Monthly Archive for January, 2022

A Question About Covid Policy

There’s been a lot of chatter lately, in print and on the web, about whether hospitals should refuse to treat unvaccinated Covid patients. Among other things, it’s been pointed out that there are potential logistical nightmares in trying to ascertain whether a patient is vaccinated before treating him, especially in emergency situations.

But it seems to me that the hospitals never were the right institutions to making these decisions in the first place — the insurance companies are. Why haven’t the insurance companies announced that they won’t cover the costs of Covid care unless you’re vaccinated? If you show up at the hospital unvaccinated and accept treatment, you’d be on the hook for the costs — at least up to the point where you’re left bankrupt.

Creating appropriate incentives is, after all, a large part of what we pay our insurance companies to do. Nobody wants to buy insurance from a company that approves every claim (and charges commensurate premiums). When you buy insurance, part of what you’re buying is the company’s promise to exercise due diligence and not fritter away its resources. There’s a pretty good argument that subsidizing people to remain unvaccinated counts as frittering.

It seems to me that “no coverage if you’re unvaccinated” would be both good social policy and clearly a win for the insurance companies themselves (because it’s a win for their customers). So the question is—why isn’t it happening?

And here’s where I hit the limits of my knowledge — is there some law that’s preventing this? Or some regulation? Or is it not happening for some other reason that I haven’t thought of?

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Fun Fact

John Tyler was born during George Washington’s administration. From 1841 to 1845 he served as the tenth president of the United States.

His grandson is alive!

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Nakamoto Meets Pigou

Proof-of-work crypto mining generates a lot of externalities. Yesterday’s post was about how not to measure those externalities. Today’s is about how to deal with them.

When miners use vast amounts of power, there are two broad categories of externality to worry about. One is environmental damage associated with power usage. Insofar as that’s a social problem, the way to deal with it is to tax power usage. That is the government’s job.

But the other kind of externality is more interesting from a crypto-design point of view. Miners are engaged in an arms race. Each miner makes the system a little more secure. Each miner earns an expected reward for that contribution. But there’s no reason to think that the miner’s reward is commensurate with the social value of the extra security that miner brings, and in fact there are plenty of reasons — at least plausible and possibly compelling — to believe that miners are over-rewarded. Currently, if you complete a Bitcoin block you earn a block reward of 6.25 bitcoins plus transaction fees that seem to be running somewhere around a tenth of a bitcoin, adding up to something in the vicinity of $300,000. It’s a fair guess that miners earn pretty close to zero economic profit, so their costs should be about $300,000 per block or roughly $45 million per day. Society is certainly getting something of value for that $45 million, but if it only takes, say, half as many miners to provide the same value, then we’re overpaying by $22.5 million every day (that being the value of the essentially wasted energy).

[it’s also entirely possible in principle that there is too little mining, in which case you can interchange all the implicit plus and minus signs in what follows.]

If you subsidize something and you get too much of it, the solution is to lower the subsidy. In this case that means lowering the block reward. If you don’t subsidize something and you get too much of it, the solution is to tax it. In this case that means a negative block reward. I don’t see any reason in principle why you couldn’t have a proof-of-work system with negative block rewards, and I think it’s at least plausible that such a system could be optimal. [The way this would work in practice is that the block reward would be subtracted from the transaction fees and then burned.]

A potentially nice side benefit is that you’d be taxing that environmental damage we talked about at the outset. You might believe as I do that if there’s a case for taxing that damage, it ought to be done by the government, not by the Bitcoiners. But if you believe your elected officials are falling down on the job, and if doing part of their job for them is an automatic side benefit of getting your own house in order, that’s a good thing.

I haven’t thought about any of this quantitatively — meaning that I have nothing to say about estimating the optimal tax rate, but there is, I think, a moral — namely:

It is often said that proof-of-work systems inevitably lead to a lot of social waste. The “inevitable” part can’t be true. It’s easy for the system to levy a tax that brings private rewards in line with social benefits.

Of course one possiblity is that with the optimal tax, transaction fees would not be enough to support the miners, in which case the system would collapse. But with such a small transaction demand, the system should collapse, so that’s not a problem.

I am sure that a lot has been thought, and a lot has been written, about optimal block rewards, and equally sure that I’m unfamiliar with most of it. So maybe a reader or two will contribute to my education here.

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A Bit of a Screed

On New Years Eve, two people were arrested for stealing soap from the Walgreens in my neighborhood. If you think that’s a pretty minor crime, consider this — one of the perpetrators was the exact same height as the Unabomber!

Now wait a minute, you might say. Height is not a measure of criminal impact. If that strikes you as obvious, you are smarter than the readership of the fellow who calls him “Digiconomist” and tweets stuff like this.


Now, if you chortled at the notion of measuring the serious of a crime in units of feet and inches, I trust you are chortling doubly at the notion of measuring economic impact in units of terawatt-hours. Bitcoin miners tend to gravitate (either physically or via the cloud) to where power is cheapest. Argentinians tend to use whatever power is available in Argentina. There’s no reason to think that the cost of a Terawatt-hour generated by a hydroelectric dam in Turkey is comparable to the cost of a Terawatt-hour generated by burning fossil fuels in Buenos Aires.

So why does Digiconomist report this kind of claptrap? Maybe he’s a smart guy who doesn’t always think before he posts. Maybe he’s an idiot. Or — and this is where I’d put my money if I had to — he figures his readers are idiots who are easily dazzled by shiny nonsense.

134 Terawatt Hours is a lot of power. But with not even a guess as to the (internal and external) costs of generating that power, we are left with absolutely no basis for even beginning to think about whether those costs are acceptable. And the comparison to Argentina, where costs are likely to be very different, does not help even a whit. Digiconomist appears to hope his readers won’t notice that.

I’m going on a bit about this because I happen to have just come from a conversation with a pack of idiots of just the sort who I’m sure the digiconomist finds useful. The tweet above happened to come across our desks; I pointed out that it was pretty stupid, and the general reaction was that this just goes to show that economists are living in some crazy fantasyland, where they deny obvious truths like “Everything anybody cares about can be measured in Terawatt Hours”.

Suddenly we were back in first grade where I was explaining that the reason we care about energy use is because it consumes resources and therefore denies us other things, like haircuts and tractors and fresh produce and clean air — and that if you want to think about whether the tradeoffs are worth it, you have to measure everything in a common unit, of which the most readily available is the dollar. That was taken as more evidence of how out of touch economists are. Nobody even suggested an alternative way to think about tradeoffs, having decided, apparently, that thought serves no purpose.

Usually I’m pretty good at ignoring this kind of stuff, but this one really pissed me off. Possibly that was because I was in kind of a bad mood to begin with. But I think it was also this: The idiots in this pack are not full-time idiots. They’re professional people who do their jobs well. I’m sure that if I had to take over any of their jobs, I’d be laughably incompetent. Surely they know how to process information. Surely they’re capable of spotting an obvious fallacy, or an attempt to pull the wool over their eyes. But given an opportunity to hoot and jeer at a simple and obvious point that they happened not to think of themselves, they shut down all of their critical thinking skills in order to grab that opportunity. That’s partly a reflection of how human beings are wired, and partly, I think, a reflection of the times we’re living in, where tribalism and mockery seem to perpetually trump reason and thought. And what it means is that in these times, even many of the best of us have chosen, at least intermittently, to join the pack of idiots. It’s pretty scary. In fact, I’d say it’s even scarier than the number of animals in the National Zoo.

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