Buffl

2 Decision Making under certainty

FS
by Fabienne S.













The Opportunity-Cost Fallacy:

The Opportunity-Cost Fallacy:

Individuals do not always consider opportunity costs (that include “hidden costs”) even though it is irrational not to do so.

(Individuen berücksichtigen nicht immer die Opportunitätskosten

(einschließlich "versteckter Kosten"), auch wenn es irrational ist

ist, dies nicht zu tun.)


Example:

Bastiat‘s “Broken Window” In a pamphlet published in July 1850, Frederic Bastiat defined a bad economist as one who sees only the immediate or visible effects produced by some cause. A good economist, by contrast, analyzes also the effects arising from the same cause that are not evident immediately.

“What Is Seen and What Is Not Seen”, tells the tale of Jacques Bonhomme, whose son is caught breaking a shop window. Seeing the boy surrounded by shattered glass on the sidewalk, passersby are in unanimous agreement: “It’s an ill wind that blows no good. But such accidents keep industry going. What would become of glaziers if no one ever broke a window?”

Why is this economically a bad statement?

Suppose that replacing the window costs $100. A glazier is called to do his job, is paid $100, and goes home offering a silent prayer for juvenile delinquents. That is what the passersby see, and that is what leads them erroneously to conclude that, because a job has been “created”, breaking the window was not such a bad thing after all. What the passersby (and the bad economists) fail to see is that $100 has been deducted from the baker’s bank account. Because he has been forced to spend $100 to replace his broken window, he will not be able to spend that sum on anything else. And since he did not plan to replace his old window by a new one, replacing the window was obviously not what he perceived to be his best option or alternative (decision)

Author

Fabienne S.

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