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Public D
F L I N T O I D

http://www.slate.com/id/2195158/pagenum/all/#page_start

Move Over, Marx

HOW TOO MANY PROPERTY RIGHTS WRECK THE MARKET.

By Tim Wu

Posted Monday, July 14, 2008, at 7:22 AM ET

The last decade has produced enough books challenging received wisdom to fill a small—and stupendously popular—library called the Compendium of Counterintuition. Here we find Malcolm Gladwell's Blink, which teaches that snap judgments are sometimes more accurate than studied observation. James Surowiecki's The Wisdom of Crowds, almost a companion volume, argues that a bunch of random idiots can sometimes do better than experts. Chris Anderson's The Long Tail makes the point that selling unpopular stuff can be a way to make lots of money.

The newest addition to the collection is Michael Heller's The Gridlock Economy, which does for property rights what the Long Tail does for product marketing. The difference is that Heller, unlike most of the authors of counterintuitive books, is actually a leader in the academic field he is scrutinizing. As one of the nation's leading property theorists, he has accomplished a feat. In an area that has generated very few nonacademic books, Heller has managed to pull off one of the most perceptive popular books on property since Das Kapital.

The Gridlock Economy takes aim at one of the strongest intuitions in Anglo-American thought: that property is a good thing, and more property is almost always better. In fact, views on property, since about the time of John Locke, have bordered on reverential. Locke, for instance, described property as a natural right given to man by God as the reward for labor. Today the worship of property rights has merged with a faith in Adam Smith and the Market, creating a sort of Vishnu-Shiva combination (the state, incidentally, is Bramha).

By this measure, what Heller offers is blasphemy to the true believer: a market critique of property. He argues that creating too many property rights can actually wreck markets. Property, to Heller, is not holy water but more like fertilizer. Add too much, and everything dies.

How can too much property kill markets? The key insight is this: A property right creates a gatekeeper—someone whose permission is needed to use that thing we've just called "property." That's fine, but when you have too many gatekeepers—too many people whose permission is necessary to undertake a given project—that fact alone can create gridlock. It is one thing to get, say, five people to agree to something, but if the number is 500 or even 5 million, the project is sure to go up in smoke.

Examples make the point much clearer. Heller stumbled across severe property gridlock problems in Russia in 1991, when he was working for the World Bank. He noticed that while sidewalk kiosks were thriving, stores were empty. The reason was that the government gave out so many conflicting property rights in the stores that bickering among owners was preventing the enterprises from getting started. Kiosks, meanwhile, needed no one's permission to sell stuff and profited from decades of pent-up demand. A country that for decades had no private property had crippled itself by creating too much of it.

The basic idea that too many stakeholders can kill a project is well-known to anyone who has ever worked on a committee or spent 15 minutes in Washington, D.C. But Heller's insight is to see that dynamic at work not just in committees but in private markets, where the property system plays a huge part in determining how many, or how few, gatekeepers there will be. And a decade ago he did what a successful paradigm-shifter should: He coined a term for this phenomenon of needing too many people's permission, so that the permissions themselves become a source of gridlock. He named it the anti-commons.

Heller demonstrates that the anti-commons can be found in places like medical research, and this is where the book gets depressing. He recounts the story of Compound X, a treatment for Alzheimer's that remains undeveloped because there are too many owners of relevant patents, each of whom can demand the lion's share of any profits. Similarly, Heller tells the frustrating story of Native American land forcibly propertized by the federal government. Over generations, that land has become so fragmented—it now consists of hundreds of tiny pieces—that nothing can be done with it without contacting thousands of people.

It's almost enough to make you wonder why we have property rights at all. This is where Heller's book begins to face the problem that every counterintuitive work encounters: the fact that the intuition you are challenging has quite a bit of truth to it. The classic example of this is the New Testament, which begins with exciting counterintuitive ideas like loving your enemies and ends with a series of boring letters from Paul acknowledging the importance of at least a few rules. The bracing allure of both Blink and The Wisdom of Crowds fades somewhat when their authors have to start admitting that, actually, relying on snap judgment and asking crowds won't solve all of your problems (darn).

Heller's book, similarly, fully concedes the utility of property but thinks it just has to be better managed. You won't find here any bold exposé of the excesses of the American obsession with property—forget about patents, and think slaves. Heller is a renovator, not a wrecker, of property whose prescriptions tend to the pragmatic rather than the radical. For example, he regards condominiums as a clever way to manage a potential anti-commons and thinks similar arrangements should be more widespread. Marx would not be impressed.

And Heller inevitably runs up against instances when the anti-commons is, rather than a bug in the system, a key feature. In the 1950s, for example, New York city planner Robert Moses proposed to tear down much of SoHo and Greenwich Village to build better freeways—but was stopped, thank God, by Jane Jacobs, property owners, and other protesters. Their anti-commons saved Manhattan. This leads to the somewhat unhelpful conclusion that an anti-commons is a bad thing, except when it isn't. More generously, you might say that an anti-commons is the enemy of change, and that deciding when you want change is a harder question. It takes us back to the tension between property and markets—property can act as a preserver while markets tend toward creative destruction. All this is satisfying to academics who love questions that lead to harder questions. But it may leave lovers of black-and-white feeling a little gray.

A different critique of Heller's book will come from classically trained economists, who are awfully hard to impress and are poised to complain that Heller isn't telling them anything new. I was once at a conference where someone said, "Michael Heller calls this an anti-commons—we used to just call it transactions costs—but God bless him."

Yet I don't buy the notion that Heller has just slapped a fancy name on something known since God created economic man out of Adam's tailbone. The function of a phrase like anti-commons isn't to discover something new. It is to use a phrase to put front and center a set of questions that other modes of thought may overlook or downplay. I think Heller would admit that the anti-commons problem is created by transaction costs, in the sense that Harley Davidson would agree that a motorcycle is just a very loud bunch of molecules. Heller's phrases, gridlock economy and anti-commons, are a test that forces us to ask when property, designed to liberate, is doing the opposite.

In the end, what matters is that Heller passes the brain-infection test. His idea, once it gets into your head, takes root and explains quite a lot. In my own field, intellectual property, the problems of mass permission are everywhere: Nearly every venture in the media or entertainment field is shaped by the potential need to get permissions from millions of copyright stakeholders. There would be no YouTube—and no Google or Yahoo, either—if those firms had started by asking their lawyers to seek approval from the owners of a gazillion different copyrighted works. Netflix would not exist if it needed permission to buy movies and ship them through the mail—its whole business is premised on an exception to copyright called the "first sale doctrine." Without the law-breaking shock of Napster and KaZaA, Apple's iTunes store might never have started. Meanwhile, electronic books have had real problems getting off the ground because of the need to clear so many rights held by so many different people.

Getting permission sounds nice, and quite polite. But Heller reminds us that the need for too much permission, in matters personal or public, can become a quiet form of strangulation.

MAS:

http://books.google.com/books?id=HinTJwpiK8kC&pg=PA212&vq=property&dq=metromarxism&source=gbs_search_s&sig=ACfU3U3CFvZXnf86Fx3YdFS4fZGVNrL-2A#PPA78,M1

_________________
http://www.toomuchonline.org/index.html

http://www.hr676.org

http://www.pnhp.org/publications/the_national_health_insurance_bill_hr_676.php
Post Fri Jul 18, 2008 3:25 pm 
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Demeralda
F L I N T O I D

I read that this morning. I'll definitely be checking out that book. My sister and I talk about property rights all the time. The idea of private property is still funny to me.

_________________
I'm no model lady. A model's just an imitation of the real thing. - Mae West
Post Fri Jul 18, 2008 3:31 pm 
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Public D
F L I N T O I D

I know, right. While we think of such 'property rights' and 'environmental' debates as modern escapades into political 'isms,' Native Americans called it 'Life.' Their 'living on the land' – not owning it – does not make them Marxists. Their care for it does not make them 'green wackos.' These ideas really shouldn't be so strange or scary to us.

_________________
http://www.toomuchonline.org/index.html

http://www.hr676.org

http://www.pnhp.org/publications/the_national_health_insurance_bill_hr_676.php
Post Fri Jul 18, 2008 3:58 pm 
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Mellow D
F L I N T O I D


quote:
Native Americans called it 'Life.' Their 'living on the land' – not owning it – does not make them Marxists. Their care for it does not make them 'green wackos.'


Duh. Of course Natives aren't green wackos. As everyone knows, the Natives are the red wackos, Silly.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I am going to report you two commies to the DHS.
Post Fri Jul 18, 2008 4:05 pm 
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twotap
F L I N T O I D


quote:
The idea of private property is still funny to me.
Jeez no private property who the hell would pay the taxes on it to pay for all those school improvements that the kiddies need so they can learn. And of course private property probably is silly to someone who does not have any and if by chance they do all they have to do is open it up for all to use.

I rest my case. Very Happy


Link

_________________
"If you like your current healthcare you can keep it, Period"!!
Barack Hussein Obama--- multiple times.
Post Fri Jul 18, 2008 4:44 pm 
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Mellow D
F L I N T O I D

Oh, TwoTap. You are loads of fun. Hi-larious.
Post Fri Jul 18, 2008 4:51 pm 
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Adam Ford
F L I N T O I D

quote:
Public D schreef:
http://www.slate.com/id/2195158/pagenum/all/#page_start

Move Over, Marx

HOW TOO MANY PROPERTY RIGHTS WRECK THE MARKET.

By Tim Wu

Posted Monday, July 14, 2008, at 7:22 AM ET

The last decade has produced enough books challenging received wisdom to fill a small—and stupendously popular—library called the Compendium of Counterintuition. Here we find Malcolm Gladwell's Blink, which teaches that snap judgments are sometimes more accurate than studied observation. James Surowiecki's The Wisdom of Crowds, almost a companion volume, argues that a bunch of random idiots can sometimes do better than experts. Chris Anderson's The Long Tail makes the point that selling unpopular stuff can be a way to make lots of money.

The newest addition to the collection is Michael Heller's The Gridlock Economy, which does for property rights what the Long Tail does for product marketing. The difference is that Heller, unlike most of the authors of counterintuitive books, is actually a leader in the academic field he is scrutinizing. As one of the nation's leading property theorists, he has accomplished a feat. In an area that has generated very few nonacademic books, Heller has managed to pull off one of the most perceptive popular books on property since Das Kapital.

The Gridlock Economy takes aim at one of the strongest intuitions in Anglo-American thought: that property is a good thing, and more property is almost always better. In fact, views on property, since about the time of John Locke, have bordered on reverential. Locke, for instance, described property as a natural right given to man by God as the reward for labor. Today the worship of property rights has merged with a faith in Adam Smith and the Market, creating a sort of Vishnu-Shiva combination (the state, incidentally, is Bramha).

By this measure, what Heller offers is blasphemy to the true believer: a market critique of property. He argues that creating too many property rights can actually wreck markets. Property, to Heller, is not holy water but more like fertilizer. Add too much, and everything dies.

How can too much property kill markets? The key insight is this: A property right creates a gatekeeper—someone whose permission is needed to use that thing we've just called "property." That's fine, but when you have too many gatekeepers—too many people whose permission is necessary to undertake a given project—that fact alone can create gridlock. It is one thing to get, say, five people to agree to something, but if the number is 500 or even 5 million, the project is sure to go up in smoke.

Examples make the point much clearer. Heller stumbled across severe property gridlock problems in Russia in 1991, when he was working for the World Bank. He noticed that while sidewalk kiosks were thriving, stores were empty. The reason was that the government gave out so many conflicting property rights in the stores that bickering among owners was preventing the enterprises from getting started. Kiosks, meanwhile, needed no one's permission to sell stuff and profited from decades of pent-up demand. A country that for decades had no private property had crippled itself by creating too much of it.

The basic idea that too many stakeholders can kill a project is well-known to anyone who has ever worked on a committee or spent 15 minutes in Washington, D.C. But Heller's insight is to see that dynamic at work not just in committees but in private markets, where the property system plays a huge part in determining how many, or how few, gatekeepers there will be. And a decade ago he did what a successful paradigm-shifter should: He coined a term for this phenomenon of needing too many people's permission, so that the permissions themselves become a source of gridlock. He named it the anti-commons.

Heller demonstrates that the anti-commons can be found in places like medical research, and this is where the book gets depressing. He recounts the story of Compound X, a treatment for Alzheimer's that remains undeveloped because there are too many owners of relevant patents, each of whom can demand the lion's share of any profits. Similarly, Heller tells the frustrating story of Native American land forcibly propertized by the federal government. Over generations, that land has become so fragmented—it now consists of hundreds of tiny pieces—that nothing can be done with it without contacting thousands of people.

It's almost enough to make you wonder why we have property rights at all. This is where Heller's book begins to face the problem that every counterintuitive work encounters: the fact that the intuition you are challenging has quite a bit of truth to it. The classic example of this is the New Testament, which begins with exciting counterintuitive ideas like loving your enemies and ends with a series of boring letters from Paul acknowledging the importance of at least a few rules. The bracing allure of both Blink and The Wisdom of Crowds fades somewhat when their authors have to start admitting that, actually, relying on snap judgment and asking crowds won't solve all of your problems (darn).

Heller's book, similarly, fully concedes the utility of property but thinks it just has to be better managed. You won't find here any bold exposé of the excesses of the American obsession with property—forget about patents, and think slaves. Heller is a renovator, not a wrecker, of property whose prescriptions tend to the pragmatic rather than the radical. For example, he regards condominiums as a clever way to manage a potential anti-commons and thinks similar arrangements should be more widespread. Marx would not be impressed.

And Heller inevitably runs up against instances when the anti-commons is, rather than a bug in the system, a key feature. In the 1950s, for example, New York city planner Robert Moses proposed to tear down much of SoHo and Greenwich Village to build better freeways—but was stopped, thank God, by Jane Jacobs, property owners, and other protesters. Their anti-commons saved Manhattan. This leads to the somewhat unhelpful conclusion that an anti-commons is a bad thing, except when it isn't. More generously, you might say that an anti-commons is the enemy of change, and that deciding when you want change is a harder question. It takes us back to the tension between property and markets—property can act as a preserver while markets tend toward creative destruction. All this is satisfying to academics who love questions that lead to harder questions. But it may leave lovers of black-and-white feeling a little gray.

A different critique of Heller's book will come from classically trained economists, who are awfully hard to impress and are poised to complain that Heller isn't telling them anything new. I was once at a conference where someone said, "Michael Heller calls this an anti-commons—we used to just call it transactions costs—but God bless him."

Yet I don't buy the notion that Heller has just slapped a fancy name on something known since God created economic man out of Adam's tailbone. The function of a phrase like anti-commons isn't to discover something new. It is to use a phrase to put front and center a set of questions that other modes of thought may overlook or downplay. I think Heller would admit that the anti-commons problem is created by transaction costs, in the sense that Harley Davidson would agree that a motorcycle is just a very loud bunch of molecules. Heller's phrases, gridlock economy and anti-commons, are a test that forces us to ask when property, designed to liberate, is doing the opposite.

In the end, what matters is that Heller passes the brain-infection test. His idea, once it gets into your head, takes root and explains quite a lot. In my own field, intellectual property, the problems of mass permission are everywhere: Nearly every venture in the media or entertainment field is shaped by the potential need to get permissions from millions of copyright stakeholders. There would be no YouTube—and no Google or Yahoo, either—if those firms had started by asking their lawyers to seek approval from the owners of a gazillion different copyrighted works. Netflix would not exist if it needed permission to buy movies and ship them through the mail—its whole business is premised on an exception to copyright called the "first sale doctrine." Without the law-breaking shock of Napster and KaZaA, Apple's iTunes store might never have started. Meanwhile, electronic books have had real problems getting off the ground because of the need to clear so many rights held by so many different people.

Getting permission sounds nice, and quite polite. But Heller reminds us that the need for too much permission, in matters personal or public, can become a quiet form of strangulation.

MAS:

http://books.google.com/books?id=HinTJwpiK8kC&pg=PA212&vq=property&dq=metromarxism&source=gbs_search_s&sig=ACfU3U3CFvZXnf86Fx3YdFS4fZGVNrL-2A#PPA78,M1


I think Heller may be confusing governmenal property rights with private property rights. In our country we have enough restrictions (taxes) on property ownership where we shouldn't have to "worry" about people owning too much property. In Genesee County the land bank also "helps" confiscate and turn a profit off of others property.

I do support copywrite law in general but acknowledge there may be need for some reforms. Without copywrite "property rights" half the books in the world may never have been written.
Post Fri Jul 18, 2008 5:53 pm 
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Public D
F L I N T O I D

You are what you own – and taxes on what you own make you less of a person.©

_________________
http://www.toomuchonline.org/index.html

http://www.hr676.org

http://www.pnhp.org/publications/the_national_health_insurance_bill_hr_676.php
Post Sat Jul 19, 2008 10:31 am 
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Adam
F L I N T O I D

Taxes just make the government more powerful and us individuals suffer more. Slaves whether plantation or tax paying governmental slaves are not less of a person dispite owning less than they should.
Post Sat Jul 19, 2008 10:45 am 
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twotap
F L I N T O I D

Adam was it necessary to repost the long boring original thread of PDs jeez dont start becoming an Eashoo on us. Laughing

_________________
"If you like your current healthcare you can keep it, Period"!!
Barack Hussein Obama--- multiple times.
Post Sat Jul 19, 2008 5:52 pm 
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Adam
F L I N T O I D

lol. I wanted to make everything feel the longness and boringness. I actually skimmed through the low quality piece so I felt like sharing the pain. Wink Sometimes it's a challenge to argue with such convuluted logic.
Post Sat Jul 19, 2008 6:55 pm 
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