Posted by Eric Posner:
What is the “ownership society”?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2008_12_21-2008_12_27.shtml#1230139734


   This term cropped up on in a recent NYT [1]article which blames the
   financial crisis on Bush administration policies, including its
   advocacy of an ownership society. The article goes too far: the
   financial crisis is the result of bipartisan regulatory decisions
   going back decades and the Fed�s easy money policies�and it is
   important to understand that financial crises will almost certainly
   occur even when government regulators do everything right. They are
   like hurricanes: we can blame the government for failing to build
   strong levees but not for failing to stop the hurricane from forming
   over the Atlantic ocean. If the hurricane is bad enough, even strong
   levees will do no good. (A lot of people also blame market actors but
   that does not make much sense. People act rationally or greedily or
   stupidly, as they always have, and blaming them for the financial
   crisis is just another way of arguing that government regulation was
   inadequate. Might as well blame hurricanes for destroying cities.)

   But what is the �ownership society,� anyway? It is a political
   [2]slogan that the Bush administration apparently first used in 2003
   to refer to three of its policy goals: (1) privatization of Social
   Security; (2) the creation of private health care accounts; and (3)
   subsidization of home ownership. The underlying theme is that it is
   better if people own than if they do not own, but what does this mean?
   Ownership compared to what?

   The Social Security example suggests one interpretation: ownership
   compared to government sponsorship. In one scenario, people earn
   wages, a portion of their paycheck goes to the government, and then,
   much later, they receive money back from the government. They don�t
   own anything, though they might have a reasonable expectation that the
   government will eventually pay something that bears some relationship
   to the payroll tax. In the ownership scenario, the sum of money that
   would otherwise be used for Social Security can be invested in
   securities. Note an odd feature, from a market or libertarian
   perspective: people don�t have true ownership rights in their labor;
   they are obligated to put a portion of the return on their labor into
   an account. Their �ownership� of securities in that account therefore
   does not reflect a commitment to a free market in some pure sense.
   What is true is that risk and return is increased, which is a normal
   feature of ownership. If you invest unwisely, or wisely but unluckily,
   you will end up impoverished when it comes time to retire. As a
   result, people have strong incentives to think about retirement, and
   to inform themselves about financial instruments and the likely future
   of the economy. Whatever you might think of this outcome�some people
   find it appealing, others do not�the odd thing is that if you like the
   idea of people having control over their finances rather than being
   dependent on the government, then you should want to do away with
   Social Security altogether rather than privatize it. Let people decide
   how much to spend and how much to save, as well as how they save their
   money. The ownership society in this setting boils down to the claim
   that we should subsidize investment and penalize consumption. If that
   is really the goal, why not just advocate a consumption tax and do
   without the ownership metaphor?

   Let�s turn to home ownership. Here, the compared to what question
   seems to be�compared to renting an apartment or perhaps renting a
   government-subsidized apartment or living in public housing. If
   government subsidizes home mortgages, then people who would otherwise
   rent or live in public housing are more likely to buy their own home.
   Again, the effect of channeling people into ownership is to increase
   the risk and the payoff. If you rent an apartment, and its value
   appreciates, you don�t obtain the return�your landlord does. If its
   value declines, you aren�t hurt�your landlord is. Finance theory tells
   us that investments have higher payoffs when they are riskier, and
   this is true for owning a home just as it is true for owning a piece
   of stock in a business. It was also thought, as in the case of Social
   Security privatization, that people who own homes will end up being
   better citizens: they will invest more in their homes, which will
   improve the neighborhood and hence the home values of others; they
   will care more about the future and therefore they will inform
   themselves about politics and vote responsibly; they will join the
   rentier class and become Republicans.

   The problem with this theory, as I noted yesterday, is that ownership
   does not have any intrinsic value. It is often wise to rent rather
   than own, as everyone understands from everyday life, and we might
   think that low-income people who chose to rent apartments rather than
   buy them knew what they were doing. Home ownership has some attractive
   features�you needn�t fight with your landlord, or worry that he will
   terminate the lease�but it is basically an enormous financial gamble
   that many people, particularly low-income people, shouldn�t make. Your
   neighborhood, for reasons outside of control, could become worse over
   the years; in addition, you might find that you need to move for
   family or employment reasons. If you are a low-income person, most of
   your savings will be tied up in your home, which means that you will
   be inadequately diversified against these future risks. These basic
   truths were obscured for many years because home prices tended to
   increase and not to collapse during recessions, but home ownership is
   just a kind of investment and does not enjoy immunity from the
   business cycle.

   Home ownership policy of the Bush and Clinton administrations was, in
   essence, an attempt to pay low-income people to make a risky
   investment that they would otherwise rationally avoid. I cannot
   understand why anyone would think that such a policy would be
   sensible. In some cases, these people will do well and enjoy the
   upside of their investment, but in other cases they will do poorly,
   with the result that they will be worse off than ever.

References

   1. 
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/21/business/21admin.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss&pagewanted=all
   2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ownership_society

_______________________________________________
Volokh mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.powerblogs.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/volokh

Reply via email to