moorhosj wrote:This is an interesting argument, never really heard it before. We could absolutely look at other things (maybe Freedom and Corruption?) to get an understanding of how people live in different countries. Oh wait, I just did that and it showed very similar results. Maybe there is something to these studies if they keep measuring different things and getting the same result.
Huh? You've never heard of a notion that something is more important than happiness? Morality? Dignity? Peace? Etc?
What same result? All I looked at was the human freedom index, and within in, countries were ranked differently by economic vs personal freedom. For example the US was IIRC 5th in economic freedom and 26th in personal freedom.
OR. Do your own analysis. Provide us with studies that prove otherwise. None of these indices uses a single metric in their analysis. The headline number you read is a weighted aggregation of lots of data.
You're confused. I'm not arguing against the findings of these studies I'm saying that their very existence is, IMO, very stupid, and shouldn't be referenced when arguing for particular policies.
The Economic Freedom portion of the Human Freedom Index is based on 43 metrics. You can pull out those individual metrics if you think it tells a different story. **** on the work someone else did, without presenting anything yourself, doesn't move the discussion forward.
I did! I pointed out that they ignored income tax rates, which are a huge part of a coherent understanding of economic freedom. And they did ignore them.
League Circles wrote:So they've basically completely ignored perhaps the single most telling metric that many would first think of when they consider economic freedom. And this is the result of their deliberate, and very subjective choices. I don't respect that. Maybe, as you say, they're well respected among those with a vested interest in patronizing them.
The Cato Institute is the most well-known libertarian think-tank in America. the idea that they would overlook taxes deliberately and subjectively is laughable. Their entire existence is fighting for limited government, low taxes, and civil liberties. I've worked for multiple consulting agencies who use these exact reports to help clients determine where to spend investment dollars.
I think they ignored it because it's probably extremely difficult to collect and standardize that data due to varying tax structures. I don't understand the significance of your personal anecdote. People make wise and unwise use of all sorts of data to make investment decisions, and have all sorts of results with it.
Maybe they are just well-respected by people who know what they are talking about.
According to the 2017 Global Go To Think Tank Index Report (Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program, University of Pennsylvania), Cato is number 15 in the "Top Think Tanks Worldwide" and number 10 in the "Top Think Tanks in the United States".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cato_Institute
Appeals to vague intellectual authority aren't interesting to me. I only like to discuss issues, not punt to people because I presume they know more than me (when it helps my presuppositions).
League Circles wrote:The criteria is completely subjective obviously. It's patently absurd on a 5 minute glance, because when I think of economic freedom, one of the first and primary concepts that comes to mind is, what % of someone's economic production do they get to do with as they wish vs how much do they have to share with society via taxes. So to me, tax rates are very central to the concept of economic freedom. Perhaps/probably the biggest single metric to get an understanding. So I checked how tax rates are used in this methodology. What I found was appauling, but not terribly surprising. The only element of tax rates that is included in the economic index is under "size of government", which amounts to 20% of the index.
"The criteria is too subjective! Please ignore that my proposed solution is far more subjective." If you find another way to measure these things, please present it.
What proposed solution do you think I'm advocating???
You're still not getting it. It's YOU that is making the claim that something is knowable and trying to argue for who knows it. I'm simply sitting in the absence of such a claim. It's not like I'm suggesting that the US is "happier", "less corrupt", or "freer" than any other particular places. I'm saying that there's nothing to be gained, no helpful function in inventing a metric for freedom and then reporting how real or inferred numbers impact your made up, and more importantly unnecessary definition. We don't need an index for freedom, happiness, etc. All we need to do is determine public policy.
In the case of this report, you are wrong on how much they measure taxes.
There are 5 categories in the Economic Freedom section and at least 3 directly measure taxes.
1. Size of Government - directly related to taxes as you mention
2. Legal System and Property Rights - long an important right in a capitalist society
3. Sound Money - related to the growth of money, which is directly tied to government costs and revenue (tax receipts)
4. Freedom to Trade Internationally - A section on tariffs (aka taxes) another section on movement of capital
5. Regulation - labor market regulations and business regulations, which includes a tax component.
I was not wrong in my central complaint that income taxes are a huge component of economic freedom and were completely ignored by this metric.
League Circles wrote:If it were as simple as blindly copying elements of a society that "performs better" in order to increase the performance of one's own country, which doesn't anyone advocate that we also have a king like Sweden? Maybe that's why they're so "happy"?
Build that straw man and knock it down. This is the "why not just make minimum wage $1,000,000/hour?" argument. It deftly dispatches an argument nobody has made. Who has suggested that we blindly copy anything?
People have absolutely made the argument that because certain countries are happier, we should adopt certain carefully cherry picked policy examples from them, while ignoring attributes we don't like. Why appeal to their system being responsible for positive outcomes without appealing to the whole thing? Why not just appeal to the merits of what one is advocating instead of appealing to the implied overall superiority of a different country with countless differences?
I do think lots of people in the US believe we could learn some things from other countries. That concept seems to rub you the wrong way for whatever reason.
For the third time, I very much agree we can learn from other countries. I volunteered that comment in this thread before we started this exchange. We just need to be careful to not conclude we've learned something before it's clear we have. We can learn from nordic health care models or whatever, and implement some of what we've learned, without appealing to ridiculous "studies" on their happiness, freedom, or corruption. Those are unnecessarily vague and overly broad.
League Circles wrote:Maybe different people having different values is Ok.
Nobody suggested otherwise.
True. To be more precise, I'll say that it is implied by many that populations of people are virtually identical (everyone agrees individuals vary plenty) other than socially or politically constructed differences. I think that notion is anti-science. I'm not saying you feel that way, just saying that it wouldn't be unusual to find that even at a population level, citizens of one nation may value freedom more than happiness or vice versa. Sometimes I feel like what is bring implied is more along the lines of "of course everyone wants happiness the same relative to other things." So even if happiness could be measured, and even if random samples were taken, and even if cause and effect could be established, we're still left with the issues of value differentiation as a reason why people might not want to adopt the same policies as other nations, and why should they not pursue what they value more?