Theme: Institution

  • **IEA THINKS TAXIS ARE NOT A PUBLIC GOOD** April 17th, 2010 Over on the IEA Blog

    **IEA THINKS TAXIS ARE NOT A PUBLIC GOOD**

    April 17th, 2010

    Over on the IEA Blog, Eric Masaba asks the question: Why do black cabs cost more than Concorde?

    I couldn’t point out ALL the holes in this article, because the IEA blog limits the number of characters per comment. I find the argument for the virtue of brevity a ‘cute’ one because affirmations are the most brief of comments, while refutations are the longest.

    The state subsidizes the ‘Black Cabs’ of London.

    Hackney cab drivers inexplicably enjoy a rule stating that no one else can describe a taxi service as a “taxi” in their marketing, and the important restriction that no one else can pick up passengers on the street. These regulations have deep historical foundations, dating back to the days of Dick Turpin. In today’s world, they are anachronistic, anti-competitive and pointless.

    London cab drivers are a pleasure to deal with. They are an intrinsic part of the tourist trade. The Danes pay an entire social class to stay home so that the average clerk in a train station is educated, literate, well mannered, and a pleasure to deal with.

    When there are price comparison sites for insurance, airlines, hotels, holidays and office supplies, where we can buy the same product from a myriad of suppliers at different prices, how is it that there are very strict rules requiring that Hackney drivers receive a minimum wage for every mile driven yet private hire drivers do not?

    Because the market is an unlimited physical space and the streets of London are a limited physical space (and the tube is a monopolized space. And therefore Cabs require a very simple set of regulations in order to maintain quality.

    Why is it good for certain stripes of taxi driver to be able to oblige people in London to pay higher rates than the market would support if such a law was not in place?

    Why is it a good for the state to regulate any kind of competition?

    Why do the same drivers, who expect to be able to choose what clothes they wear (and how much they pay for them) and which airlines and car insurance firms they use, want to deny travellers in London the basic freedom to choose another vehicle service they can hail at the airport or on the street?

    They don’t. You can hire a car from the airport. You just can’t pick someone up on the street.

    If people want to pay for the superior knowledge that the Hackney drivers clearly possess, they will do so. If they do not care, they will find cheaper alternatives until the market has informed the black-cab community what customers really think and what price they are willing to pay.

    They are not paying for the knowledge. The state is using a knowledge criteria to create a hurdle for market entry. Just like they do for just about every kind of specialist.

    Many people are disgusted with the special treatment bankers received, but through the price controls and regulations on taxis in London, transport markets are being distorted to favour one type of vehicle provider.

    Bankers recieved special treatment because the state printed money without regulating it and forced banks either to compete for profits or to go out of business. This process of moral hazard created large banks that are pseudo governmental agencies, that were so responsible for subsidizing the national payroll and cash disribution and management system that if they were not rescued then the crash would have been worse. On the other hand, the state CREATED the moral hazard. But it did not have to. The problem has been that creating the ‘rules’ of the fair game in banking (defining the properties of property and it’s rules of transfer) has become extraordinarily complex because the object of definition has become exceedingly plastic. Derivatives and new financial instruments were a new form of property that many of us decried at the time, but that was unregulated because both the state and the purveyors of these new devices foolishly bought the argument that it was possible to insure that kind of risk, and secondly, because

    So, I have to disagree with the IEA’s position. Travel to NYC, Chicago, LA and ask yourself if the London policy is better or worse for everyone involved. And if we subsidize transportation like subways why cant we subsidize Cabs. If price is a concern, then If you want another choice, call a less expensive cab company on your cell phone. Prices aren’t everything. In fact, low prices and full competition in a market often accomplishes the lowest cost service at the lowest quality that is tolerable by consumers, and bars quality from availability within a geography. (Home Depot and Walmart in the US, and superstores versus butchers, bakers and the like in Europe). I am happy that superstores exist to provide additional choice, but only if there is a replacement ‘tax’ for using them by distancing them.

    From this simple analogy of taxis and tubes versus superstores and specialty stores, we can illustrate that reduced prices and a free market within geographic boundaries produce commodities, and thereby prevent societies from capitalizing long term values of aesthetics, choice, and the ’special’ environments we adore across all of europe in favor of a bland, disposable environment.

    We restrain competition in order to raise prices and therefore concentrate capital and we do it in many ways: political subsidy (money transfers like taxation, redistribution, and outright subsidy) constraining the market by qualification (lawyers, doctors and london cabbies), and constraining the market with monopolies (public transportation like Tubes and Buses).

    We unrestrain the market to reverse the concentration of capital and to reduce prices, and we do it in many ways: political subsidy of

    The natural order of man is to attempt to circumvent the market. The free market is a byproduct of the civic republican tradition’s advocacy of meritocratic equality. It is a rebellious movement against the control of markets and the expropriation of wealth by the state. Markets are a solution to corruption that asks us to create fair competition among equals and to maintain that set of ‘rules’ we call “competition in the market”.

    However, the natural behavior of man is to circumvent that market. The means by which he circumvents it are those tools we consider fair market competition: reducing prices, increasing choices, advertising and marketing. Not all cultures have taken this route. In fact, in history, the free market is an exception that concentrates wealth in hte hands of the monied, productive and creative minority. THis concentration benefits all by decreasing prices for nearly everyone. It limits the power of capitalists as long as there is enough money in circulation to create inexpensive competition.

    But since the culture or state determines the definitions of property (the means of calculating the use of opportunities to act) the rules for any ‘game’ are particular to that game. Rules are not universal to all games. They are plastic. And this comparison of Taxis to Tubes is perhaps one of the best ways to illustrate that these rules are inconsistent.

    But what may not be obvious is the DISTORTION that is created by the myth that rules must be equal for some things and unequal for others. Or, that lowest prices are the ultimate virtue to be sought by economsts and political economists.

    As a libertarian, I care that the choices available to me are not constrained by

    Concentrating capital attracts talent to the private sector where it is skimmed by private individuals, and those who lack talent to the public sector where it is skimmed by bureaucracy. Yet this is what most cultures seek to impose: expropriation by the bureaucracy.

    WE also constrain capitalists, and unconstrain capitalists. Capitalists can temporarily distort a market by applying capital that profits one company or anotther, requiring competitors to rely upon capital or depart. They can do this by simply extending debt, so that prices may be decreased in the anticipation of driving competition out of the market, and later increasing their share of the market as these competitors disappear. the problem with this technique is that talent accumulated in the industry is sometimes forced out. Niches are abandoned (the wall mart and home depot effect).

    The state acts like a disruptive capitalist creating temporary price decreases in return for decreased niche services, and in doing so makes it impossible to concentrate capital in niche excellences. It makes it impossible to subsidize a public good: choice of the more expensive, better, prettier.

    The purpose of the London cabbie is largely to create a public ‘good’. It enforces quality so that quality personnel can afford to work in the industry (rather than the horrid service, delivered by the filthy, ignorant and incompetent in US cities).

    Prices would drive down quality, and all that will happen is that you will need additional regulation to managed an impoverished and corrupt network of marginal businesses that deliver cheap but intolerable service that prevents quality competition from competing in the market.

    If you are willing to spend money on the tube. You have no argument against spending money to maintain a quality system of taxis. Just because market mechanics are POSSIBLE for taxis and IMPOSSIBLE for tubes, that doesn’t mean that taxis are not serving the same function as tubes.

    Lowest costs does not generally create a good. It creates a marginal enterprise.

    Aesthetics are forms of capital that are perhaps, the best investment that any civilization can make.

    For a country like the UK, whose history is an industry, you’d think that such a principle would be better understood. For a country that is creating demand through immigration, cash by selling off it’s assets, and the illusion of prosperity by dilution, inflation and redistribution, rather than by increases in productivity, it is understandable why a myth of exceptionalism would be a useful distraction from the fact that the UK is selling off its exceptionalism and it’s heritage, and would do even more so along with it’s taxi subsidies.

    Prices alone do not a world make. The purpose of the market is exploration. The purpose of unbridled market is prevent government exploitation. THe purpose of the regulated market is to capitalize SOMETHING for a social good. And not all social goods are consumables. Some social goods capitalize distortions to create beauty, which is a high return for a society, as all monuments, arts and architecture demonstrate.

    So, instead of universally pursuing consumption as an ultimate good. Instead of the keynesian virtue of spending. Perhaps we should balance our capitalist strategy with the art of saving. It took english civilization a very long time to create a culture of saving, and the institution of interest, so that the middle aged could save until they were old, and the old could lend to the young, in a virtuous cycle of investment that distributed the risk of long term calculation across a vast number of people, and wherein retirement security was an insurance scheme for the underclass rather than a mandate of the majority. This virtuous cycle was undermined. Perhaps we should return to it, and to other forms of capitalizing our civilization, so that we leave something behind for our heirs rather than the record of a visitation by locusts.

    Subsidizing quality is the entire point of aesthetics and the arts. And capitalizing everything from street signs, to cabbies to historic buildings to libraries and museums is an antidote to anti-historicism.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-16 08:57:00 UTC

  • **A DECIDEDLY CHRISTIAN SET OF LAWS IN 1603 **December 9th, 2010 I hadn’t read H

    **A DECIDEDLY CHRISTIAN SET OF LAWS IN 1603

    **December 9th, 2010

    I hadn’t read Hugo Grotius’ Commentary before today. It is an interesting attempt to provide a coherent set of legal principles. Even if it is just very simply a recitation of Biblical principles with european legal conventions.

    I would never agree to place such faith in Magistrates, or any other officer of the state. They are only human beings, and not exceptional human beings at that.

    I give my violence to the state to use justly on my behalf, so that I may spend my time in other activities, in our division of knowledge and labor. That does not mean that it has the ability to act justly on my behalf, or the will to act justly on my behalf, nor has it demonstrated that it has the tendency to act justly on my behalf. I do not believe that any officer of the state is better equipped to make judgements over property than I am. And those are the only judgements a man need know. If he must do other than that, he submits to servitude.

    Now, once we possess a significant market, we must have administrators, and regulators of that market, and citizens who adhere to the manners, morals, ethics, taxes and regulations that prevent fraud, theft, and violence within that market, are it’s shareholders. Those shareholders will often seek to escape payment, or to transfer liability and risk onto others, or to draw more than their earnings from the corporation of the market that we call the state. I recognize that such thefts are invisible to men without the adminstration of the state to monitor them. As such, I agree that we must have courts and jurors.

    However, should these men, in the observance of their duties, abridge the laws of property, of theft, of violence, or fraud and deception in the course of their duties — even if it is to pursue just ends, or if such men, in the name of ease, or efficiency, or laziness or stupidity, or most importantly, the fallacy of just democratic law making, then I do not allow them to use my violence on my behalf, to seek reparation from my fellow men. And instead, I must withdraw my violence from the account of the state, and use it at my own discretion.

    Commentary on the Law of Prize and Booty [1603]

    by Hugo Grotius

    Table Of Rules And Laws Compiled From Chapter II Of The Commentary

    **Rules**

    rule i. What God has shown to be His Will, that is law.

    rule ii. What the common consent of mankind has shown to be the will of all, that is law.

    rule iii. What each individual has indicated to be his will, that is law with respect to him.

    rule iv. What the commonwealth has indicated to be its will, that is law for the whole body of citizens.

    rule v. What the commonwealth has indicated to be its will, that is law for the individual citizens in their mutual relations.

    rule vi. What the magistrate has indicated to be his will, that is law in regard to the whole body of citizens.

    rule vii. What the magistrate has indicated to be his will, that is law in regard to the citizens as individuals.

    rule viii. Whatever all states have indicated to be their will, that is law in regard to all of them.

    rule ix. In regard to judicial procedure, precedence shall be given to the state which is the defendant, or whose citizen is the defendant; but if the said state proves remiss in the discharge of its judicial duty, then that state shall be the judge, which is itself the plaintiff, or whose citizen is the plaintiff.

    **Laws**

    law i. It shall be permissible to defend [one’s own] life and to shun that which threatens to prove injurious.

    law ii. It shall be permissible to acquire for oneself, and to retain, those things which are useful for life.

    law iii. Let no one inflict injury upon his fellow.

    law iv. Let no one seize possession of that which has been taken into the possession of another.

    law v. Evil deeds must be corrected.

    law vi. Good deeds must be recompensed.

    law vii. Individual citizens should not only refrain from injuring other citizens, but should furthermore protect them, both as a whole and as individuals.

    law viii. Citizens should not only refrain from seizing one another’s possessions, whether these be held privately or in common, but should furthermore contribute individually both that which is necessary to [other] individuals and that which is necessary to the whole.

    law ix. No citizen shall seek to enforce his own right against a fellow citizen, save by judicial procedure.

    law x. The magistrate shall act in all matters for the good of the state.

    law xi. The state shall uphold as valid every act of the magistrate.

    law xii. Neither the state nor any citizen thereof shall seek to enforce his own right against another state or its citizens, save by judicial procedure.

    law xiii. In cases where [the laws] can be observed simultaneously, let them [all] be observed; when this is impossible, the law of superior rank shall prevail.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-16 08:45:00 UTC

  • think of this as an opportunity to move everyone to the institute page. The only

    think of this as an opportunity to move everyone to the institute page.

    The only real work is reloading the historical data.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-15 20:57:42 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1162106110167396365

  • think of this as an opportunity to move everyone to the institute page. The only

    think of this as an opportunity to move everyone to the institute page.

    The only real work is reloading the historical data.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-15 16:57:00 UTC

  • A lawyer from NYC, and donor, contacted the Institute and explained that Nick Da

    A lawyer from NYC, and donor, contacted the Institute and explained that Nick Dalheim has a criminal background, and no association with him is in her profession is tolerable. I presume the… https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=449023449027884&id=100017606988153


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-15 14:59:18 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1162015918563704832

  • Really? interesting. Then why did all ancient peoples who survived build granari

    Really? interesting. Then why did all ancient peoples who survived build granaries? Why did temples exist? (banks).


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-12 20:35:34 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1161013378325852160

    Reply addressees: @Utleyjacobite @BestyDevosEd @joffiecakes @Boneist @NoahRevoy

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1161007760701644802


    IN REPLY TO:

    Original post on X

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    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1161007760701644802

  • “Most people” is empirically false by every measure. They like full integration

    “Most people” is empirically false by every measure. They like full integration with preservation of food and festival – not religion, politics, language, dress and law that compete with or conflict with the american and western civilizational strategy. (No socialism / islamism).


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-09 13:02:36 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1159812223075794954

    Reply addressees: @Soothsa48725402

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1159718140546338817


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    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1159718140546338817

  • I’ve followed Jon for a long time, and his work has helped me with mine. He crea

    I’ve followed Jon for a long time, and his work has helped me with mine. He creates value from his position popular, intellectual, and organizational. My criticism is of the public virtue signaling – same for all the center-left Jewish authors (Pinker etc) – it’s not their work.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-09 01:28:40 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1159637585549058048

    Reply addressees: @tomfcreo @JonHaidt

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1159634210463735808


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  • @beoran A “Free City” was ‘free” by permission. Period. They were granted limite

    @beoran A “Free City” was ‘free” by permission. Period. They were granted limited autonomy, as a means of increasing revenues to the ruling aristocracy, and limiting the costs of administration by the state. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_imperial_city

    They weren’t a check. They were just sufficiently organized with capital in sufficient concentration that the empire didn’t need to govern ( render justice) in them in order to produce order and ’empty the woods of brigands”. This is partly because those free cities were founded by the nobility and had their own arms and justice.


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-07 20:03:24 UTC

    Original post: https://gab.com/curtd/posts/102577484833421618

  • “Don’t you think Putin will leave the presidency first, and there won’t be anyon

    —“Don’t you think Putin will leave the presidency first, and there won’t be anyone left to overthrow?

    It’s not about Putin — it’s about the system. Putin is just a brand, a label for the system. Putin will sit there until he’s done his time, and then the system will grow another Putin. A successor who will really be the same old Putin in practice, just under another name.

    Isn’t it Putin who makes the key decisions in that system?

    Yeah, it’s Putin. But the system will create another person who will let it be just as much of a parasite feeding on the neck of the Russian people. I personally believe that we will live to see happier times, though.”—


    Source date (UTC): 2019-08-07 15:51:11 UTC

    Original post: https://gab.com/curtd/posts/102576493128344321