When the Unseen is Seen

by Justin on Feb 21, 2010

I feel I have to highlight one of the rare moments when the unseen consequences of governmental manipulation of markets becomes seen:

ENVIRONMENT Minister Peter Garrett will keep his job but thousands of workers will be sacked after the abrupt scrapping of the disastrous $2.5 billion household insulation scheme yesterday.

And Mr Garrett's own department admitted that as many as 80,000 homes across the country may have been left with insulation that does not comply with the official guidelines. Source

We know that when the government distorts the price system through, for example, incentives such as insulation subsidies or grants, the higher prices - which indicate to people where the most urgent shortages as dictated by true consumer preferences currently are - lure entrepreneurs and workers like moths to a flame into that industry. When the program ends, these people are suddenly not needed - they were employed in an area not aligned with consumer preferences. We will have thousands of unemployed insulation installers who might have become plumbers or gardeners or something else actually aligned with the true demands of consumers.

The failure of this program comes as no surprise to anyone who has read Bastiat's What Is Seen and What Is Unseen but 90 per cent of the time the majority of the voting population never look beyond what is seen. It's unfortunate that it took the loss of human life to expose it this time (another unfortunate consequence these programs have a habit of causing) - no doubt the government will be calling for more money, better people and better regulation to 'get it right' the next time.

Site Comments

  • drwasho's avatar
  • drwasho
  • Wed Feb 24, 2010
  • 12.01 am

I only realized how serious this was when I heard that 4 people died and something like 90 homes had burnt down… and that there was a risk assessment on his desk for 10 months that specifically warned him of these problems. 

Now, it may be forgiven that a front-bencher Federal MP may not have time to read every report related to a scheme that their office is peddling.  But no one on his staff noticed it either, no one picked it up and called a meeting, sent an email/memo?

The question must be asked of Peter Garrett, how can he sleep while Australian beds are burning due to his office’s incompetence?  Garrett must go.

 

  • Justin's avatar
  • Justin
  • Thu Feb 25, 2010
  • 03.57 am

Hockey reckons it could end up costing the government (read: taxpayers) $1b in compensation. Garrett has to go but will that solve anything? Nope. It’s not the person but the entire system that is to blame.

 

  • drwasho's avatar
  • drwasho
  • Thu Feb 25, 2010
  • 04.47 am

Absolutely correct.

 

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