Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell


I recently finished Thomas Sowell's Basic Economics, and it was a truly eye-opening experience. What struck me most wasn't complex charts or formulas, but how the book provides a clear lens for understanding the world.
The biggest takeaway for me was the constant focus on reality versus rhetoric. Time and again, Sowell demonstrates that to understand an issue, you must look past the stated goals of a policy and instead analyze the incentives it actually creates. So many well-intentioned ideas can lead to disastrous unintended consequences simply because they ignore this fundamental principle.
This entire framework is built on the inescapable concept of scarcity, which forces us to accept that in life, there are no perfect solutions—only trade-offs.
Below are the quotes that really drove these points home for me. They represent a shift in thinking from judging actions by their intentions to understanding them by their results.
"Most of us hate even to think of having to make such choices indeed as we have already seen some middle-class Americans are distressed at having to make much mild choices and trade-offs, but life does not ask us what we want. It presents us with options. Economics is one of the ways of trying to make the most of these options." - pg 7
The cost of watching a television sitcom or soap opera is the value of the other things that could have been done with that same time - pg 22
In a price coordinated economy, employees, and creditors insist on being paid, regardless of whether the managers and owners have made mistakes, this means that capitalist businesses can make only so many mistakes for so long before they can either stop or get stopped, whether by an inability to get the labor and supplies they need or buy bankruptcy. In a feudal economy or a socialist economy leaders can continue to make the same mistakes indefinitely. The consequences are paid by others in the form of standard of living lower than it would be if there were greater efficiency in the use of scarce resources. - pg 26-27
Continuing transactions between buyer and seller makes sense only if the value is subjective, each getting what is worth more subjectively. economic transactions are not a zero some process where one person loses whatever the other person gains - pg 31
In short people tend to do more for their own benefit than for the benefit of others - pg 32
However, unattractive greed may be it is likely to move food, much faster, saving more lives - pg 32
As Will Rodgers once said, we couldn't live a day without depending on everybody". Prices make that dependence viable by linking their interest with ours - pg 33
Understanding any subject requires that it first be defined so that you are clearing your own mind as to what you are talking about and what you are not talking about - pg 64
Analyzing economic actions in cause-and-effect terms means examining the logic of the incentives of being created rather than simply thinking about the desirability of the goals being sought - pg 65
Incentives matter because most people will usually do more for their own benefit and for the benefit of others - pg 72
An economy based on prices, profits and losses, gives decisive advantages to those with greater knowledge and insight - pg 95
Given the scarcity of mental resources an economy in which knowledge and insights have such decisive advantages in the competition of the marketplace is an economy, which itself has a great advantages in creating a high standard of living for the population at large - pg 100
It is not just ignorant people, but also highly educated and highly intellectual people like George Bernard Shaw, Carl, Marx, Nehru, and John Dewey, who have misconceived profits as arbitrary charges, added onto the inherent cost of producing goods and services too many people even today high profits are often attributed to high prices charged by those motivated by greed in reality most of the great fortunes in American history have resulted from someone's figuring out how to reduce costs so has to be able to charge lower prices and therefore gaining mass market for the product - pg 115
As a professor at the London business school, put it some organizations have reached a scale and complexity that made risk management errors almost inevitable, while others had become so bureaucratic, and top-heavy that they had lost the capacity to respond to changing market demands - pg 122
Many of the great American fortunes by Rockefeller, Carnegie, and others came from finding lower costs ways of producing and delivering the product to the consumer and in charging lower prices then their higher cost competitors can meet those learning away their customers - pg 129
Since it is impossible to prove a negative, the accused company cannot disprove that it was pursuing such a goal, and the issue simply becomes a question of whether those who hear the charge choose to believe it - pg 173
More generally in almost any occupation, your productivity depends not only on your own work, but also on the cooperating factors such as the quality of the equipment management and other workers around you - pg 196
In short productivity is not just a result, solely of what the individual worker does, but is a result of numerous other factors as well to say the demand for labor is based on the value of the workers productivity is not to say that pay is based on merit merit and productivity are too very different things just as morality and causation are two different things - pg 197
Ultimately, it is economic prosperity, which makes it possible for billions of dollars to be devoted to helping the less fortunate - pg. 198
If for example, women were paid only 75% of what men of the same level of experience and performance were paid and any employer could hire four women instead of three men for the same money and gain a decisive advantage in production cost over competing firms - pg 211
Although most modern industrial societies have minimum wage laws, not all do. Switzerland has been a rare exception and has and has had very low unemployment rates in 2003. The economist magazine reported Switzerland's unemployment neared a five-year high of 3.9% in February. Swiss labor unions have been trying to get a minimum wage. Law passed arguing that this would prevent exploitation of workers. However, the Swiss cabinet still rejected the proposed minimum wage law in January 2013. Its unemployment rate at the time was 3.1%. Singapore likewise has no minimum wage law and its unemployment rate as likewise been 2.1% - pg. 221
It would be comforting to believe that the government can simply decree higher pay for low-wage workers without having to worry about unfortunate repercussions, but the preponderance of evidence indicates that labor is not exempt from the basic economic principle that artificially high prices cause surpluses - pg. 225
Where exploitation is defined as the difference between the wealth that an individual creates in the amount that individual is paid then babe Ruth may have been the most exploited individual of all time - pg. 259
The industrial revolution was not created by highly educated people, but by people with practical industrial experience, the airplane was invented by a couple of bicycle mechanics who had never gone to college - pg. 271
in order to avoid having to speculate like this, the farmer may in effect pay professional speculator to carry the risk while the farmer sticks to farming the speculator signs, contracts to buy or sell at prices fixed in advance for goods to be delivered at some future date. This shifts the risk of the activity from the person engaging in it, such as the wheat farmer. In this case, to someone who is in effect betting that he can guess the future prices better than the other person that has the financial resources to write out the inevitable wrong bets in order to make a net profit overall because of the bets that turn out better - pg. 285
If over a period of 10 years, you pay a total of $9,000 in premiums for insurance to cover some property and then suffer $10,000 in property insurance to cover property damages that the insurance company must pay for. It might seem that the insurance company has lost money. If, however, your $9,000 in premium payments have been invested and have grown to $12,000 by the time you require reimbursement for property damage, then the insurance company has come out $2,000 ahead. According to the economist magazine, premiums alone are rarely enough to cover claims and expenses and in the United States. This has been true of this. Have been true of property casualty insurers for the past 25 years in 2004 automobile and property insurers in the United States made a profit from the actual insurance underwriting itself for the first time since 1978 - Page 318
Both social and economic policies are often discussed in terms of the goals they proclaim rather than the incentives they create- page 342
Again, with the depositor's writing checks on their accounts while part of the money in those accounts is also circulating as loans to other people. The banking system is in effect adding to the national money supply over and above the money printed by the government- page 382
By setting the interest rate on the money that it lends to the banks, the Federal reserve system indirectly controls the interest rate that the banks will charge the general public- page 385
However, with the rest of us, their experience illustrates again. The fact that one of the best ways of understanding and appreciating an economic function is by seeing what happens when that function does not exist or malfunctions- page 387
People with careers in government may be unlikely to be so willing to sustain damage to their own careers for the good of others- page 389
It doesn't matter whether you are rich or poor, so long as you have money - page 402
However, when in electric utility company buys cool to burn to generate electricity, a significant part of the cost of the electricity generating process is made by people who breathe the smoke that results from the burning of the coal and whose homes and cars are dirty by the soot cleaning, repainting and medical cost paid by these people are not taking into account in the marketplace because these people do not participate in the transactions between the coal producer and the utility company- page 411
When the state of Maryland passed a higher tax rate on people earning a million dollars a year or more, taking effect in 2008, the number of such people living in Maryland fell from nearly 8,000 to fewer than 6,000. Although it had been projected that the additional tax revenue collected from these people in Maryland would rise by 106 million. Instead, these revenues fell by 257 million when Oregon raised its income tax in 2009 on people earning $250,000 or more organs income tax revenues likewise fell by 50 billion- page 427
However, among the things that wealth buys is more and better education as well as more leisure time that can be devoted to political activities and the mastering of legal technicalities all this translates into a disproportionate influence of what wealthier people in the political process, while the fact that those who are not rich often have more money in the aggregate than those who are may give ordinary people more weight in the market than in the political or legal arena, depending on the issue and the circumstances- page 456
Both markets and governments must be examined in terms of their incentives and constraints- page. 467
No one likes to admit being mistaken, but under the incentives and constraints of profit and loss, there's often no choice but to reverse course before financial losses. Threaten bankruptcy in politics. However, the cost of the government's mistakes are often paid by the taxpayers, while the cost of admitting mistakes are paid by the elected officials- page 469
In short, higher wage rates per unit of time are not the same as higher costs per unit of output. It may not even mean higher labor costs per unit of output and of course labor costs are not the only costs- page 488
These thousand economists, including many leading professors of economics at Harvard, Columbia and the University of Chicago accurately predicted retaliatory tariffs against American goods by other countries. They also predicted that the vast majority of American farmers who are who are among the strongest supporters of tariffs would lose out on net balance as other countries restricted their imports of American farm products. All these predictions were fulfilled, unemployment grew worse and us form exports plummeted along with a general decline in America's international trade- page 490
When the number of jobs in the American steel industry fell from $340,000 to 125,000 during the decade of the 1980s that had a devastating impact and was big economic and political news. It also led to a variety of laws and regulations designed to reduce the amount of steel imported into the country that competed with domestically produced steel, of course this reduction in supply led to higher steel prices within the United States and therefore higher costs for all other American industries that were manufacturing products made of steel which range from automobiles to oil rigs. All these products made of steel were now at a disadvantage and competing with similar foreign made products both within the United States and in international markets. It has been estimated that the steel tariff produced 240 million in additional profits to the steel companies and saved 5000 jobs in the steel industry at the same time. Those American industries that manufacture products made from this artificially more expensive steel, lost and estimated 600 million in profits and 26,000 jobs as a result of the steel tariffs. In other words, both American industry and American workers as a whole were worse off on net balance as a result of the import restrictions on steel- page 491
In other words, whether consumers lose greatly exceeds what the workers gain, making the society as a whole worse off- page 499
Cultures that promote the rule of law rather than arbitrarily Powers exercised by leaders have increasingly been recognized as major factors promoting economic development- page 554.
Such condemnations of economics are due to the fundamental fact that economics is a study of the use of scarce resources which have alternative uses. We might all be happier in a world where there were no such constraints to force us into choices and trade-offs that we would rather not face, but that is not the world that human beings live in or have ever lived in during thousands of years of recorded history- page 586
Whether in urgent or less urgent matters, many believe that those with political power are better qualified to make moral decisions than are the private parties directly concerned- page 589
We also need to keep in mind a clear moral distinction between doing things that let us vent or pent up feelings and doing things likely to actually help those who have been unfortunate in the circumstances into which they were born- page 595
No society can surely be flourishing and happy of which the far greater part of the members are poor and miserable- page 600
Smith argued that wealth consisted of the goods and services, which determined the standard of living of the people. The whole people who to Smith constituted the nation
But in the economy, Smith argued that governments were giving a most unnecessary attention to things that would work out better if left alone to be sorted out by individuals, interacting with one another and making their own mutual accommodations- page 601
As he was deciding what career to pursue the increasing urgency of economic studies as a means towards human well-being grew upon me- page 611
Controversies have raged in science, but what makes a particular field scientific is not automatic unanimity on particular issues, but a commonly accepted set of procedures for resolving differences about issues when there are sufficient data available- page 617
However, economics is scientific only in the sense of having some of the procedures of science, but the inability to conduct controlled experiments prevents its theories from having the precision and repeatability often associated with science- page 618
Success is only part of the story of a free market economy failure is at least as important apart though few want to talk about it and none want to experience it- page 633
Naturally individuals and groups who want their own particular contributions to the process to be better rewarded but their complaints or struggles over this are a sideshow to the main event of complementary efforts which produce the output on which all depend -page 633
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