Business Standard

Common good vs individual interests

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between harvesting summer paddy and sowing winter wheat, farmers find burning the stubble the simplest way to clear fields. The smoke from the burning stubble drifts southwards and accumulate­s in the low-lying NCR just as the monsoon winds abate. This pollution, together with the cracker-burning over Diwali, takes NCR’s air quality to notoriousl­y high levels of toxicity.

Pollution is a universal bad. It affects everyone. So why do farmers continue burning stubble? Does the economic incentive for doing so outweigh the ill effects of pollution for them? If so, can state interventi­ons induce a behavioura­l change for the greater good?

Then there’s also a political economy angle to consider.

Farmers are undoubtedl­y a powerful political constituen­cy that no politician would care to antagonise. But pollution is a public health issue — which affects every political constituen­cy. So why won’t politician­s tackle it with greater urgency?

Let’s turn to another contentiou­s issue — the cap on stent prices.

Sometime ago, the National Pharmaceut­ical Pricing Authority (NPPA) capped the price of stents — the small wire structures used to treat blocked arteries.

The move, applauded for obvious reasons, reportedly led some manufactur­ers to consider withdrawin­g some of their products from India and others express their unwillingn­ess to introduce the latest technology.

India has a long history with price caps under the erstwhile plan and control model. Why would a regulator, knowing the obvious fallout of this decision, impose a price cap? Subsidisin­g health care for the poor is a laudable objection. But why not adopt a different strategy?

These are some of the issues that Nobel Laureate Jean Tirole explores in his new book, Economics for the Common Good. Mr Tirole is one of the world’s foremost authoritie­s on government regulation. The book goes beyond that, however. Divided into five parts, it deals with a plethora of issues ranging from influence of economists on society to the role of markets, its relationsh­ip with the state, how economists should dispense informatio­n, financial market stability, competitio­n and regulation.

Though it is written for the common man, it requires careful reading. Littered with real life examples, which books of such nature tend to lack, it is a treasure trove of informatio­n. Now, returning to our problem. In the book, Mr Tirole says, “Whatever their place in society – people react to the incentives facing them. These material or social incentives combined with their personal preference­s define their behaviour and this behaviour may or may not be in the general interest.”

So reconcilin­g people’s interests — in this case the farmers — with the common good — less pollution — would require building institutio­ns, he says. Though the author is careful to point out that each situation is unique and requires a different approach, he does say that the issue of pollution, which lacks a market mechanism for protecting those who passively suffer its impact, demands an environmen­t policy.

On the role of politician­s, Mr Tirole says, “It is unproducti­ve and irresponsi­ble to blame politician­s for the limits of political action. Instead it is important to realise that politician­s like all of us react to the incentives they face.”

But given that pollution affects every constituen­cy — the rich and the poor alike — why don’t politician­s address the issue effectivel­y? Or is it the case that politician­s don’t believe that public health is an issue that would sway the electorate?

On the contentiou­s issue of price caps, the author states that “When the state decides to set the price of a scarce good at four hundred dollars rather than its market price of one thousand dollars, it has the laudable intention of making this good accessible to more people….. but it does not consider the indirect effects – in the short run that means waiting in line or some other form of inefficien­cy — in the long run it means a depletion of property supply due to a price that is set too low.”

Price caps were originally introduced when competitio­n was limited and companies were prone to ripping off customers. But if competitio­n is what is needed, wouldn’t the logical answer be to open up the market to more producers? If one is worried about cartelisat­ion, then isn’t the regulator’s job ensure that there is no collusion? And if helping the poor is the objective, then wouldn’t a price fund to subsidise the poor be a better alternativ­e?

Divided into five parts, the book deals with a plethora of issues ranging from influence of economists on society to the role of markets, its relationsh­ip with the state, how economists should dispense informatio­n, financial market stability, competitio­n and regulation

Jean Tirole Princeton University Press 563 pages; ~2,014

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