Economics of Police Brutality
By Art Carden on Sep 8, 2008 in Civil Liberties, Criminal Justice, Personal Liberty, Police, Uncategorized
Here are a few thoughts on the economics of apparent police brutality and media portrayals thereof:
1. Judiciously edited video can be deceptive. However, I’d be interested in learning the conditions under which a woman being cross-checked by a cop who looks to be about a head taller than her and probably 50-100 pounds heavier—I’m not very good at eyeballing these kinds of things—is warranted. Perhaps it’s a credible commitment to take no prisoners as a means of defusing an explosive situation, but I’m skeptical. The fact that the cops “disappeared” her (even if only temporarily) while she was giving an interview was a little bit alarming.
2. As stories like these develop, I predict that they will be cast as struggles between the state and individual rights as recognized under the first amendment. This interpretation has some merit, but the key problem rests fundamentally on questions of poorly-defined property rights. In the second video, this is stated explicitly: the news team was “on public property.” Of course, when “the public” owns something, nobody does—which means that the right to exclude others from use is poorly defined. Common property is a source of conflict. It is clear that I don’t have the right to enter your living room and say what I want under the guise of free speech or to observe what you’re reading or watching on TV and report on it under the guise of a free press. When resources are unowned, our claims come into unavoidable conflict. Conflict is a necessary consequence of poorly defined ownership.
3. Monopolists behave like monopolists. Competition is a civilizing force: if I don’t like the service your company provides, I can take my business elsewhere. This is only true in a limited sense in the case of defense and police protection. The case for government provision of police services rests on a standard story about externalities. If I subscribe to police services, my neighbors enjoy a benefit for which they do not have to pay because criminals will presumably be less likely to go about their business in our neighborhood. At the same time, though, government provision changes the incentives: insulation from competition means that income is not tied to ability to create value. The creative competitive pressures of the marketplace are replaced by the noisier (and in some cases, destructive) competitive pressures of the political sphere. The structure of incentives lends itself to corruption and inefficiency.
Criticisms of the incentives inherent in government provision of services are sometimes unfortunately interpreted as personal attacks against the people providing the services. Nothing above is not to denigrate people who put on a police uniforms because of the actions of a few bad apples. My own experience with the police has been largely positive: many cops are outstanding human beings who are dedicated to their jobs. One of my friends from high school is the quintessential “good cop,“ the officers who took the police report after our house was robbed did a commendable job, and the campus safety officers here at Rhodes are outstanding. However, provision of police services often relies on people to do what is right for its own sake irrespective of the incentives created by the system. In a fallen world, relying on individual virtue rather than the clearly-defined incentives that emerge in a market economy is a recipe for waste, abuse, and inefficiency.
Cross-posted at Division of Labour.




















If I don’t pay (in part) for the salary of a policeman and/or his rulers, that policeman (or his brothers in blue) will take, by force, from me the results of my life’s labor. If I resist this immoral taking they will put me in a cage. If I fight back they will execute me.
If I grow a God created herb that doesn’t meet the cop’s ruler’s approval the cops will steal/cage/kill me. If I participate in a voluntary exchange with another competent adult that is not approved I will feel their boots on my neck.
No, Mr. Carden, there are no “good cops”.
ed42 | Sep 10, 2008 | Reply
The panoramic view of America (from here, CH) and what “it” has become, seems to rest easy with most Americans, the majority. Witness the American political system this very moment… Witness the American economic system today. Capitalism is better suited for the Marxian definition. “The very idea of Free-enterprise, free-markets, two or more individuals freely engaging and voluntarily entering into free and open exchange, does not exist in America and never has. And neither does private property rights or real privacy in any form. American capitalism = “CRAPitalism!” The moral turpitude and corruption of the American system grow like a relentless, unmitigated cancer. The patient will die. History never seems to correct the incorrectness, especially when individuals VOTE under ANY form of “democracy.” (Even here in Switzerland, albeit the rate of death is slower!)
I left America nearly thirty-years ago. I saw what was happening back in the late ‘50s. Switzerland is the venue of relative freedom & liberty now. Experientially, and with keen judgment and much time, Switzerland proves it IS a far better place to be. The politics, the economics, the level (quality) of education, the currency (nominal inflation), etc., all attend to the understanding that leaving America was in fact a very right choice! The “police” here are not the thugatarians, (omni-government) that exist in America. Thirty-years renders that judgment. I lived nearly 45-years in America. I know the difference. It’s sad. A seemingly once worthy nation has become a police state, its Constitution, a lamentable experiment from its inception, ruled by a “convocation of politic worms.”
Gore Vidal summed it up best in an interview long ago: “Americans will get exactly what they deserve, not what they want.”
And if what they now have is what they want, they are about to get a helluva lot more of it!
C’est la guerre Mr. Carden. Thank you for your insight.
Capt. A. | Sep 10, 2008 | Reply