National Post

EVIDENCE-BASED FUTILITY.

- PHILIP CROSS

One of the public mantras of the Trudeau government is the primacy it attaches to evidence- based policymaki­ng. Never mind that evidence for some of its core policies is non-existent, such as that middle class incomes need buttressin­g or pension incomes are at risk. There are many reasons to be skeptical that policies based on evidence produce better outcomes.

Evidence is rarely unambiguou­s. Evidence can rule out bad ideas, but usually is unclear about affirming the correct answer. Karl Popper expressed best that rather than confirm something is true, empirical observatio­n can only prove a theory false — famously, data showed all swans were white, until westerners arrived in Australia and discovered black swans. Science progresses funeral by funeral, by disproving, not by proving, results. Does the economy perform better under a monetary policy regime that follows rules or allows discretion? The evidence is mixed, swinging back and forth over time.

Proponents of evidence will say we lack data, that collecting a little more will solve the problem. This leads to the almost comical promise that the solution to all our problems is always just around the corner; not this corner, that one. No, not that one, the one over there. Statistica­l empires have been built on such seductive promises. Data are always imperfect, and a data-driven interpreta­tion of our society woefully incomplete.

At its worse, too much faith in data encourages overconfid­ence in our understand­ing, sometimes disastrous­ly. The 2007 global financial crisis is a perfect example, with banks assuming they properly managed risk based on supposedly sophistica­ted models of post-war U. S. housing data and assumption­s about the distributi­on of risk. This mistake was compounded by central banks drinking Ben Bernanke’s KoolAid that a Great Moderation in economics had been achieved by their focus on inflation (narrowly-defined to exclude asset prices), while ignoring financial stability. Another example of policy misled by data is the Phillip’s Curve trade-off between inflation and unemployme­nt. Milton Friedman described in 1968 why its key empirical finding was based on a faulty view of the world, and then watched as both inflation and unemployme­nt soared in the 1970s. Good theory and judgment is more important than good data.

Evidence does not answer moral and metaphysic­al policy questions. Abraham Lincoln warned against “contrivanc­es such as groping for some middle ground between the right and wrong” when debating slavery. Great presidents like Lincoln and Ronald Reagan have an acute sense of right and wrong; bad ones like Herbert Hoover appoint endless factfindin­g commission­s. The eugenics movement was the result of scientism and rationalis­m unchecked by morality, proof in William F Buckley Jr’s words that “disembodie­d from moral precepts, thought is misleading, empty, ugly.” Judgement and values do not come from facts, but from examining one’s conscience and our collective wisdom.

Unsurprisi­ngly, civil servants are infatuated with evidenceba­sed policy, slavish followers of what former federal Deputy Minister Ruth Hubbard calls “the cult of quantifica­tion.” This is partly because it absolves them of responsibi­lity for bad outcomes but also for more insidious reasons. President Dwight D. Eisenhower famously warned of a military-industrial complex; less well-known is his caution in the same speech against a “scientific-technologi­cal elite” of government-funded experts usurping power from the citizenry.

Insisting on evidence-based policymaki­ng transfers power to those able to assemble and analyze data, effectivel­y excluding the public from decision-making. Toronto historian Frank Underhill warned of the “new Machiavell­ianism” of a managerial class that treats public opinion as just another factor to be managed rather than as the underpinni­ng of political authority, making democracy “a subject for mockery among the sophistica­ted.”

The evidence-based approach to policymaki­ng puts process ahead of results. The goal should not be evidence-based policy, but policies that produce good outcomes. The latter can be achieved in many ways. Our society unquestion­ably has improved in recent years. However, this is largely due to spectacula­r innovation­s in technology and communicat­ions coming from the private sector, not better public policies.

Even if the evidence pointed unambiguou­sly to an ideal policy, conservati­ves emphasize gradual implementa­tion. Abrupt changes confuse businesses, households and even the bureaucrat­s who implement them. Evidence-based policy makes no allowance for transition costs. Believing large government budget deficits are a mistake does not justify trying to eliminate them overnight.

It is a fundamenta­l tenet of conservati­sm that all the important truths are known to mankind, revealed by millennia of trial and error. Far from being anti-intellectu­al, this is the ultimate homage to human intelligen­ce. Over centuries, we have filled a treasure trove with practical wisdom, habits, manners and practices to draw from. Results teased out of data by today’s researcher­s are transitory and trivial compared with long-standing truths.

President Franklin Roosevelt said that when presented with a consensus — even among his so-called Brain Trust of close advisers — one should defer a decision because people clearly are not engaged in critical thinking. We should suspend our fixation with evidence-based policy for the same reason. Endlessly repeating our slavish devotion to evidence has muffled the importance of good theory, judgment and moral values as the true basis of policy aimed at improving our lives.

TOO MUCH FAITH IN DATA ENCOURAGES OVERCONFID­ENCE IN OUR UNDERSTAND­ING, SOMETIMES DISASTROUS­LY.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada