Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Opinion|Mon, Jun. 29 2009 10:10 AM EDT

What Money Can't Buy

By Chuck Colson|Christian Post Guest Columnist

Across the country, school systems are paying children to do better in school. In New York, fourth and seventh graders can get up to $500 for improving their scores on the city’s math and English tests. Schools in Georgia pay eighth and 11th graders $8 an hour to attend an after-school learning program.

You would think that, given what’s at stake, doing well at school would be its own reward. But, increasingly, both inside and outside the classroom, striving for virtue is being replaced by monetary incentives.

As one principal told USA Today, he is “trying lots of different incentives for doing the right thing.” “Incentives” include iPods for attending Saturday study sessions and a flat-screen television for making the all “A” honor roll.

Many critics prefer the word “bribe” to “incentive.” One compared the practice to giving athletes steroids: “Short-term performance might improve but the long-term effects can be very damaging.”

Damaging or not, paying people to do what they should already be doing isn’t going away. Greensboro, North Carolina, is paying teenage mothers $1 for every day they are not pregnant. Like paying students to improve their grades and test scores, paying teen mothers to not get pregnant appears to be having the desired affect.

The core ideas in these kinds of programs come from a new field known as “behavioral economics.” Classical economics assumes that people are rational and act in accordance with their best interests. Behavioral economics knows that, in the real world, people make bad and even self-destructive choices all the time.

The goal of behavioral economics is to identify the “dizzying array of human foibles” and help policy makers take them into account when shaping policy.

In the case of incentive programs like the ones I have described, it means “nudging” people to act in their own best interests. It’s an approach, by the way, that is favored by a “number of high-level appointees” in the Obama administration.

While basing policy on human beings as they actually are is certainly preferable to basing them on rational “economic men” that exist only in economists’ imaginations (you can count me among the critics on that one).

It doesn’t surprise me that these “nudges” can have a short-term positive effect. But it’s difficult to imagine these programs making a long-term difference.

On the contrary, the “long term damage” mentioned earlier may very well include creating a generation of people for whom incentives will become a necessity, not a nudge.

To put it in Christian terms, incentives will replace virtue. Instead of doing the right or prudent thing because it’s what a moral person does, people will do what they do because they get something out of it. This doesn’t build character-it builds calculators.

What’s more, in the real world, people don’t always reward you for doing the right thing. But there are still consequences for behaving foolishly. How will people raised on a steady diet of nudges avoid these pitfalls?

The answer is that many won’t avoid them because they never learned that, for the virtuous person, doing the right thing is incentive enough.

_______________________________________________________

From BreakPoint, June 22, 2009, Copyright 2009, Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with the permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the express written permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries.
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  • Tue Jun 30, 2009 9:17 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    While these programs seem to be getting the desired outcome I'm not sure how lasting they will be, plus it's a shame that we have to bribe students to get them to do the right thing, talk about a self-centered and self-serving agenda.

  • Tue Jun 30, 2009 6:41 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    RevR: If you can show a correlation between paying a dollar a day, and graduating high school with an earned diploma and no more babies, then you are correct. Chuck is positing that there will be no such correlation.

    We'll see in a few years. Until then, color me skeptical.

  • Tue Jun 30, 2009 1:53 am Agree: 2   Disagree: 0

    Flagged as inappropriate. show Some of the things Chuck writes are inane but this latest has to take the cake. Claiming "it's difficult to imagine these programs making a long-term difference" is the epitome of absurdity when each teenage pregnancy not prevented obviously has a huge effect on the lives of multiple individuals. hide

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