-Caveat Lector-

~~for educational purposes only~~
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]

Incentives and Motivation
by Brad Edmonds

It sounds pedestrian, but one way to gain insight into
people's behavior is to ask what the motivation could be
for the behavior you're observing. This is more than a
curiosity, or even a truism relevant only for obscure
psychological research; examining the motivation of
others can help you make important decisions, and
thereby affect your own outcomes.

As noted by a home schooled student recently, one of the
reasons home schooled children are better educated and
socialized than government- or private-schooled students
is that parents are motivated only by the well-being of
their children. By contrast, public school teachers are
union members and government employees; both groups
produce distorted incentives for members, primarily in
that member loyalty is not to the constituency served. Put
another way, if government teachers are loyal to their
unions, they are better off financially; what is good for the
students is irrelevant (or worse  a population deliberately
made ignorant is more likely to continue voting for
increased funding for government schools). Further, that
they work for the government means teachers can
continue to demand funding and perquisites regardless of
the quality of their service.

Private school teachers are much less beset by such
conflicts, but private schools usually still have to please
the government, by hiring government-certified teachers
and by submitting curricula for government approval.
(Private schools suffer in other ways compared to home
schools: A class with 20 students will exert pressure on
the teacher to orient himself toward the lowest common
denominator; and since a private school must satisfy the
largest number of parents, Alan's parents might have to
accept for Alan what the parents of Barbara and Charles
want for Barbara and Charles.)

Our heroes in Congress, while they claim they are rushing
to rescue us from evil CEOs, are motivated only to win
votes  a concern independent of solving financial
reporting problems. Votes are won by politicos' acting
publicly as though they are solving problems. In reality, in
their ignorance they are worsening current financial
reporting problems by writing new laws that will have
unintended consequences of their own. (Even worse is
the near certainty that some Congressmen realize that
more laws will deepen the problems, but that the true
cause-effect relation will escape the awareness of the
public; they know that future outcries arising from the
new problems will have Congress making new laws that
take still more freedom from us while giving still more
power to government.)

People are not automatons, and incentives such as job
security, money, power, and recognition are not the only
things that motivate us. In many  not all  law schools,
first-year students leave dissatisfied when they learn that
justice is ignored while the law as considered a tool to be
used to win settlements. Regardless what
government-fostered short-term incentives they face,
most CEOs are interested in the long-term outlook for
their company, most have used their rank to ensure that
honest financial statements are produced, and most
would be honest in the absence of government attempts
to make them so. And many individuals not only behave
honestly in business, but even tithe. People are more
complicated than simple punishment/reward schemes
make them out to be.

That being said, incentives can be viewed another way:
Whenever a large population is offered an incentive for
doing something, there will be takers. If the government
offers a monthly check to teenaged girls, even if the catch
is that they have to have a baby and no job prospects,
and even though most teenaged girls will recognize that it
is a raw deal, there will be girls lined up at the government
office, infant in hand, to begin receiving their checks. If
Congressmen offer the prospect of legislation that favors
businesses who forward campaign contributions, they'll
have plenty of campaign contributions. If Congressmen
are promised votes from Midwestern states for
supporting legislation that amounts to direct transfer
payments from the rest of us to farmers, along with higher
prices for food (indirect transfer payments),
Congressmen will weigh the votes they'll gain and lose,
and make their decisions, without regard to the effect on
the economy or individual families.

The tangible incentives we face are just a subset of the
varied things that motivate us. They don't explain
behavior to the extent that it is easy to predict what any
individual will do, except in those cases where there is an
exceptionally strong incentive at stake and there are no
counterbalancing disincentives. But applied to a
population, incentives reliably tell you what to expect on a
larger scale. They help explain the inefficiency of
government and the effectiveness of the private sector.
They help explain why the nuclear family is the foundation
of any successful society. Looking for incentives can
even help you predict where a new law will have
unintended consequences. Finally, of course, the notion
of incentives explains too well how our government got
where it is in the first place.

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