Amitai
Etzioni
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/amitai-etzioni/small-lies-big-lies-and_b_73341.html
Small Lies, Big Lies, and Economists
Posted November 19, 2007 | 03:46 PM (EST)
The timing could not be more inappropriate. The United States is
finally moving to join all the civilized nations of the world by ceasing to
execute people. It still has quite a way to go. So far, most states that still
impose the death penalty have recently suspended executions until the Supreme
Court rules on whether the ways people are currently 'put down' constitutes a
cruel and unusual punishment; that is, whether lethal injection violates the
constitution.
Enter a bunch of economists with a model that, they say, shows
that the death penalty deters crimes and hence saves lives. Because most people
do not read the math involved and have a hard time following the intricacies of
these models, these kinds of "findings" are often taken seriously.
Indeed, even a major progressive legal scholar, Cass Sunstein, told the press
that "the evidence on whether [capital punishment] has a significant
deterrent effect seems sufficiently plausible that the moral issue becomes a difficult
one."
Actually the data on which this model is based are extremely thin.
First, there are simply not enough executions for most statistical methods to
work properly; in 2003, while there were more than 16,000 homicides nationwide,
there were only 65 executions. Adding to this statistical shortfall, too many
other factors change over the same period as the number of executions changes
to permit a sound conclusion. These include the overall crime rates, policing
methods, gun laws, levels of economic growth and of upward mobility, drug
rehabilitation and education policy, among others. Things are complicated even
further when one recognizes that these factors differ not only over time but
also among various states that execute more people than others. The economists
gloss over such challenges by using dummy variables, artificial weights, and
other slights of hand.
But all that the economists ultimately demonstrate is some (deeply
questionable) correlation between capital punishment and murder. That is, they show
that as the number of executions increased, homicide rates decreased. It
doesn't take a doctorate in economics to know that correlation does not prove
causality. As Cassandra Stubbs of the ACLU wrote in a recent letter to the
editor of the Wall Street Journal, one might argue that "children with
larger shoe sizes perform better in reading tests." And when one notes, as
Professor Ronald Allen of the Northwestern University School of Law has, that
during the time-period in question the homicide rate fell more or less
nationwide--that is, not merely in states with capital punishment--one wonders
whether these economists are not doing some shoe-gazing of their own.
Finally, there are some measures that civilized societies just
don't employ, whether they are efficient or not. And if these measures are
used, the societies at issue should be profoundly shamed rather than comforted
with pseudo-scientific mumbo jumbo. Good societies do not hang people, do not
torture people, and in select key areas, they allow their values to take
precedent over all other considerations. After all, if our legal system
followed the cost-benefit analysis of economics, we would shoot all young,
first time offenders--because we know they are very likely to offend again. Not
to mention that the costs of incarceration are higher than many college tuition
rates; some $30,000 per year, per inmate. A bullet and cremation can be readily
had for a few bucks.
The death penalty, especially given how often innocent people have
been executed, belongs on this--granted short--list of no-nos. It is this taboo
which I urge the United States to finally embrace, and also which is the only
reason I oppose hanging a few economists in order to deter the others from
building such deadly models.
Amitai Etzioni is University Professor at the George Washington University and author of The Moral Dimension: Toward a New Economics.