Coase on Economics and on China: A December 2010 Interview January 15, 2011
Posted by David in Economics, The Social Sciences.Tags: Ronald Coase, Wang Ning
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I just discovered a very recent interview with Ronald Coase conducted by the co-author (Wang Ning) of his 2011 book on capitalism in China. It’s extremely interesting:
WN (Wang Ning): First of all, happy birthday, professor Coase. As you know, Chinese economists are now holding a Conference in Beijing, “Coase and China”, to celebrate your 100th birthday. To my knowledge, no other western economist, probably with the exception of Karl Marx, has ever been so honored in China. The reason is twofold. It first has to do with the powerful influence of your ideas. Second, you clearly have a special feeling toward China. In Chinese culture, reciprocity is a high virtue. The first question many Chinese people have in mind is, what got you interested in China?
RC (Ronald Coase): I don’t know why I am interested in China. I have been interested for a long time, too long for me to remember. I read Marco Polo many years ago, probably as a schoolboy. It was an impressive book. I don’t think anyone can read the book without being impressed by the Chinese civilization. It went back many centuries. It made great achievements long before the rise of the West. That impression stayed with me forever.
WN: Did your relationship with Steven Cheung have any impact on your perception of China?
RC: None. I had the view about China long before I knew any Chinese. Of course, I had a very good relation with Steve. He spent two years at Chicago many years ago after his study at UCLA. We talked and we quickly became good friends. That was one of the best times in my whole life. I think it was beneficial for both of us. Unfortunately, Steve went to University of Washington (Seattle) after two years. I always thought that was a mistake.
WN: I remember Steve told me that that was probably the only decision he later regretted.
RC: Steve somewhere said that he grew up in Hong Kong and missed water. But that didn’t seem to me to be a good reason.
WN: Another reason I remember Steve gave somewhere in his writing was that he wanted to be independent. If he stayed at Chicago, he was afraid that he could not develop his own thinking give the strong presence of Milton Friedman, George Stigler, and other weighty figures at Chicago.
RC: That wouldn’t happen. I was able to do my work at Chicago just as freely as I was at Buffalo.
WN: I think you were right. Given Steve’s character, I don’t think anyone could stop him from developing his own thought.
RC: I am glad that I later strongly urged Steve to go to Hong Kong. I did not know how much good it would do. But given Steve’s influence in China, I think it was a good move.
WN: Steve certainly played a critical role in developing and explaining your ideas in China. From that point of view, his move to Seattle also helped to influence people like Doug North and Yoram Barzel. I remember North said many times that he learned transaction cost economics from Steve, and Steve learned from you.
RC: I never doubted that Steve would do great work no matter where he was. And good economics will attract good economists. But if he stayed in Chicago, he could have done much more.
WN: You are probably right. If Steve stayed, the Coase-Cheung team would last for more than a decade at Chicago even before Steve went back to Hong Kong. Given your character, you would not be aggressive enough to push your vision of economics at Chicago. But if you were teamed up with Steve, what you called good economics probably would have prevailed in Chicago.
RC: That’s right.
WN: You mentioned many times that you do not like the term, “Coasean economics”, and prefer to call it simply the “right economics” or “good economics”. What separates the good from bad, the right from wrong?
RC: The bad or wrong economics is what I called the “blackboard economics”. It does not study the real world economy. Instead, its efforts are on an imaginary world that exists only in the mind of economists, for example, the zero-transaction cost world.
Ideas and imaginations are terribly important in economic research or any pursuit of science. But the subject of study has to be real.
WN: Since the Coase China Society is named after you, we cannot avoid using Coasean altogether.
RC: I do not like the term Coasean economics. The right economics that I have in mind, or what you called Coasen economics, is what economics ought to be.
WN: Absolutely. The whole reason to establish the Coase China Society is exactly to bring it about so that the right economics will prevail.
WN: The second question many Chinese have in mind for you is, what you think other countries can learn from the Chinese experience of market transformation? Is there any general lesson to be learned from the China model?
RC: I don’t know. You don’t know what you can learn until you try to learn.
WN: I think this point is critically important. If I understood correctly, you are saying that learning from China or any other example is not like learning from a book or cooking recipe, but more like learning by doing. If the Chinese economic reform is an experiment, learning from China remains an experiment. Different countries will learn different things even if they learn from the same model.
RC: Exactly. What we do is all experiment.
WN: You remind me a saying made popular by Deng Xiaoping that reform is an experiment. But the experimental approach does not guarantee success. I have in mind Mao’s experiment with socialism, the Great Leap Forward, and so on.
RC: Nothing guarantees success. Given human fallibility, we are bound to make mistakes all the time.
WN: So the question is how we can learn from experiments at minimal cost. Or, how could we structure our economy and society in such a way that collective learning can be facilitated at a bearable price?
RC: That’s right. Hayek made a good point that knowledge was diffused in society and that made central planning impossible.
WN: The diffusion of knowledge creates another social problem: conflict between competing ideas. To my knowledge, only people fight for ideas (religious or ideological), only people are willing to die for their ideas. The animal world might be bloody and uncivilized. But animals, as far as we know, do not fight over ideas.
RC: That’s probably right. That’s why we need a market for ideas. Ideas can compete; people with different ideas do not need to slaughter each other.
WN: That seems to me the number one task for any government: to foster an active market for ideas and maintain civil order.
RC: That’s right.
WN: You have said many times that the Chinese economic reform was extraordinary and unexpected. The third question is what you think was mainly responsible for this unexpected transformation?
RC: We explain this in our book (How China Became Capitalist). The events were unexpected and could not be stated in advance. It must have something to do with certain personalities. If Deng never existed, the story would be quite different. Those developments, or what we called marginal revolutions in the book, such as the household responsibility system and the Special Economic Zones, might be expected. But when they happened, we were surprised.
WN: Indeed, the Chinese were also surprised themselves.
WN: Here comes the fourth question. You have high hopes that the future of economics is in China. What makes you think so?
RC: It is obvious. It is the size of Chinese population. A new idea is always accepted only by a small proportion of the population. But a small proportion of the Chinese is a big number.
It also has to do with the fact that China is now open for new ideas. The old way of thinking has been discredited. But new ways have not been developed yet. Both new good economics and new bad economics have a great chance in China. We want to see that good economics prevails.
China has another advantage. As we have argued in our book, there is still too much to learn from the Chinese experience of market transformation. There is a lot more to learn from how the market economy with Chinese characteristics operates and evolves over time. If the Chinese economists rise up to the challenge, they will contribute to the development of economics.
Here is a letter to Sheng Hong I wrote in 1988. There I said that I had a “firm believe that an understanding of what is happening, and has happened, in China will greatly help us to improve and enrich our analysis of the influence of the institutional structure on the working of the economic system”. I still hold the belief. Indeed, the belief has become even stronger over time.
In the past, economics was once mainly a British subject. Now it is a subject dominated by the Americans. It will be a Chinese subject if the Chinese economists adopt the right attitude.
WN: I am deeply moved by what you just said. That will give Chinese economists a strong motivation and confidence to develop their own way of thinking.
RC: That’s exactly what they ought to do. That’s another reason that I do not like the term Coasean economics. If the right kind of economics that I have in mind is first developed in China, it will be rightly called the Chinese school of economics by future historians.
WN: This I believe is a very, very important point. You are saying that Coasean economics or what you call the right economics is not developed yet. It is an open subject. And you believe that the Chinese economists have a great chance to develop the subject.
RC: Exactly. I think deference to authority is a bad trait of the Chinese. What Chinese economists should do is to develop their own thinking based on a careful and systematic investigation of the working of the Chinese market economy. My work, “The Nature of the Firm” or “The Problem of Social Cost”, does not provide an answer to questions that the Chinese economists should tackle. The most my work or the work of anyone else can do is to suggest possible directions to tackle the problems.
WN: I agree. I think more and more Chinese economists have recognized that they either have to strike out on their own way or have no way to go. The recent financial meltdown and economic crisis, and particularly the lack of coherent response among American economists, have helped them to realize the flaws of mainstream economics.
RC: The main function of the Coase China Society, in my view, is to facilitate the development of independent thinking among Chinese economists. The Society will not be run as a big organization, but a network of many clusters of scholars. Each scholar will pursue what he thinks is the most important question. Each cluster of scholars will form a small community, working on some aspect or some region of the Chinese economy. We shall encourage all kinds of research, historical, statistical, or analytical as long as it sheds light on how the Chinese economy works or changes. This is the only way to get a well-rounded view.
WN: Yes. The Society will collaborate with Chinese universities. A Chinese university can become a corporate member of the Society and specialize in studying the economic problems that are unique to where it is based. For example, Zhejiang University is well positioned to study the development of Wenzhou, Yiwu, and other phenomena unique to Zhejiang province.
RC: One way for the Society to advance the right kind of economics to China, and encourage Chinese economists to do the right kind of work, is to have a journal of its own. When I was editor of the Journal of Law and Economics, I was very active. I would attend seminars and conferences and talk to people to see what kind of research they were doing. I would solicit their articles if I thought they were good ones. And frequently, I would talk to people and encourage them to conduct certain studies with the promise to publish their article.
WN: This is indeed very different from the way journals are run now.
RC: I do not believe any other journal was run the same way then. Most journal editors wait for submitted articles and use external reviewers to select the articles for publication. This was not the way I worked. I knew what kind of articles I would like to publish, and I went around to find people to write them.
I’ll give you an example. Bernard Siegan came to the University of Chicago Law School as a Fellow and proposed to write a paper on the pros and cons of zoning. I told him instead to find a place where zoning did not exist and to see what happened to land use in comparison to places with zoning. He wrote a great paper about land use in Houston which did not have zoning (The paper was published as “Non-Zoning in Houston, Journal of Law and Economics (1970)).
Another example is Steve’s article on bees. I knew there were contracts between beekeepers and orchard owners in Washington. I asked Steve to investigate it. He did a splendid study (The paper was published as “The Fable of Bees, in Journal of Law and Economics (1973)).
Richard Sandor wrote a paper on the setup of a plywood future contract, which, however, failed. Sandor was very upset because no one would publish a paper on a failed market. I was not upset at all since most markets failed. The paper just showed how difficult it was to set up a market. I published his paper (The paper appeared as “Innovation by an Exchange: A Case Study of the Development of the Plywood Future Contract, Journal of Law and Economics (1973)).
WN: I think this is one of the greatest public services you have done to the profession. But the opportunity cost was probably very high. At the prime time of your research, you devoted yourself to the Journal instead of your own research. You might have written another one or two articles as great as “The Nature of the Firm” or “The Problem of Social Cost.”
RC: I do not regret my decision at all. This was the main attraction for me to come to Chicago. I think this was the only way to develop a subject. If it were not for the Journal, many articles would not have been published or even written.
WN: Based on your experience, what should the Society do if it launches a new journal?
RC: You should have a clear view of what you want to accomplish, what articles you want to publish and what kind of research you want to encourage. You shall not worry about how other people think about your views. You cannot control what other people think. You will not monopolize the whole field. If you believe in your view, you have to be strong to defend it and promote it in the market for ideas until you are convinced that it is proved wrong. This is the only way to be independent.
WN: I totally agree. But I don’t think we have got the second Coase yet. When you started editing the Journal of Law and Economics, you were already well established in the profession. Your view, no matter whatever it was, would be considered seriously and readily command agreement.
RC: I do not think that was the case. I always find myself in disagreement with the prevailing view. Even today, my view of the subject is not accepted by the profession. You certainly do not need a second Coase to make the Coase China Society successful. Instead, you will have a Cheung, or Wang, or some other Chinese name.
WN: I have three more questions left. The first one is, many people have said that China has succeeded in transforming itself from a planned economy to a market economy without private property rights. How could that happen?
RC: All economies have different systems of property rights. The common classification of private versus public property rights, the former associated with capitalism and the latter with socialism, is too simplified a view. Britain and America have different systems of property rights. China under Mao and the Soviet Union were also different in the ways property rights were structured. A good system of property rights is the one that economic resources, including human talents, are efficiently utilized. I think China will develop its own system of property rights. Whether you call it socialist or capitalist does not matter.
WN: Here comes the second question. Your 100th birthday is approaching, what you have to say to Chinese economists?
RC: What I am going to say have nothing to do with my birthday. All they should do is to study the Chinese economy based on how it actually works. It might be historical, or statistical, or analytical. Whatever form it takes, it has to be based on the working of the Chinese economy.
WN: This seems a simple task.
RC: It certainly is not something like E = MC2. But the way the economic system works is complicated. It has many components. Each component is itself a mini-system. The way they interact with each other and the whole system works is very complex. A regression with aggregated statistical data will not tell you much about the way the economy works.
WN: This is the last question. What you hope the Coase China Society should do in the near future?
RC: The Society should get it running as soon as possible. I mean it should get the research going in China. I have met many Chinese economists and read many of their works. They are very capable and some of their work is very promising. The Society will succeed as long as it gets the Chinese economists to study the working of the Chinese economy. If a journal helps, we will launch a journal. If workshops or conferences are needed, we will run workshops and conferences. If it needs funding, we will get funding. I expect the Chinese government and Chinese businessmen to be very supportive of the Society and eager to fund the research.
WN: Thank you very much, professor Coase. I cannot wait to share your enthusiasm and high hopes with my colleagues in China. Your work and your love for China have inspired many Chinese economists and won their deep respect. I am sure the Coase China Society will live up to your expectation.
RC: I am now 100 years old. At my stage, life requires a constant effort. As I told you many times, do not get old. But I have no doubt that Chinese economists will do the right kind of work, and make their contribution to advance economics. This hope keeps me happy and I thank them.
HT: Mario Rizzo
Our Coasefest December 31, 2010
Posted by David in Economics, Life in Taiwan, Reflections.Tags: Chris Clausen, James Taylor, Kevin Hoeltschi, Ranjit Dash, Ronald Coase, Trent Prestegar
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Ronald Coase turned 100 on December 29, and in his honor we arranged a seminar with cake and coffee yesterday. The idea was for students to present Coase’s 1937 and 1960 papers, followed by a discussion of how all this relates to institutional economics (the seminar was part of my MA course entitled Introduction to Institutional Economics).
One student, James Taylor, decided to commemorate the day with a poem:
And then it was time for Kevin Hoeltschi to explain social cost and Ranjit Dash to explain why firms exist:
And, at the end we indulged in specially ordered cakes while giving Kevin a chance to display his aesthetic talent:
We agreed that we are all looking forward to Coase’s 2011 book on Chinese capitalism, which is an unusually appropriate subject at a business school in Taiwan. It will be interesting to see if Coase manages to be the first economist to publish a book after 100 without perishing first (yes, I know, he has a co-author, but I want it to count when I co-author something, so my enlightened self-interest compels me to give Ronnie C the benefit of the doubt!)
Happy 100 to RHC and Happy 2011 to everyone else!
#8 Ronald Harry Coase: Economy of Expression December 27, 2009
Posted by David in Economics, Reflections, The Social Sciences.Tags: Ronald Coase
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Ronald Coase, who will be celebrating his 99th birtday the day after tomorrow, is perhaps the best living exponent of the principle that ideas impress more when they have not been designed to impress. Unlike many contemporary economists, Coase was never interested in developing mathematical models. Unlike most sociologists, he did not have a penchant for impossible-to-understand words. He simply wrote about his ideas in the most intelligible way possible. But his ideas had consequences.
In “the Nature of the Firm,” Coase attempted to explain why firms exist, and also to offer propositions for why firms stop expanding after a certain point. This paper laid the foundation for the development of the huge literature on transaction costs and governance costs by economists such as Douglass North and Oliver Williamson. What I find especially impressive about this paper is its apparent simplicity. Using everyday language, North explains seemingly self-evident phenomena in terms that are accessible to the general reader. But in spite of being obvious as well as important, transaction costs had not focused anyone’s attention before the publication of the paper in 1937.
His other well-known paper – “the Problem of Social Cost” – is similar: seemingly simple and obvious. But that didn’t stop those economists who were driving at high speed down the cul-de-sac of equilibrium theorizing from misunderstanding Coase . The explicit conclusion of the paper is that externalities don’t matter in a world without transaction costs. Since the typical equilibrium model does not contain transaction costs, equilibrium modelers concluded that externalities don’t matter. But the real conclusion of Coase’s paper was the opposite one: because transaction costs are pervasive, externalities do matter. The paper even had an important policy implication: vague and uncertain property rights are associated with high transaction costs, and thus with big externality problems. Consequently, the best way to deal with both externalities and transaction costs is to strive for less ambiguous and more predictable property rights.
Coase also made other contributions to our understanding of the world. In his historical investigation of the organization of lighthouses along the British coast, he showed that public goods can be provided by private organizations. Again, Coase was prescient: there are now numerous studies that show how the old assumption of “public good = public sector” may ultimately lead to the socialization of almost everything.
All in all, however, Coase’s substantive contributions consist of a few articles that together make up a relatively thin book (his “greatest hits” have been published as “The Firm, the Market, and the Law”). But these papers are among the most cited papers of all time. Interestingly, Coase has said that he never submitted unsolicited papers to journals. He only wrote because he was asked to do so or because a certain subject took his fancy. This laid-back attitude to publishing is evident in the quirkiness of some of his non-seminal papers. As an example, the title of one paper is “Alfred Marshall’s Mother and Father.”
In any case, Coase is living testimony that the publish-or-perish mindset may not be the optimal strategy, either socially or individually. Reaching an age of at least 98 years and 363 days and receiving a Nobel Prize for one’s contributions is an indication that economizing on one’s intellectual resources may yield both a few path-breaking papers and a long life.


