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The Economics of Loving Your Neighbor

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Title: The Economics of Loving Your Neighbor


1
The Economics of Loving Your Neighbor
  • Princeton University, Pace Center March 6, 2006
  • John D. Mueller
  • Director, Economics and Ethics Program
  • Ethics and Public Policy Center
  • President, LBMC LLC
  • Washington, DC

2
What is Economics About?
  • What do people do all day?
  • Marrying and giving in marriage distributing
  • Eating and drinking using (consuming)
  • Planting and building producing
  • Buying and selling exchanging
  • Luke 18 27-28

3
A Brief, Remedial History of Economics
  • Economics has been taught continuously at highest
    university level since 13th Century
  • Scholastic (AAA) Economics 1250-1776
  • Classical Economic 1776-1870
  • Neoclassical Economics 1870-c. 2000
  • Neoscholastic c.2000- ?
  • Aristotle and Augustine, integrated by Aquinas

4
How the Structure of Economics Has Changed
Theory Outline Final Distribution Consumption (Utility) Production Equilibrium
Scholastic Yes Yes Yes Yes
Classical No No Yes Yes
Neoclassical No Yes Yes Yes
Neoscholastic Yes Yes Yes Yes
5
Augustines Description of Gifts and Crimes
  • 1. All persons are motivated by love for some
    person(s).
  • 2. Love means willing some good to some person
    (Aristotle).
  • 3. We express our preferences for persons (e.g.,
    love) by distributing our goods between ourselves
    and others.
  • Outer Acts toward
  • Kind of love Inner Act Self Others
  • Ordinate Benevolence Utility Beneficence (Gifts)
  • Inordinate Malevolence Vice Maleficence (Crime)

6
Selfishness (assumed by Adam Smith and
neoclassical economics)
Gifts (express love)
Crimes (express hate)
7
What does it mean to love your neighbor as
yourself?
  • Since we naturally love ourselves, the purpose of
    the Two Great Commandments is to make our loves
    ordinate
  • What as yourself means depends on whether the
    good is diminished by being shared, i.e.,
    scarce (Augustine)
  • If good is abundant, we can and must share it
    equally
  • If the good is scarce, thats impossible loving
    your neighbor as yourself cannot always mean with
    equally with yourself
  • Since you cannot do good to all, you are to pay
    special regard to those whoare brought into
    closer connection with you (De doctrina
    christiana 1,28)

8
Distributive Justice
  • Analog to personal gifts for common goods both
    are transfer payments, determined by geometric
    ratio, practically limited by scarcity (failure
    of communism)
  • Violated by political faction (James Madison)
  • A factions ideology creates a fictitious world
    (Hannah Arendt)
  • Collectivists tend to reduce justice to
    distributive justice (as if all goods were
    common)
  • Individualists tend to reduce justice to justice
    in exchange (as if all goods were personal)

9
Justice in Exchange
  • Products value (e.g., computer) producers
    income (labor and property compensation)
  • Violated by disequilibrium general inequality of
    supply and demand e.g., unemployment,
    inflation/deflation
  • Unemployment a function of labors after-tax,
    after-transfer share of total income (Rueffs
    Law)
  • Inflation/deflation imbalance between demand for
    money and money supply

10
Basic Principles of Successful (and Popular)
Economic Policy
  • General government should be funded by taxing
    labor and property income equally
  • Transfers to persons (e.g., Social Security)
    financed by taxes on labor income transfers to
    property owners (e.g., tax-free savings accounts)
    by taxes on property income
  • Borrow only to fund government-owned investments
  • Dont finance government by creating money

11
How both parties violate the basic principles
  • Both fund general government with Social Security
    surplus (labor income) Democrats to keep
    spending high, Republicans to dole out tax
    breaks, for constituents.
  • Both rely on funding government with foreign
    dollar reserves, causing commodity inflation,
    chronic budget and trade deficits.
  • Republicans want to shift tax burden for general
    government from all income to only labor income
    (e.g., tax-free savings)
  • Democrats want to subsidize Social Security
    (benefits for workers) with income tax and/or
    taxes on property income.

12
Income Shares Before and After Taxes and Transfers
13
Shares of National Income and Unemployment
14
Rueffs Law
15
Components of U.S. Net Labor Cost
16
Labor Income, Shares of Actual Potential Income
17
Actual Projected Federal Spending
18
Actual and Projected Total Fertility Rate
Year (1) Total Fertility Rate (TFR) w/ projected benefit share at 2001 incomes (2) Projected TFR with projected benefit share at projected incomes (3) Projected TFR, same as (2) without legal abortion (4) Memo TFR, SSA Trustees Intermediate Assumptions (5)   SSA Low-Cost TFR (6)   SSA High-Cost TFR
2001 actual 2.05 2.05 2.05 2.05 2.05 2.05
2025 est. 1.98 1.87 2.51 1.95 2.18 1.74
2050 est. 1.92 1.73 2.35 1.95 2.20 1.70
2075 est. 1.87 1.60 2.22 1.95 2.20 1.70
19
Actual and Projected Net Labor Cost and
Unemployment Rates
20
Social Spending and Fertility
21
National Saving and Fertility
22
Worship and Fertility
23
Fertility Predicted vs. Actual
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