There is nothing “free” about concert tickets if you have to stand in line in the
rain for six hours to get them. Taking the bus for $1.50 may not be cheaper than
taking a taxi for $7 if you are running late for a meeting with a peevish client
who will pull a $50,000 account if you keep her waiting. Shopping at a discount
store saves money but it usually costs time. I am a writer; I get paid based on
what I produce. I could drive ninety miles to shop at an outlet in Kenosha,
Wisconsin, to save $50 on a new pair of dress shoes. Or I could walk into
Nordstrom on Michigan Avenue and buy the shoes while I am out for lunch. I
generally choose the latter; the total cost is $225, fifteen minutes of my time, and
some hectoring from my mother, who will invariably ask, “Why didn’t you drive
to Kenosha?”
Every aspect of human behavior reacts to cost in some way. When the cost of
something falls, it becomes more attractive to us. You can learn that by deriving
a demand curve, or you can learn it by shopping the day after Christmas, when
people snap up things that they weren’t willing to buy for a higher price several
days earlier. Conversely, when the cost of something goes up, we use less of it.
This is true of everything in life, even cigarettes and crack cocaine. Economists
have calculated that a 10 percent decrease in the street price of cocaine
eventually causes the number of adult cocaine users to grow by about 10 percent.
Similarly, researchers estimated that the first proposed settlement between the
tobacco industry and the states (rejected by the U.S. Senate in 1998) would have
raised the price of a pack of cigarettes by 34 percent. In turn, that increase would
have reduced the number of teenage smokers by a quarter, leading to 1.3 million
fewer smoking-related premature deaths among the generation of Americans
seventeen or younger at the time.
4
Of course, society has already raised the cost
of smoking in ways that have nothing to do with the price of a pack of cigarettes.
Standing outside an office building when it is seventeen degrees outside is now
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