Many might remember the way in which France qualified for
the last World Cup. The
equalizing goal (which was enough for
France to qualify) was scored because Thierry Henry, perhaps the most
famous player on the French national team, kept by hand the ball from going off
the pitch, brought it back and it was then easily tapped (by foot) it into the
net. The reactions were fierce: from protests of the Irish players in the
field, to the disagreements between the Irish and French politicians and requests
for a replay. At the end, the Irish Football Association applied that,
exceptionally, Ireland be included in the World Cup. Of course it all ended as
such things usually end, the goal stood and Ireland stayed home.
But what I found interesting in this story is not soccer but the role of
morality and the institutions. The common defense of Henry’s act was as
follows: sure, handball is a violation of soccer rules, but it is no different
from a professional foul, or simulations to force a penalty kick. In every soccer
game players try to use these tricks in order to win. To quote José Mourinho's famous
words: to win is my job. So, the defense of Henry went on: it is the
task of the referee, that is of institutions, to catch him, prevent them from breaking
the rules and eventually to punish him. Hence Henry’s handball is not his
problem (everybody would do the same), but the problem of inefficient institutions.
Either the referees were not up to the task or soccer should improve its institutions,
for example by the introducing more referees or by the use of video recordings.
Now I would like the reader to forget that we are talking
about soccer. Consider it more generally. Henry’s defense implies that in life everything is allowed in order to
achieve one’s objective, and one should
not feel at all bad or dishonest for doing it. Institutions ought to prevent the achievement
of such goals by illegal means. If I am a trader on Wall Street, my objective
is to make money, by whatever means I can. It is the role of institutions to
stop me. If they failed and the financial crisis happened, it is because they
were badly designed. The entire moral order of society is outsourced, away from
individuals and their internal controls to institutions. We do not expect ourselves to be
moral and behave fairly. It is not our duty: it is the duty of society to
provide good institutions which would punish those who steal and lie, and to create a
good system of incentives which would reward those who contribute to society
through their work, capital or inventiveness.
This position is close to the heart of many economists. If the institutions and
the system of incentives are well “calibrated", the society will move
forward because misconduct will be punished and good behavior rewarded. This will
come about because each of us is a rational and profit-seeking individual and will
follow own interests. The institutions will ideally “channel” our passions and
interests so well that we shall, as “if led by an invisible hand”, be doing the
things that are both in our own and social interest.
But is the improvement of institution, that is purely external
control of human behavior with an implicit assumption that human nature obeys
no rules unless it is punished, really enough to force people to behave
morally? Returning to Henry’s handball, should our objective be only to improve
the quality of refereeing or to introduce cameras, or should our objective be that
the rules are “internalized” so that
people act in accordance with moral requirements regardless of whether they are
expedient or not? Even if all other players are playing by hand and thus steal
goals, we know that such behavior is immoral, and we shall not resort to it, regardless
of consequences. But how can one convince people to apply internal
breaks in a hyper-competitive capitalist society that rewards only success? Even
when they start by behaving morally, would not the behavior of those who behave
otherwise and who, behaving thus, become rich and successful, lead the first
group also to lose their scruples?
It seems to me that with ever greater commercialization, globalization
and the use of money as the sole criterion of success, we have gone further and
further away from any attempt to impose internal control and have entirely
outsourced it to institutions. Perhaps it
is inevitable because all previous attempts to do it internally, thorough religion
or secular religion (like in socialism) have failed either because they led to
endless wars (“my religion is better than yours”) or were incompatible with
human nature (fall of socialism). So I have no answer to the “outsourcing” of morality.
I see it as inevitable although I cannot say that I enjoy that prospect. Being
an economist, I cannot even see exactly why I should not enjoy it, but I still do
not.
After all, Thierry might have done the right thing. We
shall get cameras and another handball will not happen. But something else
will.
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