NY Times December 16, 2011
The Dismal Education
By YORAM BAUMAN

THE stereotypes about economists are well known: that we’re 
selfish Grinches; that we don’t read human interest stories 
because they don’t interest us; that the only reason we don’t sell 
our children is that we think they’ll be worth more later.

But are the stereotypes true? And if so is the cause nature or 
nurture? In other words, are selfish people disproportionately 
likely to become economists? Or is there something about being an 
economist (or being on the receiving end of economics education) 
that makes people selfish?

Academic research suggests that there’s a good deal of truth to 
the stereotype. Many studies have looked at how economists behave 
in what are called public goods situations. A key feature of these 
situations is that you can benefit from public goods even if you 
don’t contribute to them. You can watch PBS without making a 
donation; you can enjoy clean air even if you drive a car that 
pollutes. Such goods, however, give rise to the so-called 
free-rider problem: acting selfishly makes sense for each 
individual (why sacrifice if you don’t have to?) but as more and 
more people choose to act selfishly, the good disappears and 
everyone loses.

Public goods run counter to Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” theory 
in that self-interested behavior by individuals does not, as the 
theory would have it, lead to good outcomes for society as a 
whole. These situations flummox just about everybody — look at all 
the trouble that nations and individuals are having in dealing 
with climate change — but economists and economics students appear 
to be especially likely to free-ride and act in ways that are 
“anti-social” rather than “pro-social.”

My research with the economist Elaina Rose, published this summer 
in the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, has looked 
at a real-life public goods situation faced by students at the 
University of Washington. During our study period (1999 to 2002), 
when students went online to register for classes each quarter, 
they were asked if they wanted to donate $3 to support WashPIRG, a 
left-leaning activist group. Students were also asked if they 
wanted to donate $3 to Affordable Tuition Now (ATN), a group that 
lobbied for “sensible tuition rates, quality financial aid and 
adequate funding.”

You may question whether these groups actually serve the common 
good, but that’s mostly beside the point. Regardless of the 
groups’ actual social value, a purely self-interested individual 
would choose to free-ride rather than contribute; after all, a 
single $3 donation is not going to make a noticeable difference in 
tuition rates.

Our data showed that each group received donations from about 10 
percent of the students each quarter. Although students remained 
anonymous, we could look at all of the 8,743 members of our data 
set and determine what their majors were, when they took economics 
classes (if at all) and whether or not they donated to ATN or 
WashPIRG during each quarter of our study period.

In line with previous research, what we found supported the Grinch 
stereotype. About 5 percent of economics majors donated to 
WashPIRG in a given quarter, compared with 8 percent for other 
arts and sciences majors. A similar divide — 10 percent versus 
almost 15 percent — occurred with respect to donations to ATN.

We also found evidence that the giving behavior of students who 
became economics majors was driven by nature, not nurture: taking 
economics classes did not have a significant negative effect on 
later giving by economics majors.

But taking economics classes did have a significant negative 
effect on later giving by students who did not become economics 
majors. One interpretation of these results is that students who 
were not economics majors suffered a “loss of innocence” after 
taking an economics class, presumably because of exposure to 
certain ideas (like the invisible hand) or certain people (like 
economics teachers).

In contrast, students who became economics majors did not suffer a 
loss of innocence. This may be because they lost their innocence 
in high school — other research suggests that pre-university 
exposure to economics reduces giving — or perhaps even because 
economics majors were “born guilty.”

Our research suggests that economics education could do a better 
job of providing balance. Learning about the shortcomings as well 
as the successes of free markets is at the heart of any good 
economics education, and students — especially those who are not 
destined to major in the field — deserve to hear both sides of the 
story.

Yoram Bauman, a co-author of “The Cartoon Introduction to 
Economics,” is an environmental economist at the University of 
Washington.
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