Why IEDs Aren’t Giffen Goods

I’m having a bit of a debate

over at Zubin’s economics blog, and rather than continue it in the comments

there, I thought I might as well hoist it up here, into its own blog entry.

Zubin’s found a chap called Matthew Hanson who claims

that he might have found a "Giffen good" – something which becomes

more popular the more expensive it gets. The title of Hanson’s paper: "Are

Improvised Explosive Devices a Giffen Good?".

Unfortunately, it seems quite clear to me that no, IEDs are not a

Giffen good, and that Hanson uses some rather shoddy logic to come to his conclusion.

There are quite a few places where Hanson’s assumptions can be challenged,

but let’s leave them to one side, and concentrate on the logical leap that Hanson

makes at the beginning of his paper:

We can treat the percentage of IED attacks that are effective as an inversely

correlated proxy for the price of an IED attack, since a decrease in the percentage

of IED attacks that are effective increases the resources necessary to conduct

an effective IED attack.

Let’s say that Iraqi insurgents, in some given time period, make A

attacks, of which E are effective. Then "the percentage of IED

attacks that are effective" is just E/A. Hanson says

that this number is "an inversely correlated proxy for the price of an

IED attack" – in other words, as E/A goes down,

the price of an IED attack – let’s call it a – goes up.

If the cost of an IED attack is a, then le’ts say the cost of an effective

IED attack is e. Since only E in every A attacks

are effective, we can say that e=aA/E.

Now let’s take another look at Hanson’s reasoning: he says that "a decrease

in the percentage of IED attacks that are effective increases the resources

necessary to conduct an effective IED attack". In other words, as E/A

goes down, e goes up.

Well, yes. Hanson’s saying here that E/A is inversely correlated

to aA/E – which is all but tautological. Most simply,

you can just hold a constant, and come to the conclusion that E/A

is, quite literally, the inverse of A/E.

What Hanson has signally failed to show is that there’s any correlation

at all, inverse or otherwise, between E/A and a

the proposition which he seems to think that he’s demonstrated.

So it seems to me that Hanson hasn’t come close to showing that IEDs, or the

cost of an IED attack, are a Giffen good. As I said in the comments to Zubin’s

original blog entry, a Giffen good isn’t just any old thing which you buy more

of and therefore spend more money on: it’s something which actually becomes

more expensive on a per-unit basis even as it becomes more popular. And for

all Hanson’s lovely charts of attack effectiveness against total IED incidents,

I don’t think he’s found any product which is behaving in a Giffen-like manner.

Update: Hanson responds, in the comments. If I understand

him correctly, he’s now saying not that IEDs are Giffen goods, but rather that

"the resources expended to cause a unit of damage" – something

which fits into "the standard consumer theory interpretation of price"

– are (or might be) Giffen goods. In which case Hanson needs to change

more than his sentence, he needs to change his title. Intuitively speaking,

something as abstract as "the resources expended to cause a unit of damage"

isn’t a good at all – a point that dsquared makes, also in the comments.

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