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By News Staff | June 19th 2008 07:30 AM | 4 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
When six day care centers imposed a fine on parents who picked their children up late, tardiness doubled and it stayed high even when the fine was removed.

How can it be that a financial penalty made the problem worse? Parents, it seems, stopped seeing lateness as an imposition on teachers, and instead saw it as something that could be purchased with no moral failing.

A basic tenet of economics is that people always behave selfishly, or as the 18th century philosopher economist David Hume put it, "every man ought to be supposed to be a knave."

But what if some people aren't always knaves?

Sam Bowles argues in Science that economics will get it wrong and sometimes badly so. He points to new experimental evidence that people do often act against their own personal self-interest in favor of the common good, and they do so in predictable, understandable ways. Poorly-designed economic institutions fail to take advantage of intrinsic moral behavior and often undermine it.

Another example is a study this year which showed that women donated blood less frequently when they were paid for it than when it was an act of charity.

These examples show that economists ignore human altruism at their peril. Standard economic theory assumes that incentives that appeal to self-interest won't affect any natural altruism that may exist, but that assumption is clearly wrong. Bowles discusses the research to date that helps to explain when and why that assumption breaks down.

As the world becomes more interconnected and the resulting challenges to humanity increase, learning to harness these altruistic impulses becomes even more important, Bowles says.

So the economists' "holy grail," to learn to design institutions and policies to direct the selfish impulses of individuals to public ends, "will be necessary but insufficient," Bowles says. "The moral nature of humans must also be recognized, cultivated, and empowered."

Comments

this ties quite well to the opinions about changing the laws of organ donation and purchase.

the theory was that people would demand money for organs of dead relatives if they could get money from them alive, making the organ shortage worse.

and we all want multiple redundant organs so we can live forever.

Hank's picture
It sounds true. If you inject money as a variable into an equation, it will become important. If my live organs have value, why don't my dead ones?

Want them to stay societal good? Don't allow sale - and have a lot less of them. Want to have lots of organs? Make them available.

I am for choice 3. We can practically grow replacement parts inside pigs or something similar now. If we can make 100% compatible parts from our own cells it eliminates the societal issue about organ harvesting, live or dead.

Gerhard Adam's picture
Doesn't this article actually suggest that it is a serious error to treat corporations with the status of "individuals" according to the law? Since, by definition, a corporation will act to promote its own self-interest and more specifically the monetary interests of its investors, then this article suggests that this will result in more, not less, immoral behavior. Isn't this precisely the behavior we see where a corporation may be a polluter (which clearly acts against the interest of all its representatives) and yet the action is viewed in a strictly monetary sense, so that there is no moralism attached to the decisions being made. It seems to me that there is far too much emphasis on individual behaviors and not enough study in the dynamics of large groups and social organisms.
Greetings. I would like to enter the following for consideration here:
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/07182008/transcript4.html

When I think the problem is tough, like the greed of capitalism, I open my mind up, way up, for new insights. Hope you will find it helpful.

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