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Submitted by admin on 1 September 2020

COVID-19 and its  collateral  damage  continue  to  leave  a  trail of devastation around the world.  Millions of businesses have closed, with many having no realistic prospect of reopening. Millions of people have lost their jobs. Millions are without health care. Some families are suffering from food insecurity for the first time. While the well-to-do can manage by using their  savings,  those  who  live  from  pay  check  to  pay  check,  or hand to mouth, are suffering unfathomable hardships.

The  pandemic  also  poses  an almost impossible problem for traditional economic thinking.  Most  economists  believe that the price mechanism will allocate resources efficiently, if not equitably, and that com-petition will maximise national income. But this assumes, crucially, that the activities of individuals or firms do not directly affect those of other agents, except through price signals in the market that indicate the scarcity of a product.

Economists refer to these effects as “externalities,” and divide them into external economies and diseconomies, depending on whether they are positive or negative. Such externalities prevent resources from being allocated efficiently.

Consider the decision whether or not to wear a face mask. In the absence of a pandemic, the demand for and sup-ply of masks reflect the benefit and cost of producing them. Mask wearers will be protected from harmful substances in the air, but will incur costs: in-convenience, some discomfort, a possible loss of physical attractiveness, and of course the price of the mask. The market will equate the benefit and the cost, and scarce resources will be used in adequate amounts.

But this is not  the  case  when externalities exist, as with COVID-19.  Today, wearing  a  mask will deliver many benefits beyond those to the individual mask  wearer.  If  the  wearer  is  infected, the mask will prevent transmission of the coronavirus to friends, and further to friends of friends.

Here, the market fails, be-cause the benefit of wearing a mask  is  far  higher  than  what  a  single  individual  would  estimate for themselves. National or municipal governments must therefore intervene and make it mandatory for all  residents  to wear one.

By  requiring  everyone  to  wear a mask, rather than leaving  the  decision  to  personal  choice,  a  community  can  better protect itself from the substantial  ravages  and  suffering  caused  by  COVID-19.  I live in Connecticut, where the state’s governor and his pandemic task force have responded appropriately and done a good job of containing the virus.

The  state  has  so  far  been  one  of  the  most  successful  in  the United States (US) in terms of infection and mortality rates. By contrast, governors of other, mostly southern states refused to listen to scientists and health experts, and thus did not mandate mask  wearing  or  enforce  shelter-in-place orders and social distancing guidelines.

Similar  externalities,  or  technological diseconomies, exist with respect to the environment. If a firm freely disposes of a large amount of sewage or air pollutants, then it is not paying the cost of the harm that its dis-charges or emissions will cause. The company is thus producing the  substances  in  far  greater  quantities  than  a  comparison  of social cost and social benefit would deem adequate.

Yet,  US  President  Donald  Trump’s  neglect  and  dismantling  of  environmental  regulations  encourages  such  behavior,  because  it  enables  many  firms to avoid the cost of external  diseconomies  and  impose  additional  hazards  on  society.  Environmental deregulation assumes away the externalities the regulations were intended to address.

This  reflects  a  broader  mindset shared by Trump and leading  Republicans  such  as  Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.  It  is  reflected  in  a  lack  of  compassion  or  empathy for others, particularly non-white people and other marginalized  groups  –  many  of  them  US citizens – who are suffering from poverty or illness. One can only  assume  that  Trump  and  those like him are unable to regard others as entitled to comparable concern and respect as those in their wealthy, rarefied circles.

But we can turn for inspira-tion to Guido Calabresi, the US Circuit  Court  Judge  and  Professor  Emeritus  at  Yale  Law  School who, along with the late Nobel laureate economist Ronald Coase, laid the foundations of the interdisciplinary “law and economics” approach. Calabresi highlighted the importance of social  justice  and  the  serious  impact of sudden income fluctuations  on  people  involved  in accidents – very similar to what many are experiencing during the current pandemic.

In his book The Future of Law and Economics, Calabresi explores a new approach that incorporates externalities into consumption. In particular, he argues that a legal system which reflects people’s compas-sion toward one another may help to create a more equitable society.

Calabresi’s idea is especially welcome and enlightening at a time when too many leaders are neglecting the struggles and pain of their fellow citizens. Perhaps close study of Calabresi’s argument and propagation of his ideas among policymakers would contribute to fostering a much-needed sense of social solidarity in a world where the self-absorption of some is a threat to all.

Koichi Hamada is Profes-sor Emeritus at Yale University and a special adviser to former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

By Koichi Hamada

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