Title: Democracy is Overrated
1Democracy is Overrated
X
- Michael Munger
- Duke University
- November 7, 2005
2Key Elements of Public Choice
- Methodological Individualism
- Aggregation
- Consequence, not Intention
- Disagreement
- Self-interest
- Institutions and Organizations
3THE Key Element
- Difference between Samuelsonian public goods
problem and the problem of making choices
collectively - Information, tastes, and culture
- Institutional design
- Collective choices
4Collective v. Public
5I. Information, Tastes, and Culture
- The peculiar character of the problem of a
rational economic order is determined precisely
by the fact that the knowledge of the
circumstances of which we must make use never
exists in concentrated or integrated form but
solely as the dispersed bits of incomplete and
frequently contradictory knowledge which all the
separate individuals possess. The economic
problem of society is thus not merely a problem
of how to allocate "given" resourcesif "given"
is taken to mean given to a single mind which
deliberately solves the problem set by these
"data." It is rather a problem of how to secure
the best use of resources known to any of the
members of society, for ends whose relative
importance only these individuals know. Or, to
put it briefly, it is a problem of the
utilization of knowledge which is not given to
anyone in its totality. (F.A. Hayek, 1945, AER).
6The Right Thing
- There may not be any one right thing to do. It
depends. - It is the nature of collective choices that they
are unitary One defense budget, one standard
for pollution, and so on. - Asking What Will We Do? begs the question. The
real question is - Why Do You Think There is a We?
- Buchanan and Tullocks Two Levels Cant let
the majority decide what the majority gets to
decide
7My Plan Your Plan ? Our PlanSocialist
Calculation Debate
- This is not a dispute about whether planning is
to be done or not. It is a dispute as to whether
planning is to be done centrally, by one
authority for the whole economic system, or is to
be divided among many individuals. Planning in
the specific sense in which the term is used in
contemporary controversy necessarily means
central planningdirection of the whole economic
system according to one unified plan.
Competition, on the other hand, means
decentralized planning by many separate persons.
The halfway house between the two, about which
many people talk but which few like when they see
it, is the delegation of planning to organized
industries, or, in other words, monopoly.
(Hayek, 1945).
8Coherence and Legitimacy
- Can a group of people who disagree come to a
consensus? How would this work? Why would we
believe that the consensus is any more than an
imperfect choice? - Do the choices of majorities tell us anything
about the right thing to do in the face of
disagreement? - Is there such a thing as the majority, which we
just have to discover through voting or some
political process? - I wantyou wantwhat do we want?
9Institutional Design
- Institutions are the humanly devised rules of the
game that shape and direct human interactions. - Institutions reduce uncertainty by shrinking the
choice set of all of the players. If the rules
are not formalized, the players spend too much
time arguing over the rules, and less time in
productive activities. The actual choice of
institutions, however, is hard, since there are
countless ways of choosing. What makes some
institutions better than others? - In particular, is democracy a good institution?
How would we know? What are the alternatives?
10Step back for a moment.The Fundamental Human
Problem(according to Munger)
- How can we construct or preserve institutions
that make individual self-interest not
inconsistent with the common good?
11Two Approaches
- Madisonian
- Ambition must be made to counteract ambition
- Rousseauvian
- Transform the self, solve the problem of amour
propre. Inscribe the law on the hearts of men.
Some preferences are better than others.
12Origins of Markets
- Differences in endowments
- Differences in preferences
- Technical cost conditions (div of labor,
economies of scale, increased dexterity,
innovations in tool design)
13Origins of Government Institutions
- Disagreement/exchange (BT)
- Capture gains from trade by reducing transactions
costs - Make public goods possible
14Origins of Government Institutions
- What if we all wanted the same thing? Would
government even be necessary? - It would. Because we do all want the same thing
more. - On disagreement, Charles IV
- My cousin Francis and I are in perfect accordhe
wants Milan and so do I.
15Madisonian Institutions
- MarketsSmiths baker
- PoliticsFederalist 51
- Men are not angels
- Men are not ruled by angels
- Ambition must be made to counteract ambition
16Democracy Unbound.Rousseau
- But it is asked how a man can be both free and
forced to conform to wills that are not his own.
How are the opponents at once free and subject to
laws they have not agreed to? - I retort that the question is wrongly put. The
citizen gives his consent to all the laws,
including those which are passed in spite of his
opposition, and even those which punish him when
he dares to break any of them. (From The Social
Contract)
17Democracy Unbound.
- When in the popular assembly a law is proposed,
what the people is asked is not exactly whether
it approves or rejects the proposal, but whether
it is in conformity with the general will, which
is their will. - When therefore the opinion that is contrary to my
own prevails, this proves neither more nor less
than that I was mistaken, and that what I thought
to be the general will was not so. - If my particular opinion had carried the day I
should have achieved the opposite of what was my
will and it is in that case that I should not
have been free.
18Loyal Opposition?
- This conception of democracy is logical. The
actions of government are driven by the people
the general will is sovereign. Opposition to the
general will is treason, and must be punished.
No need for two parties only one general will. - All those countries with Peoples Democratic
Republic of ___ were not perversions of
democracy, but examplars. That is what pure
democracy, with no limits on scope, looks like.
Cannot be otherwise. - Democracy, in and of itself, is an attractive
concept that must constitute a recipe for
tyranny, unless the scope of collective
sovereignty is strictly limited.
19Che Guevaras Man and Socialism in Cuba (1965).
- Society as a whole must become a huge
school....We can see the new man who begins to
emerge in this period of the building of
socialism. His image is as yet unfinished in
fact it will never be finished, since the process
advances parallel the development of new economic
forms. Discounting those whose lack of education
makes them tend toward the solitary road, towards
the satisfaction of their ambitions, there are
others who, even within this new picture of
over-all advances, tend to march in isolation
from the accompanying mass. What is more
important is that people become more aware every
day of the need to incorporate themselves into
society and of their own importance as motors of
that society
20Collective ChoicesWhat is truth? said jesting
Pilate, and would not stay for an answer.
- True Statements?
- Democracy means rule by the people
- Democracy is the best form of government
- The many are wiser than any one person
- Morality is defined by majorityDemocracy is a
means of discovering truth
21A movie Pure Democracy in Action
22Central Questions
- Can reasonable people differ? Can a reasonable
person oppose gay marriage? Can a reasonable
person be pro-life? Is it possible to support
the war in Iraq? - What is the basis of disagreement
- Chocolate vs. Vanilla? In politics, values. Are
they primitives? Deliberation wont help. - Different information sets? Evidence about
causes, different understandings of means-ends
relations. Deliberation might help. - Is there a fact of the matter?
23Central Questions
- Is it true that the many are wiser than any one?
Many people have argued this claim. - For it is possible that the many, no one of whom
taken singly is a sound man, may yet, taken all
together, be better than the few, not
individually, but collectively. (Aristotle,
Politics, Book I, Chapter 11) - Some important analytical support, under some
circumstances. Condorcets Jury Theorem, for
example.
24Central Questions
- The real problems of democratic choice
- Scope of government/collective power the
Buchanan problem - Information of time and place the Hayek problem
- Coherence and legitimacy The Condorcet / Arrow
problem
25Scope
- What can government decide? How would we decide
what government can decide? - What do I get to decide, by myself? What things
does my family get to decide? - Suppose a group of people want to decide
something for me, for my own good? Can they do
that? How could I stop them?
26P.J. ORourkeInformation and Scope Problems of MR
- Now, majority rule is a precious, sacred thing
worth dying for. Butlike other precious, sacred
things, such as the home and the familyit's not
only worth dying for it can make you wish you
were dead. Imagine if all of life were determined
by majority rule. Every meal would be a pizza.
Every pair of pants, even those in a Brooks
Brothers suit, would be stone-washed denim.
Celebrity diets and exercise books would be the
only thing on the shelves at the library.
Andsince women are a majority of the population,
we'd all be married to Mel Gibson. (Parliament of
Whores, 1991, p. 5).
27James Buchanan Like Hobbes, too much liberty?
- What should government be allowed to do? What
is the appropriate sphere of political action?
How large a share national product should be
available for political disposition? What sort of
political decision-structures should be adopted
at the constitutional stage? Under what
conditions and to what extent should individuals
be franchised? (Politics Without Romance.)
28Coherence and Legitimacy
- Can a group of people who disagree come to a
consensus? How would this work? Why would we
believe that the consensus is any more than an
imperfect choice? - Do the choices of majorities tell us anything
about the right thing to do? - Is there such a thing as the majority, which we
just have to discover through voting or some
political process? - I wantyou wantwhat do we want?
29Problem of the U.S. in Iraq
30Democratic Choices War in Iraq
- Youve got to help me out hereplay along!
- Preferences and beliefs, on the little card.
REALLY! Accept the premise, and act like those
are your preferences. Three choices - No war N
- Aggressive war W
- Police/political means P
31Choices War in Iraq
- One possibility isolationist variant of Powell
doctrine - N gt W gt P
- We should not get involved.
- But, if we do, we should go in with overwhelming
force. - Worst thing is to expose our troops/workers in a
limited police action, depend on the U.N.
32Choices War in Iraq
- Another possibility Rummy World
- W gt P gt N
- Iraq/Saddam is an imminent threat, will develop
WMD. - If not war, then must vigorously pursue sanctions
- Worst thing is to do nothing, relax sanctions and
let Iraq become nuclear power
33Choices War in Iraq
- Final possibility Prudent Dove
- P gt N gt W
- Let sanctions and inspections do their work,
because Iraq is a potential danger to its
neighbors and the world - We have no good claim to just war, so next best
is to do nothing - Worst thing is to use war against a nation that
has made no overt attack on the U.S.
34Choices War in Iraq
- Sowe have disagreement
- Prudent dove wants to use P, police action
- Rummy wants war
- Isolationists would prefer to stay far away from
foreign entanglements, so do nothing.
35Choices War in Iraq
- Lets use democracy, the pure kind where the
people make the choice directly. - First, lets decide whether to use force, or do
nothing. - Vote P vs. W to decide which activity is better,
and then vote that against N. That way, we are
comparing the best do something against do
nothing.
36Choices War in Iraq
- Consider what just happened. Simply by changing
the order in which we consider the alternatives,
I could generate as the winner any one of the
three alternatives. - Choosing the agenda, then, is tantamount to
choosing the outcome. - Is this just a conjurers trick, or does it tell
us something about democracy?
37Choices War in Iraq
- If there are three (or more) alternatives, and
there is disagreement, then democracy may be
radically indeterminate. - More simply, there is no correct answer to the
question, What do the people want? - In fact, some majority opposes every alternative.
38Choices War in Iraq
- Here is the problem
- I/P Rummy Prud Dove
- N W P Best
- W P N Middle
- P N W Worst
- Majority preferences
- W gt P gt N gt W
- Endless, infinite cycling over alternatives. Not
a tie, but a literal perpetual motion machine
39But this is nonsense meetings end
- That is what should terrify you meetings end,
and things get decided. The point is that we are
rarely presented with three or more alternatives.
We usually are presented with two. How are
those two chosen? - The Lawson Revolution coalitions form,
charismatic people take power. Not the will of
the people, but the force of will of some
demogogue or tyrant - If the rules matter to this extent, that means
that procedures, not preferences, determine
outcomes. And elites control procedures.
40Democracy works fine. So long as everyone agrees
- But if there is disagreement, and at least three
alternatives, then a majority opposes every
available choice. So, democracy fails us when we
need it most! - Since some choice has to be made, we are left
with an outcome that is either - Imposed (tyranny)
- Arbitrary (random or procedure-driven)
- In either case, democratic choice is chimerical
- Dictatorship with the trappings of democracy
41The worst of all worlds
- Democracy without constitutional liberalism
- 1. Rule of law, protections of property and
liberty - 2. Limits on scope of issues within the
jurisdiction of collective choice - Democracy without these is the most terrifying
kind of tyranny you can imagine. Americans, and
the West, are confused about good government.
The key is constitutional liberalism, not
democracy.
42Stability is a variable
- Politics in nations are not always stable
- Different nations have different institutions
- Those institutions are more or less effective at
different times - How do U.S. institutions serve to make our
political system more, or less, stable? How do
the institutions of other nations solve this
problem, differently?
43In our example, Iso-Powell was the culprit
Utility
Prudent Dove
Rummy
Iso-Powell
N
P
W
Intensity of War Effort
44Cannot Rely on the Conditions of the MVT to Turn
Up by Chance
- Institutions shape the choices nations make.
But - Preferences arent single-peaked
- Issues are not always one-dimensional
- Democratic institutions are likely to fail when
we need them most
45Three Histories
- Plato
- Shakespeare
- Plutarch
46Plato Democracy Means Tyranny
- Democracy is precisely the constitution out of
which tyranny comes from extreme liberty, it
seems, comes a slavery most complete and most
cruel.When a democratic city gets worthless
butlers presiding over its wine, and has drunk
too deep of libertys heady draught, then, I
think, if the rulers are not very obliging and
provide plenty of liberty, it calls them
blackguards and oligarchs and chastises themand
any who obey the rulers they trample in the dust
as willing slaves and not worth a jot.
(Republic, Book VI, 560a-564b)
47- Shakespeares Tragedy of Coriolanus Act II, Sc
3 - BOTH CITIZENS. The gods give you joy, sir,
heartily! (Exeunt citizens) - CORIOLANUS. Most sweet voices!
- Better it is to die, better to
starve, - Than crave the hire which first we
do deserve. - Why in this wolvish toge should I
stand here - To beg of Hob and Dick that do
appear - Their needless vouches? Custom
calls me to't. - What custom wills, in all things
should we do't, - The dust on antique time would lie
unswept, - And mountainous error be too highly
heap'd - For truth to o'erpeer. Rather than
fool it so, - Let the high office and the honour
go - To one that would do thus. I am
half through - The one part suffered, the other
will I do.
48ARISTIDES FROM PLUTARCHS LIVES
- Aristides being surprised and asking if
Aristides had ever done him any injury, "None at
all," said he, "neither know I the man but I am
tired of hearing him everywhere called the just."
Aristides, hearing this, is said to have made no
reply, but returned the sherd with his own name
inscribed. At his departure from the city,
lifting up his hands to heaven, he made a prayer
(the reverse, it would seem, of that of
Achilles), that the Athenians might never have
any occasion which should constrain them to
remember Aristides.