Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
Wealthier Than Thou
7
8
What do people really care
9
about: being rich, or being richer than their neighbors?
10
11
Of course, people care about
12
a lot of things that have nothing to do with being rich. Just by logging on to
13
Slate instead of using this time to earn an extra dollar, you've refuted the
14
proposition that people pursue wealth the way sharks pursue food. Instead, we
15
compromise between the pursuit of wealth and the pursuit of leisure, sometimes
16
accepting less of one so we can have more of the other.
17
18
Besides
19
wealth and leisure, there's a long list of other things we value. We like to
20
avoid risk; we care about the qualities of our mates; we want our children to
21
be happy. But wealth is one of the things we strive for, so it makes
22
sense to ask how we measure success in that dimension.
23
24
One hypothesis is that it's only your raw wealth that
25
matters--a million dollars will make you happy regardless of whether it's half
26
or twice what your neighbor has. In other words, you measure the value of your
27
wealth by what you can buy with it. The alternative hypothesis is that you also
28
care about your place in the pecking order.
29
30
If only raw wealth matters,
31
your hard-working neighbor is no threat to you. He keeps what he earns, you
32
keep what you earn, and you can each decide whether you'd rather earn more
33
money or enjoy more leisure. On the other hand, if people care about the
34
pecking order, you and your neighbor can get involved in a costly and futile
35
"arms race," sacrificing valuable leisure in your mutually frustrating efforts
36
to be the top earner on the block.
37
38
To put
39
this in perspective, imagine that we could all agree to take an hour off from
40
work this week. Under the "raw wealth" hypothesis, there's no advantage to that
41
agreement. After all, you were always free to take an hour off. But
42
under the "pecking order" hypothesis, the agreement could serve as a sort of
43
"arms control" that leaves everyone better off by preserving our relative
44
positions while freeing up some extra time for leisure. But any such agreement
45
would be impossible to enforce, which (if the "pecking order" hypothesis is
46
true) is a failure of the marketplace.
47
48
49
Which hypothesis is true? Economists
50
traditionally have assumed that relative position does not matter, and
51
noneconomists traditionally have scoffed at that assumption. The scoffers point
52
to medieval monarchs who earned less (in real terms) than today's average
53
American; nevertheless, by the standards of their contemporaries, they
54
lived--literally--like kings. It's easy to imagine that ruling all of
55
15 th -century England brought greater satisfaction than does, say,
56
the life of a modern certified public accountant.
57
58
But when
59
something is easy to imagine, it's often because your imagination is limited.
60
In this case, your vision probably has neglected to include the disease,
61
monotony, and isolation of medieval life. I think it not at all unlikely that
62
Henry V would have traded his kingdom for modern plumbing, antibiotics, and
63
access to the Internet.
64
65
Here's another reason to be skeptical of the hypothesis
66
that people care deeply about how their income compares with others': I've
67
never met anyone who subscribes to the analogous theories about leisure or
68
risk. Do you care about the length of your vacation, or about whether your
69
vacation is longer than your neighbor's? Do you care about how well your air
70
bag works, or about whether you've got the best air bag in your neighborhood?
71
In each case, surely it's the former. But if we feel that way about leisure and
72
risk, why would we not feel that way about income?
73
74
On the
75
other hand, if you really believe that people care about wealth only for what
76
it will buy them, it's hard to explain why Bill Gates gets up and goes to work
77
in the morning. Surely it's not because he's afraid he'll run out of money? But
78
it just might be because he's afraid he'll lose his No. 1 ranking in the Forbes
79
400. (Though here I'm tempted to respond that it's a mistake to generalize
80
about human behavior on the basis of a few extraordinary individuals who
81
probably--and quite atypically--love their work.)
82
83
84
Recently, three economists named Harold Cole,
85
George Mailath, and Andrew Postlewaite (for whom I will use the collective
86
abbreviation CMP) have proposed a compromise between the two theories: On the
87
one hand, people do not care directly about their relative positions in
88
the wealth distribution. On the other hand, they care indirectly about
89
their relative positions, because a high relative position allows you to
90
attract a better mate.
91
92
The CMP theory sounds very
93
simple, but it has some remarkable implications. First, it implies that the
94
competition for mates drives most people to save too much money. Young people
95
oversave in an attempt to improve their own prospects, and old people
96
oversave in an attempt to improve their children's prospects. If
97
everyone could agree to save a little less, we'd all be better off: Our
98
relative mating-game scores would be unchanged, but we'd all have more money to
99
spend. And yet, while this "oversaving" is costly to any given generation, it
100
enriches future generations.
101
102
When
103
people compete by saving, the rich have a head start. So the CMP theory
104
suggests that income inequality should grow over time. But if inequality
105
becomes so great that people lose all hope of changing their relative
106
positions, then the incentive to oversave disappears, and the inequality could
107
begin to shrink.
108
109
The most striking implication of the CMP theory is that the
110
concern for relative position vanishes in societies where mates are allocated
111
by mechanisms other than wealth. Imagine an aristocracy, where your social
112
status is inherited from your parents and dictates your choice of mate. Such an
113
aristocracy might not be sustainable. People with low status and high wealth
114
can prove attractive to people with high status and low wealth, whereupon the
115
entire social structure disintegrates. Even families with low status and
116
low wealth might be able to save aggressively for several generations in
117
order to buy their way into the aristocracy, and again there is an eventual
118
breakdown.
119
120
But the
121
CMP researchers have identified a way for an aristocracy to be sustained
122
indefinitely. Mixed (high status-low status) marriages can be effectively
123
deterred in a society where the children of such marriages are relegated to the
124
lowest status of all. In that case, a low-status man who wants to crack the
125
social barriers (and who cares about his offspring) must save enough to
126
purchase high-status mates for both himself and his children. CMP have
127
demonstrated that to succeed, such social rebels would have to achieve
128
impossibly high savings rates--so the aristocracy endures.
129
130
131
Now here is the punch line: Imagine two
132
societies that are identical in all the ways that economists traditionally view
133
as important. They have identical populations. They have access to identical
134
technologies. Their people have exactly the same preferences in all things. But
135
in Society A, you attract your mate by wealth, and in Society B, you attract
136
your mate by inherited status. Then the standards of living in these societies
137
will differ dramatically and diverge dramatically over time, because they offer
138
different incentives to save--and saving is one of the twin engines of economic
139
growth. (The other engine is technological progress, which we've assumed is the
140
same in both societies.)
141
142
The moral of the story is
143
that cultural norms are extremely important. Of course, one could argue that
144
everyone except economists knew this all along. But the CMP research
145
demonstrates something genuinely new: that cultural norms can be extremely
146
important even if we accept all the standard simplifying assumptions
147
that economists like to make about human behavior.
148
149
We can go further, imagining
150
societies where status is conferred not by accidents of birth but by learning,
151
or by physical strength, or by darkness of complexion. Clearly any one of these
152
societies will evolve very differently from all the others. But what makes them
153
differ in the first place? Part of the answer, according to the logic of CMP,
154
is that once a cultural norm is established--even for purely random reasons--it
155
can become self-sustaining. Ideally, though, we'd like a coherent account of
156
those "purely random reasons"--and I'm not sure anyone knows how to think about
157
that.
158
159
160
161
162
163