Thursday, April 24, 2008

Sowell: Subsidies and Waste

Thomas Sowell :

The Economics of College.

Costs are not just things for government to help people to pay. Costs are telling us something that is dangerous to ignore.

The inadequacy of resources to produce everything that everyone wants is the fundamental fact of life in every economy -- capitalist, socialist or feudal. This means that the real cost of anything consists of all the other things that could have been produced with those same resources.

Building a bridge means using up resources that could have been used building homes or a hospital. Going to college means using up vast amounts of resources that could be used for all sorts of other things.

Prices force people to economize. Subsidizing prices enables people to take more resources away from other uses without having to weigh the real cost.

Without market prices that convey the real costs of resources denied to alternative users, people waste.

Sowell explains why government intervention in markets usually has undesirable unintended consequences and ends up being a far less efficient way of handling the issue being addressed than would letting the market make the adjustments naturally.

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