to Be a Cop?” suggest that it has never been safer to be a police officer, and there are certainly occupations that are far more deadly. This undercuts assertions that the military gear is necessary for the safety of police. The author does not intend to minimize the difficulty and hazards of law enforcement: 

“They’re required to have daily contact with drunks, the mentally disabled, and criminal suspects. Arrests can often lead to physical confrontation, assault, and sometimes injury…. But it just isn’t unusually deadly or dangerous—and it’s safer today than ever before. The data do not justify the kinds of armor, weapons, insecurity, and paranoia being displayed by police across the country.” 

Perhaps we can leave the heavy armor and sophisticated weaponry in the care of the National Guard, for use only when the Guard’s involvement is judged necessary. (The Guard was called to Ferguson by Missouri Governor Jay Nixon earlier this week.) I noted several weeks ago in “Local Police or Local Military” that violent crime in the U.S. has fallen in half since 1991, deepening the mystery over the presumed need for heavy police armor.

We should also be suspicious of the militarization of federal regulatory agencies such as the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Education, and the FDA, which apparently all employ their own SWAT teams. “Let’s Demilitarize the Regulatory Agencies, Too” discusses these developments and efforts to roll back the “warrior cop” trend via legislation:

“There has already been left-right cooperation on the issue, as witness the unsuccessful Grayson-Amash amendment in June seeking to cut off the military-surplus 1033 program.” 

Your Administrative Master With Police Power

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sinestro

The administrative / regulatory state just grows and grows, as this tool from the Mercatus Center shows. As it does so, the bureaucracy becomes less accountable to the people in its sway, and seemingly less responsive to the checks and balances among the branches of government defined in the constitution. Rules are made by unelected bureaucrats, and their application is often uneven and arbitrary. In “The Sinestro Theory of The Administrative State,” Ben Domenech explores the link between this type of governance and declining “faith” in government itself. The danger posed by the administrative state is captured here by Domenech:

“In the era of the Administrative State, big government has been giving out too many rings to too many would-be Sinestros. And when it comes to trust in Washington, it’s the fact that this power is centralized in the Administrative State, rather than localized via federalism, which creates the special class of modern ringbearers. It allows them to work together in common purpose, as the progressives intended, as opposed to balancing and checking each other, as the Founders always understood to be essential.” [Sinestro link in original]. 

It may be too late, but left unchecked, the administrative state will be an ongoing and increasing drag on the economy and personal freedom. It must be rolled back.