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The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1986
James M. Buchanan Jr.
The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1986
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
James M. Buchanan Jr.
Press Release
16 October 1986
THIS YEAR'S ECONOMICS PRIZE AWARDED FOR A
SYNTHESIS OF THE THEORIES OF POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC
DECISION-MAKING (PUBLIC CHOICE)
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to
award the1986 Alfred Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences
to
Professor James McGill Buchanan, George Mason
University, Virginia, USA,
for his development of the contractual and constitutional
bases for the theory of economic and political
decision-making.
Summary
This year's Alfred Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences is
awarded to James M. Buchanan for his contributions to the
theory of political decision-making and public economics.
Traditional economic theory explains in great detail how
consumers and entrepreneurs make decisions regarding purchase of
goods, choice of work, production, investments, etc. In a series
of studies, Buchanan has developed a corresponding theory of
decision-making in the public sector. This comprehensive
theoretical formulation which goes under the name, "The New
Political Economy" or "Public Choice", and lies on the boundary
between economics and political science and has some of its
origins in the work of the Swedish economist Knut Wicksell.
Buchanan's contribution is that he has transferred the concept of
gain derived from mutual exchange between individuals to the
realm of political decision-making. The political process thus
becomes a means of cooperation aimed at achieving reciprocal
advantages. But the result of this process depends on "rules of
the game", i.e., the constitution in a broad sense. This
in turn emhasizes the vital importance of the formulation of
constitutional rules and the possibility of constitutional
reforms. According to Buchanan, it is often futile to advise
politicians or influence the outcome of specific issues. In a
given system of rules, the outcome is to a large extent detemined
by etablished political constellations. A relevant example is
that those who would like to correct individual tariffs should
concentrate instead on the fundamental rules of international
trade, such as GATT
regulations.
For nearly forty years, James M. Buchanan has devoted himself to
development of the contractual and constitutional bases for the
theory of economic and political decision-making. In so doing, he
has become the leading researcher in the field which has come to
be known as "public choice theory".
For a long time, traditional economics lacked an independent
theory of political decision-making. Modern welfare theory often
relied on the premise that public authorities could apply
relatively mechanical methods to correct different types of
so-called market failures. Stabilization policy theory -
regardless of whether it was Keynesian or monetarist appeared to
assume that political authorities endeavored to achieve certain
macroeconomic or socioeconomic goals regarding employment,
inflation or growth rates. Buchanan and others in the public
choice school have not accepted this simplified view of political
life. Instead, they have sought explanations for political
behavior that resemble those used to analyze behavior on
markets.
Individuals who behave selfishly on markets can hardly behave
wholly altruistically in political life. This results in analyses
which indicate that political parties or authorities that to at
least some extent act out of self-interest, will try to obtain as
many votes as possible in order to reach positions of power or
receive large budget allocations. This type of analyses has
become universal in recent years, and is perhaps the most widely
known aspect of public choice theory.
Principles of Unanimity
Buchanan has extended the parallels between economic and
political decision-making even further. Market behavior is based
primarily on voluntary agreements and the exchange of goods and
services which give rise to mutual advantages for the agents in
market transactions. A prerequisite of the market system,
however, is the establishment of a legal system that protects
ownership rights and the realization of contractual agrements.
The political system may also be regarded as a system based on
voluntary agreements.
Beginning with Knut Wicksell's early analysis of the relation
between public expenditures and taxes, Buchanan has formulated a
theory of the public sector and political decision-making based
on the principle of unanimity. As a result, decisions concerning
the dimensioning and financing of collective efforts may be
regarded as the outcome of voluntary agreements among citizens.
Every citizen would thus in theory receive a welfare gain if the
value, to him, of collective measures exceeds what he must forego
in the form of taxes.
In this perspective the political process becomes primarily a way
of cooperating to achieve mutual advantages - and not a means for
redistributing resources among individuals. Owing to the high
costs of arriving at decisions, however, the unanimity principle
is difficult to apply in practice. The costs of making decisions
based on a high degree of mutual agreement have to be weighed
against the costs an individual faces when a majority decision
goes against him. It thus becomes imperative to distinguish
between fundamental decisions concerning the rules which govern
future decisions on all kinds of issues and the decisions
themselves.
Once constitutional rules are adopted, the outcome on concrete
issues is often given by the internal dynamics of the political
system. Thus the design of constitutional rules and the
possibility of constitutional reforms take on great importance.
Attempts to advise paliticians or affect the outcome of specific
issues are often futile; for any given rule system, the outcome
is determined largely by prevailing political
constellations.
The Importance of Fixed Rules
Buchanan's foremost achievement is that he has consistently and
tenaciously emphasized the significance of fundamental rules and
applied the concept of the political system as an exchange
process for the achievement of mutual advantages. He has used his
method with great success in the analysis of many scecific
problems and issues. Long before large budget deficits arose, for
example, he showed how debt financing dissolves the relation
between expenditures and taxes in the decision-making
process.
Developments over the last few decades have confirmed Buchanan's
realistic view of the scope of economic policy and the importance
of continuously reconsidering fundamental rules of the game,
while retaining stable rules. Economists now working in the area
of stabilisation policy are much more interested in fixed rules
than they were a few decades ago when "fine tuning" was in
fashion. Earmarked taxes and qualified majority as methods of
achieving better correspondence between public expenditures and
taxes are now considerably more topical questions than they were
twenty years ago when attempts were made to restrict the
political administrative decision-making process as little as
possible.
Important Publications
Buchanan's best-known work is probably Calculus of Consent
(1962; written in collaboration with his colleague, Gordon
Tullock). Different applications are given in, e.g.,
Public Finance in a Democratic Process (1966), and The
Demand and Supply of Public Goods (1968).
Buchanan's visionary approach is presented in The Limits of
Liberty (1975) and Freedom in Constitutional Contract:
Perspectives of a Political Economist (1977). In more recent
works, Buchanan has continued his analysis of the tax state and
systems of rules in The Power to Tax (1980; with G.
Brennan) and The Reason of Rules (1985; with G.
Brennan).
In addition to these monographs, Buchanan has published numerous articles in scientific journals; collections have appeared in What Should Economists Do? (1979) and Liberty, Market and State (1986).
MLA style: "The Prize in Economics 1986 - Press Release". Nobelprize.org. 23 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/1986/press.html
