-Caveat Lector-

Economics 101
by Walter E. Williams

MOST PEOPLE THINK THAT ECONOMICS IS DIFFICULT, but it's
really simple. More than anything else, economics is a
way of thinking.  Knowing just a little bit of economics
can save us from the tricks of political hustlers.

At the heart of economics are a few simple and
easy-to-comprehend rules -- it's not rocket science.
Our first rule is there's a cost to everything. To
obtain more of one thing requires the sacrifice of
something else. Nothing is free.

You say: "Hold it, Williams. Aren't there free public
libraries and schools, and free medical care?" Consumers
of these services might enjoy them at a zero price, but
that doesn't mean they're free. If expenditures weren't
made for public libraries, schools and medical services,
those resources would be available for something else.

That "something else" sacrificed is the cost of public
libraries, schools and medical services. The main issue
about so-called free services is which Americans are
going to be forced to pay for them. The moral or
Christian principle says the person who enjoys them
should pay. But if we accept the standards of thieves,
we don't care who pays as long as we enjoy it.

Another basic rule of economics is the law of demand.
That's just an observation about human behavior, namely:
The higher the price (cost) of something, the less we
take of it. The lower the price (cost), the more we
take of it.

For example, if nothing else changes and the price of
oil falls, we can expect to see greater use. People
might travel more, purchase more gas-guzzler cars and
be less motivated to insulate their homes. When oil
prices rise, they do just the opposite.

When interest rates fall, people invest more and purchase
more homes. When rates rise, they do the opposite. There
are no known exceptions to the law of demand, even though
political hustlers want us to believe there are.  For
instance, politicians want us to believe that when higher
minimum wages are enacted, employers will hire the same
or more low-skilled labor in response. They want us to
believe that when they raise taxes, people will be just
as honest in reporting income as they were before.

Psycho-babblers want us to believe executing murderers,
sending more criminals away for a longer time and
concealed-carry laws had nothing to do with today's
reduction in crime. Criminals also respond to the law
of demand. When crime's cost to criminals rises, they'll
do less crime.

If it weren't for the fact of scarcity, there'd be no
economic issues. Scarcity simply means we all want more
of something, but there are not enough resources on Earth
to satisfy every want. That means we must find a way to
determine who is going to get what's available.

For example, even if Rolls Royce built 100,000 cars a
year, I'm betting that of the Earth's 6 billion people
more than 100,000 of them would like to have one. That
means there must be a way to decide who gets the cars.
We could compete through violence, but the preferred
method has turned out to be the market mechanism ---
whomever's willing to bid the highest price.

Some people piously announce there shouldn't be any
competition. That'd be nice, but scarcity requires a
mechanism to decide who gets what. That applies to
everything. For instance, there's only one Williams.
Mrs. Williams had to compete with other women for my
hand in marriage. She triumphed at the expense of other
women, who were forced to do without.

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