A relative recently sent me a snippet
from a radio show (rhymes with Tarm Song and Smetty) in which they
promote the idea that the "free market" can replace most
government regulation via organizations like Consumer Reports and
web-based consumer rating agencies.
The argument that private consumer
organizations can get sued if they screw up is questionable. If they
fail to detect bacteria in milk and millions get sick, for example,
are they liable? Most likely there will be a tiny disclaimer at the
bottom of their legal statement that limits their legal risk.
Further, it would be expensive for
consumer reports etc. to inspect every milk factory. Currently they
only test one or a few product samples overall for their reviews.
Also note that dairies pay inspection fees to the government; it
generally doesn't come out of citizen's pockets as income taxes;
although may increase the price of the milk itself as companies pass
on the fees in their price.
I've never heard a consumer service
perform such a service at a large scale. It may make for an
interesting experiment, but please try it on something less risky
than food first. I'm all for testing new ideas, but don't start out
with the Big Kahuna.
As far as financial rating agencies,
many existing agencies gave the banks who were purchasing suspect
home mortgages high marks before the mortgage melt-down. Here's a
quote from an article related to Moody's mortgage-related ratings:
CEO Raymond McDaniel said in written remarks released ahead of his testimony that he was "deeply disappointed" by the performance of the credit ratings issued by Moody's for complex bonds called mortgage-backed securities.
"Moody's is certainly not satisfied with the performance of [our] ratings. Indeed, over the past few years, there has been an intense level of self evaluation within the organization," said McDaniel, the CEO and chairman of a once proud company that has seen its share value slide down with its reputation.
Another example given of alleged excess
regulation is "regular" restaurants banning hot-dog stands
selling meals near themselves because they don't want the
competition. That may be a case of crony capitalism. Restaurants may
be influencing local officials to keep hotdog stands out of their
area. If you have a way to fix crony capitalism, I'm all ears. Voters
typically don't look into those details close enough unless they
"blow up" in the press; and the vast majority of the
details don't.
You might say, "just don't have
ANY regulations about where people can sell food, then the crony
capitalists (such as fixed-location restaurants) can't bribe away
competition." However, there are likely many unintended
consequences of such an over-arching law.
For example, traffic congestion near
high-traffic hotdog vendors or already-full streets. Most new brick-and-mortar
businesses are required to demonstrate they have sufficient parking
facilities so that cars don't spill over into other areas. (And I've
witnessed the annoying problems when they guess wrong.) Or what if
hot-dog grease ends up being dumped all over the pavement with no
trace of who dumped it, causing skids, slips, and deaths.
And if a fly-by-night push-cart stand poisons you and your children with bad meat, you may not even be able to find the company or owner to sue. You can't sue somebody you can't find. It's harder for a brick building renter to skip town. (It's also hard to sue if you are dead.)
And if a fly-by-night push-cart stand poisons you and your children with bad meat, you may not even be able to find the company or owner to sue. You can't sue somebody you can't find. It's harder for a brick building renter to skip town. (It's also hard to sue if you are dead.)
Again, I'm all for testing ideas, but
the result is not likely to be what conservatives think they will be.
They live in an idealistic dream-world. Many a town have passed
zoning laws as a result of organizations abusing the system. Yes, some
such laws and regulations are stupid and worthy of ridicule. But
that's not a reason to toss all laws.
If 10% are bad, does that mean we
should toss 100%? That's not rational. Fox News and Friends will keep
emphasizing the 10% silly laws in an effort to rid all because the
plutocrats pay them to say that. They cherry-pick their evidence and
scenarios to paint an unbalanced picture of regulation. You don't
hear about the majority of good regulations.
In the program, the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is allegedly withholding useful new medications
because they are a "slow and bureaucratic" organization.
I've heard complaints both ways regarding when to approve the drugs.
There have been medications that were allegedly released too early,
such as Vioxx, which resulted in potential injury and death. Weighing
the risk is a delicate balance.
Some want individuals to be able to
accept the risks themselves; to purchase whatever risky product or
service they wish. However, society may just end up taking care of
people who screw themselves up, becoming lame zombies, creating
higher insurance rates for us all; and a society perhaps too crippled
or hobbled to work.
Many conservatives want Social
Darwinism where those who make consumption mistakes are just left to
die in the street and as a society we just leave their corpses there
to rot as punishment for their mistakes. (Maybe that's what they'll
make the hotdogs out of.) However, that's not the kind of society I
personally want and I won't vote for that. It would also create a
spreading sociopathic moral rot.
I doubt it would be economically
efficient either because people on average would waste all their
resources recovering from preventable mistakes. We'd be both an
economic dead zone and a bunch of twisted sociopaths that nobody
would want to be associated with.
Before the FDA was formed, a company
once sold a successful weight loss pill. It turned out the pills had
tape-worm spores in them.
(See also our 5/3/2010 article on
regulation & efficiency)