O ‘zbekiston respublikasi oliy ta’lim fan va innovatsiyalar vazirligi farg‘ona davlat universiteti


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RENT SEEKING PUBLIC CHOICE

As with all empirical work, these various approaches are only as good as the theories and models upon which they are based. Buying a lock, for example, is a response to the security of property rights in a society. This security can be produced in a variety of ways (including moral exhortation), but in the face of the relevant probabilities, buying a lock can hardly be seen as an unproductive investment. Given the prevailing ethos, a lock protects property rights, and the protection of property rights enhances the productivity of resources over what they could produce without the lock. To argue that one can be wealthier without locks and lawyers implies that there are feasible reforms in behavior that will reduce such costs. This is certainly believable, but this is exactly the burden that estimators of the costs of rent seeking face. The lock and the lawyer are only wasteful to the extent that these resources can be feasibly reallocated to more productive uses. Alternatively, contributions to churches should be regarded as substitutes for locks.
In principle, the cost of rent seeking is simply the increase in GNP that would result if a feasible way to reallocate resources from locks and lawyers to more productive uses could be found by a political entrepreneur. This figure could be high or low, but it is probably low given the ability of rent-seeking inputs to resist such reallocations. And the mere resistance of the inputs is yet another reason not to waste resources attempting such a reallocation (Tollison and Wagner, 1991).
A related concept is Tullock’s (1975) transitional gains trap. In this case regulatory-created rents are dissipated by cost-increasing competition (e.g., more airline flights at a given time of day), so that consumers and producers are "trapped" in a situation from which no Pareto-like improvement is possible. Producers make normal returns on their investments after rent dissipation, and consumers pay higher than competitive prices. The capital losses facing producers in this case preclude a Paretian argument for deregulation.

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