Time to shed those fuzzy
fallacies and fairy tales
ARE the groves of academe more idyllic
than the business world?
Are cars making our life more
comfortable?
Most people probably would answer
“yes?to both questions.
But wait. Heed the cheerful warnings
of Thomas Sowell in “Economic
Facts and Fallacies,?published this
year by Basic Books. Sowell is scholarin-
residence at the Hoover Institution
at Stanford University.
Professors in the United States often
don’t have students?best interests at
heart, says Sowell.
Indeed, once they have tenure, they
can’t be fired.
This is the case in many
other countries.
Sowell is especially candid when
he reveals that American professors
sometimes abuse their power, sometimes
choosing textbooks based on
kickbacks from publishers.
Oops. I never knew some American
professors would play this trick.
I thought Chinese professors had the
“patent?on trading their souls for
money, until I read “Economic Facts
and Fallacies.?
Sowell’s book, written with great style
and economic insight, is a wake-up call
for us to be on guard against the sloppy
thinking that passes for wisdom.
The fallacy about the “idyllic groves
of the academe?results mainly from
information asymmetry ?outsiders
don’t know as well as the insiders how
a university is really run.
While a fallacy resulting from information
asymmetry is understandable,
a “fallacy of composition,?as Sowell
calls it, shows human stupidity that should have been easily overcome.
Nowadays many people in China prefer
to have a private car in the belief that
it will make life more comfortable.
And many local policy makers support
this fallacy with another fallacy:
Roads can always be broadened to accommodate
more cars.
This is a typical fallacy of composition,
which confuses the attributes of a
part with those of the whole entity.
Yes, you are more comfortable if
you alone drive in an empty or not-socrowded
street. Yes, you can broaden
a street to accommodate a few more
cars.
But when everyone drives a car and
every street has been expanded to its
limit, your life gets worse ?you can’t
move easily, you lose mobility.
“Many desirable things are advocated
without regard to the most
fundamental fact of economics, that
resources are inherently limited and
have alternative uses,?Sowell says.
If an American professor is worried
about his country’s limited resources,
a Chinese professor has all the more
reason to be worried, because China’s
population more than triples that of
America and China has more nonarable
land than America.
However, many Chinese professors
have encouraged families to buy
apartments and have regarded private
cars as an engine of China’s economic
growth.
While those Chinese “economists?
may have deliberately spread such
false ideas to suit their private agendas,
it is extraordinary that the general
public has been so willing to accept
them without critical examination, or
basic common sense.
Media has played a notorious role in
perpetuating misconceptions, Sowell
says.
I can’t agree with him more.
Lacking the ability (or the willingness)
to think clearly and critically
has led many journalists ?Chinese
and foreign ?to sell fallacies to the
public.
Yesterday I read an article in a major
local newspaper in Shanghai, alleging
that “there would be a new round of price
hikes for dairy powder next month.?
This statement sounded as though
the whole dairy industry would witness
further price jumps.
But the story
later explained that only Nestle and a
very few other brands have decided to
raise prices.
Flip through any Chinese newspaper
and the chances are that you
will find one fallacious statement or
conclusion after another.
A common problem, according to
Sowell, is the “open-ended fallacy,?
which extrapolates from limited data.
Can the media, the general public,
and even pundits be free of economic
fallacies? Maybe, but not everyone is
free of fallacies all the time.
Even Sowell suffers from sort
of a fallacy. For example, he says:
“Throughout history, the world
has abounded with differences
that are today called ‘disparities?
or ‘inequalities,?even in situations
where they cannot be explained by
discrimination.?
Well, this implies that we have no
reason to worry about those differences
today because they were there
in history. Indeed, there’s nothing new
under the sun.
But people’s minds and attitudes
change. What was moral 1,000 years
ago may not be so now.
It’s indeed difficult to be free of fallacies,
but Sowell’s book is a guide in
one’s search for wisdom.
--Wang Yong |