Title: Case Studies, Taxes, Tipping, and Trust
1Case Studies,Taxes, Tipping, and Trust
2Suicide Tipping Points
Rural Mo. Area Grapples With Teen Suicides
CARUTHERSVILLE, Mo. Saturday December 16, 2006
438 pm
In a Land Torn by Violence, Too Many Troubling
Deaths New York Times
Marvilia Marmolejo lost two of her children to
suicide, Ketty Salazar, 15, and Yuber Salazar,
18. "This had never happened around here before,"
she said.
3Other Teen Tipping Points
- contagious behavior/imitation Gladwell (p. 223)
getting permission to act from someone else
Red Lake High School, MN
Jeff Weiss Too Close for Comfort New York Times
Jonesboro, Arkansas
Heath, Kentucky
4Teen Smoking
- (CNN) -- Smoking rates among American teen-agers
rose dramatically between - 1988 and 1996, according to the CDC.
- The teen smoking epidemic illustrates both the
Law of the Few (contagiousness) and Stickiness - Of all the teenagers who experiment with
cigarettes, only about a third ever go on to
smoke regularly. Hence, nicotine may be highly
addictive, BUT it is only addictive in some
people, some of the time. - Even among the population of smokers, a fifth
of them dont smoke every day. - There are millions of Americans who manage to
smoke regularly and not be hookedpeople for whom
smoking is contagious but not sticky. - They are known as chippers (avg. no more than 5
cigarettes a day but who smoke at least 4
days/per week equivalent of social drinkers)
5Teen Smoking
- What distinguishes chippers from hard-core
smokers? Partially genetic factors - e.g., rat experiments at Univ. of Colorado (pp.
236-237) - Three Categories
- 1.) People who tried smoking once, didnt get a
buzz, and found the whole experience so awful
that they never smoked again are probably similar
to those rates whose bodies treated nicotine like
a poison. - 2.) Chippers may be people who, like other rats,
have the genes to derive pleasure from nicotine,
but not the genes to handle it in large doses. - 3.) Heavy smokers, meanwhile, may be people with
the genes to do both. - Yet genes dont provide a total explanation for
how many people smoke and how much they smoke.
Environmental factors still play a role. - What this and other research shows is that what
makes smoking sticky is very different from the
kinds of things that make it contagious.
6Teen Smoking
- Contagiousness e.g., the Colorado Adoption
Project and the nurture myth - - If nurture matters so much, then why did the
adopted kids not resemble their adoptive parents
at all? (Gladwell, p. 240) - - The Colorado study isnt saying that genes
explain everything and that environment doesnt
matter. On the contrary, all of the results
strongly suggest that our environment plays as
bigif not a biggerrole as heredity/genes in
shaping personality and intelligence. - - What it is saying is that whatever the
environmental influence is, it doesnt have a lot
to do with parents. Its something else, Judith
Harris argues peers (p. 241). - SO, public health campaigns threatening and
scaring teenagers with grisly photos about the
risks of smoking are useless. Theyre adult
propaganda. Its because adults dont approve of
smoking that many teenagers want to do it. -
- In short, its hard to make smoking less
contagious. - Hence, trying to reduce smoking by thwarting the
efforts of Salesmen and making it less
contagious doesnt seem like a particularly
effective strategy. - So how about trying to make it less sticky?
7Teen Smoking
- Stickiness Two Possibilities
- 1.) recently discovered link between smoking and
depression - - research has shown that smokers suffer
disproportionately from chemical imbalances in
their brains (serotonin, dopamine, and
norepinephrine) - Hence, if you can treat smokers for depression,
you may be able to make their habit an awful lot
easier to break (pp. 246-247) - e.g., Glaxo Wellcome and bupropion/Zyban
- 2.) Nicotine addiction isnt a linear phenomenon
no instant addiction (takes on average 3 years
most smokers start in the mid-teens, so you
have time to prevent addiction) - - smoking research (p. 249) shows that there is
something of an addiction tipping point
chippers simply never smoke enough to hit that
addiction threshold/tipping point - chippers smoke up to, but no more than, 5
cigarettes a day (4-6 milligrams of nicotine) - - so require tobacco companies to lower the
level of nicotine so that even the heaviest
smokersthose smoking, say, 30 cigarettes a
daycould not get anything more than 5 milligrams
of nicotine within a 24-hour period (New England
Journal of Medicine)
8Teen Smoking
- Anti-smoking efforts
- - have focused on trying to make smoking less
acceptable, more stigmatized - - have involved raising cigarette prices,
curtailing advertising, running public health
messages, limiting access to minors and
schoolchildren, encouraging absolutely no
experimentation (in short, trying to change
attitudes/making smoking less contagious) . . .
Not very successful. - Instead . . .
- - treat some smokers for depression,
- - and reduce nicotine levels below the addiction
threshold - The habit would be significantly less sticky.
Cigarette smoking would be more like the common
cold easily caught but easily defeated.
9Coordination in a Complex World
- coordination problems
- - how best to maneuver around campus?, feed UR
students?, etc. How can people voluntarily make
their actions fit together in an efficient and
orderly way? - - one way to solve them is by authority or
coercion, which is unappealing. - In a liberal society, authority (which includes
laws or formal rules) has only limited reach over
the dealings of private citizens, and that seems
to be how most Americans like it. - bottom-up, voluntary solutions are preferred
(e.g., the El Farol problem)
10Coordination in a Complex World
- Schelling Points salient landmarks or focal
points upon which peoples expectations
converge. Why important? - They show that people can find their way to
collectively beneficial results not only without
centralized direction but also without even
talking to each other. - The existence of Schelling points suggests that
peoples experiences of the world are often
surprisingly similar, which makes successful
coordination easier. - - Conventions not only maintain order and
stability, they reduce the amount of cognitive
work you have to put in to get through the day. - - Conventions allow us to deal with certain
situations without thinking too much about them,
and when it comes to coordination problems in
particular, they allow groups of disparate,
unconnected people to organize themselves with
relative ease and an absence of conflict. (p. 93)
- - (In short, they reduce dramatically the number
of choices individuals have to make on a daily
basis they help to reduce the Paradox or
Paralysis of Choice).
11Invisible Norms/Conventions/Social Dictates that
Regulate Human Behavior without Centralized
Control and that Go Largely UnnoticedExcuse Me.
May I Have Your Seat?
- Yoni Brook/The New York Times
- In 1975, students asking for another rider's seat
on the subway felt queasy breaking the
first-come-first-served code. - Three decades later, the experience is just as
daunting.
Dr. Stanley Milgram, who planned the experiment,
in 1975. Milgrams idea exposed the extremely
strong emotions that lie beneath the surface of
otherwise normal, everyday life. The study showed
how much the unwritten rules of society save us
from chaos through coordination and cooperation.
12Society Does ExistTaxes, Tipping, TV, and Trust
- There's no such thing as society, British Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher once famously
declared. There are individual men and women and
there are families. - Society, therefore is nothing more than
individuals (and families) always and only
seeking their own self-interest or to maximize
their own utility in each and every human
interactionits more rational to free ride. - If that is true, then how do we explain, among
other examples (1) the Richard Grasso affair,
(2) tipping while away on vacation, (3) the
ultimatum game, (4) the success of eBay and
Amazon.com, and (5) anyone paying their income
taxes.
13Society Does ExistTaxes, Tipping, TV, and Trust
- Answer Cooperation through trust and a sense of
fairness - prosocial behavior and strong reciprocity by
which the group benefits - The key to cooperation is the shadow of the
future or the opportunity to punish free-riders
and trust-abusers (eBay, Amazon, tax audits,
Honor System at UR) - capitalisms success and superiority over any
other economic system - - the realization that the accumulation of
capital over the long-term, versus the
short-term, is actually in everyones
self-interest! - Capitalism is healthiest when people believe and
behave on the realization that the long-term
benefits of fair dealing outweigh the short-term
benefits of sharp or shady dealing.