Posted by Eric Posner:
The Piracy Problem.
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_04_12-2009_04_18.shtml#1239556666


   Consider two approaches�

   The Stick. If the United States and other countries simply blew up any
   ship captured by pirates, including the crew and the pirates
   themselves, then, after a few demonstrations, piracy would no longer
   be a profitable activity. The pirates, rational profit-maximizing
   agents that they appear to be, would conduct backward induction and
   then find something else to do with their time. After the short term
   costs are incurred, the sea lanes would be safe until memories faded.

   The Carrot. Pay the pirates to stop engaging in piracy. That was the
   approach of the United States and other maritime powers in the early
   nineteenth century; for a number of years, they paid ransom as
   necessary; eventually, the process was formalized as tribute payments,
   which made the initial capture of the ship and crew unnecessary. As
   Michael Oren�s recent [1]book makes clear, this practice was entirely
   rational; when the United States finally decided to destroy the
   pirates, the naval costs were far greater than the tribute payments
   had been. The various U.S. administrations paid the ransoms as long as
   they could but eventually bowed to popular pressure incited by a sense
   of national shame.

   Each approach has characteristic costs and benefits. The stick lacks
   credibility. The pirates know that no government will kill its own
   people, nor can governments or shipping companies refuse to pay
   ransoms. The problem is not so much the doctrine of double effect as
   the political difficulty of inflicting harm on innocents even to
   advance the greater good. The carrot gives pirates incentives to
   invest in more destructive capabilities and draws more people into the
   labor market. Depending on just how costly piracy is for the pirates,
   the implicit tax imposed on shipping could end up significantly
   suppressing economic activity. At approximately $100 million per year,
   however, we are far from reaching that point.

   One significant problem is the low cost of entry into the piracy
   business. It would be much better if a single pirate leader controlled
   entry. Then we could do business with him, paying him a tribute (we
   might prefer to call it a �toll�) in return for a promise not to
   molest our ships. As a monopolist, he would have an incentive to limit
   �production� of piratical activity, relative to the unregulated market
   we currently live in. The monopolist essentially would be selling
   passage off the coast of Somalia, and would be constrained by
   competition from people who control alternative routes (which,
   unfortunately, seems limited). We might even expect the pirates to
   start organizing, or fighting among themselves, in an effort to
   establish a single firm that could obtain these monopoly rents. In the
   happy event that an organization emerged, we could call it a �state�
   and deal with it as we deal with any other state�paying it or
   pressuring to act as we want it to act, in light of its interests and
   capacities. We could even call this state �Somalia.� If the gains from
   rational management of this newly discovered resource�the power to
   block important sea lanes�provide sufficient incentives for Somalia�s
   warring clans to make a deal and reestablish a state that can control
   entry into the market, we should be sure to keep paying Somalia money
   (we might call it �foreign aid� if �tribute� or even �toll� is too
   irksome) rather than yield to the temptation to smash it to pieces. In
   the state system, sometimes you do better with an enemy than without
   one.

   But that outcome is a long way off. In the meantime, governments will
   have to employ an unsatisfactory combination of carrots and
   sticks�mounting expensive patrols that spot and pick off pirates on
   occasion, while paying ransoms to those pirates who succeed.

   Everyone thinks that President Obama will put together an
   international coalition that will solve the piracy problems. So far
   skeptics have emphasize the costs of patrolling, which are extremely
   high. But there are other reasons for skepticism. Clearing the sea
   lanes is a public good, and no state has much of an incentive to help
   others. Indeed, we have already seen that states take their own
   nationals far more seriously than the nationals of other states. The
   French attempted to rescue a French crew. Piracy was considered a joke
   among the American public until an American crew was captured; now
   President Obama is �personally involved,� according to the papers, as
   he never was before. These conflicting incentives will contaminate all
   aspects of an international operation. Some states may hope to pay
   tribute payments to pirates so that the pirates will go after other
   states (akin to putting bars over your windows so that burglars will
   go next door). The current practice of responding more forcefully when
   one�s own nationals are involved will have a similar effect. Obama
   will have no more luck persuading states to overcome these incentive
   problems than he has had in so many other areas�economic stimulus,
   contribution of troops to Afghanistan, assistance in relocating
   Guantanamo Bay detainees.

   Obama has good reason to become personally involved in the current
   hostage crisis. Despite the relative insignificance of the problem up
   till now (ransom payments of $100 million per year are a pittance),
   the pirates� main tactic�hostage-taking�has a way of capturing the
   public imagination. It also has a way of sucking the air out of normal
   politics and destroying presidencies. That is what happened to
   President Carter, when Iranian militants took over the U.S. embassy in
   Tehran. And that is almost what happened to President Reagan, who
   launched his cockeyed arms-for-hostages scheme in order to secure the
   release of a handful of hostages in Lebanon. The scandal nearly
   destroyed his presidency. President Obama has every reason to be
   concerned.

   He also has little room to maneuver. Having just returned from a trip
   promoting internationalism, he has raised expectations that any
   anti-piracy endeavor will have an internationalist flavor. This will
   mean costly, time-consuming negotiations for the sake of largely
   symbolic contributions by other countries, if history is any guide.
   Having also raised expectations that his administration will act with
   the utmost respect for legality, Obama will either have to direct
   American forces to walk on eggshells or risk exposing his words as
   empty. If the pirates continue to take American hostages, he will have
   trouble maintaining these commitments while giving satisfaction to the
   inevitable nationalist backlash driven by the mounting sense of
   powerless and humiliation that we haven�t seen since the Carter years.

References

   1. 
http://www.amazon.com/Power-Faith-Fantasy-America-Present/dp/0393330303/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1239556504&sr=8-1

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