by Miranda Worley
Inefficient gift-giving |
Purple stripy toe socks – WHSmith vouchers –
flowerpot-people ornaments – what do all these things have in common? They all represent inefficient gift-giving.
As I am always telling my pupils, Economics is the study of
efficiency. Efficiency means getting the most happiness (utility) from the
scarce resources that we have. So here
is the dilemma: how do we maximise happiness at Christmas? More specifically, how do I give gifts that
generate the most happiness? It has been
estimated that each year Americans spend $100 billion on giving gifts which are
perceived as having only $80 billion value by the recipients. A waste of $20
billion a year of utility.
Now the general rule about utility (happiness) is that it is
maximised when the (opportunity) cost of the action is much less than the benefit
gained. So the ideal (Economist’s) gift
would be (almost) free of cost to give, but generate much joy in the
recipient. As an example: I visited my
sister; on the way, I stopped at a Starbucks and noticed that they were giving
away, for free, old coffee grounds neatly packaged up, which reduces the firm’s
waste and represents good corporate social responsibility. It allowed me to give a gift to my sister
that shows I know her and her current passion of composting; not only was she
happy with her gift, which could go straight in the (compost) bin, but it also
filled her house with happy coffee smells all that day and prompted a good
shared experience in her garden examining her plants-manship too. Now, I’m not
suggesting we should all give each other old coffee grounds all the time – that
would be boring - but the idea is that we should know our recipient and give
them a gift that yields them more utility than the lost utility to us of
acquiring the gift in the first place.
And so we come up against the main problem of gift-giving:
knowledge (information) of what will give joy ... how do we really know what
the recipient desires? I have tried to
overcome the information problem in various ways: from intercepting letters to
Santa to recalling what the recipient gave me last year (surely a good
indication of what they really wanted
themselves?). But none of these tactics
is perfect. Faced with demands for “a
real unicorn” (?) or the biannual arms-race of mutual scarf exchange with
sisters-in-law, perhaps we should stop and contemplate the joy that we are
trying to give, not the stuff.
Efficient gifts:
The most efficient gift is one that
the recipient will value more than the cost of the gift to ourselves. We can
begin to solve this problem by thinking about how much we know the desires of
the recipient. My third favourite gift,
one that shows the giver understands that they don’t know me very well, it is
the one that has a gift receipt in the bag – it says “I think you’ll look good
in this, but if you don’t agree, then get what you really wanted”. Which is at least an acknowledgement of the
problem of gift-giving. My second
favourite gift is one that gives me something that I would never have bought
for myself – perhaps because it would be difficult to find – or perhaps because
I actually hadn’t realised that I needed this item, until now. My absolute favourite gift is something
unique, usually homemade, such as the photo collage of a party we both went to,
some homemade biscuits, a poem written for me.
The financial cost of the gift is negligible next to the value it
generates.
So here are my suggestions for gifts to avoid this
Christmas:
Inefficient gifts:
where the utility to the recipient is less than the cost to the giver: Basically, anything that is purchased as a
“Christmas gift”, which the recipient could have easily bought themselves,
because, if they don’t already own it, then this is a pretty good signal that
it has less value to them than the cost of buying it. So this includes vouchers, anything from a
chain store, or that can be ordered online.
The point here is not that the gift is unwelcome, or useless, but that
this gift is inefficient – you do
not know that the recipient would have chosen this gift from the many
available, and therefore you are not maximising their happiness. The solution is to just give them the money
you would have spent on the gift instead – then they can make the efficient
choice for themselves. Even vouchers are
an inefficient gift, and not nearly as good as money – recently, I found a
stack of W H Smith vouchers, given to my kids over several Christmas seasons by
well-meaning relatives. These vouchers
cost my relatives real money, but yielded my children negligible utility as we
don’t regularly visit W H Smith, and have no immediate desire for the products
sold there. Hence the vouchers still lie
un-used in a drawer. I am absolutely
sure real money given to them instead would have yielded greater utility by
now.
But in the end Christmas isn’t about efficiency. We love this winter festival: the parties,
the log-fires, the excuse to eat and drink a little too much, the time with
family and friends, the long nights and crisp walks, for themselves. But perhaps, if we thought about the
efficiency of the gifts we give as well, we might end up less frazzled in the
run up, and with a happier Christmas all round.
Have an efficient Christmas! (…don’t tell my kids they’re getting used
coffee grounds this year!)
With thanks to
Marginal Revolution University for the idea and data. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UH28iJ7lVfg
Brilliant article! As per your suggestion, I popped down to Starbucks today and picked up some used coffee grounds for the neighbours! They are very pleased.
ReplyDelete