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SuperFreakonomics

SuperFreakonomics

Global Cooling, Patriotic Prostitutes, and Why Suicide Bombers Should Buy Life Insurance
by Steven D. Levitt 2009 414 pages
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100k+ ratings
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10 minutes

Key Takeaways

1. Incentives drive human behavior, often in unexpected ways

People aren't "good" or "bad." People are people, and they respond to incentives.

Incentives shape actions. Whether it's street prostitutes adjusting their prices based on customer demographics or parents responding to financial rewards for good grades, people consistently respond to incentives. However, these responses aren't always predictable or positive. For example:

  • The Americans with Disabilities Act, intended to protect disabled workers, led to fewer jobs for them as employers feared inability to discipline or fire.
  • Endangered Species Act sometimes prompts landowners to preemptively destroy habitats to avoid restrictions.
  • Pay-per-bag trash collection policies can lead to illegal dumping or stuffing bags fuller.

Understanding incentives is crucial for effective policy-making and problem-solving. It's not enough to have good intentions; we must consider how people will actually respond to new rules or systems.

2. Simple solutions can solve complex problems

The best medicine for stopping infections? Getting doctors to wash their hands more frequently.

Simplicity can be powerful. Many of history's most impactful solutions were remarkably straightforward:

  • Ignatz Semmelweis dramatically reduced maternal mortality by having doctors wash their hands with chlorine solution.
  • Seat belts, a simple and cheap invention, save thousands of lives annually.
  • Adding fluoride to water systems saves billions in dental costs.

Complex problems don't always require complex solutions. Often, the most effective interventions are cheap, simple, and easy to implement. The challenge lies in identifying these solutions and overcoming resistance to change, even when the evidence is clear.

3. Data analysis reveals hidden truths about society

Just about any request which could conceivably be asked of the subject by a reputable investigator is legitimized by the quasi-magical phrase "This is an experiment."

Numbers tell stories. Careful analysis of data can uncover surprising truths that challenge our assumptions:

  • Introduction of TV correlates with increased crime rates, possibly due to reduced socialization of children.
  • Terrorists are more likely to come from middle-class, educated backgrounds than from poverty.
  • Sumo wrestlers and teachers cheat in predictable patterns when incentives align.

However, data analysis requires caution. Experiments, especially in social sciences, can be influenced by:

  • Selection bias in who participates
  • The "Hawthorne effect" where subjects change behavior when observed
  • Misinterpretation of correlation as causation

Critical thinking and multiple data sources are essential for drawing accurate conclusions from statistics.

4. Conventional wisdom is often wrong

When a scientist brings a lump of uranium into a lab, or a mealworm or a colony of bacteria, that object isn't likely to change its behavior just because it's being watched by someone in a white lab coat.

Question assumptions. Many widely-held beliefs crumble under scrutiny:

  • The famous "38 witnesses" to Kitty Genovese's murder was largely a media fabrication.
  • Walking drunk is statistically more dangerous than driving drunk (though less likely to harm others).
  • Child car seats are no more effective than regular seat belts for children over age 2.

Challenging conventional wisdom requires:

  • Careful analysis of data
  • Consideration of incentives and motivations
  • Willingness to question authority and popular narratives

By questioning what "everyone knows," we can uncover new insights and solutions to persistent problems.

5. Unintended consequences shape our world

If you believe that the scary stories could be true, or even possible, then you should also admit that relying only on reducing carbon-dioxide emissions is not a very good answer.

Actions have ripple effects. Well-intentioned policies often have surprising and sometimes counterproductive results:

  • Efforts to reduce carbon emissions can lead to increased deforestation for biofuels.
  • Banning the sale of organs leads to thousands of preventable deaths on waiting lists.
  • Publicizing suicide bombings may inadvertently encourage more attacks.

Understanding unintended consequences requires:

  • Systems thinking to see interconnections
  • Humility about our ability to predict outcomes
  • Willingness to adjust policies based on real-world results

By anticipating potential side effects, we can design more effective interventions and avoid unintended harm.

6. Experts can be biased and mistaken

When a doctor fails to wash his hands, his own life isn't the one that is primarily endangered. It is the next patient he treats, the one with the open wound or the compromised immune system.

Expertise has limits. Even highly trained professionals can make mistakes or act against their own knowledge:

  • Doctors often fail to wash hands between patients despite knowing the risks.
  • Climate models can be influenced by funding pressures and groupthink.
  • Economic forecasters consistently fail to predict major events like recessions.

Reasons for expert fallibility include:

  • Misaligned incentives (e.g., doctors prioritizing speed over safety)
  • Cognitive biases shared by all humans
  • Overconfidence in one's own judgment

While expert knowledge is valuable, it's important to maintain healthy skepticism and seek diverse perspectives.

7. Economic thinking applies to non-financial realms

The typical street prostitute in Chicago works 13 hours a week, performing 10 sex acts during that period, and earns an hourly wage of approximately $27.

Economics is about choices. Economic analysis can provide insights into diverse areas of human behavior:

  • Prostitution markets respond to supply and demand like any other industry.
  • Sumo wrestlers and teachers cheat in patterns predicted by economic incentives.
  • Terrorists often make rational choices based on their goals and constraints.

Key economic concepts applicable to non-financial realms:

  • Opportunity cost
  • Incentives and disincentives
  • Supply and demand
  • Cost-benefit analysis

By applying economic thinking broadly, we can better understand and potentially influence human behavior across many domains.

8. Small changes can have outsized impacts

Pretend the United States (and perhaps Europe) miraculously converted overnight and became zero-carbon societies. Then pretend they persuaded China (and perhaps India) to demolish every coal-burning power plant and diesel truck. As far as atmospheric carbon dioxide is concerned, it might not matter all that much.

Leverage points matter. Sometimes, tiny interventions can produce dramatic results:

  • Adding sulfur dioxide to the stratosphere could potentially reverse global warming at low cost.
  • Changing default options on forms can significantly increase organ donation rates.
  • Simple checklists in hospitals can dramatically reduce medical errors.

Identifying high-leverage interventions requires:

  • Systems thinking to understand interconnections
  • Creative problem-solving to find non-obvious solutions
  • Willingness to experiment with unconventional approaches

By focusing on high-impact changes, we can achieve large-scale results with minimal resources.

9. Human behavior is complex and context-dependent

Given that the monkeys aren't very smart in the first place, you might assume that any gambling strategy was well beyond their capabilities. In that case, you'd expect them to prefer it when a researcher initially offered them two grapes instead of one. But precisely the opposite happened!

Context shapes choices. Human (and animal) behavior is often more nuanced than simple models suggest:

  • Laboratory experiments on altruism often fail to reflect real-world behavior.
  • Cultural differences can lead to vastly different responses to similar incentives.
  • Small changes in how choices are presented can dramatically alter decisions.

Factors influencing behavior include:

  • Social norms and peer pressure
  • Framing of options
  • Emotional state and cognitive biases
  • Past experiences and learned patterns

Understanding these complexities is crucial for designing effective policies and interventions.

10. Creative problem-solving requires questioning assumptions

We've already geoengineered the earth.

Think outside the box. Many persistent problems require unconventional solutions:

  • Geoengineering approaches to climate change (e.g., stratospheric sulfur injection) challenge traditional emissions-reduction focus.
  • Legalizing organ sales could save thousands of lives annually.
  • Unique incentives (e.g., offering midwives money to bring babies with cleft palates for treatment) can solve seemingly intractable issues.

Strategies for creative problem-solving:

  • Question fundamental assumptions
  • Look for analogies in other fields
  • Consider counterintuitive approaches
  • Embrace "crazy" ideas initially to spark new thinking

By approaching problems with fresh eyes and a willingness to challenge orthodoxy, we can find innovative solutions to long-standing challenges.

Last updated:

Review Summary

4 out of 5
Average of 100k+ ratings from Goodreads and Amazon.

SuperFreakonomics received mixed reviews. Some praised its entertaining and thought-provoking approach to economics, while others criticized its controversial claims and methodology. Readers appreciated the authors' ability to make complex topics accessible and explore unconventional ideas. However, some found the book less impressive than its predecessor, with concerns about data interpretation and oversimplification of complex issues. The global warming chapter was particularly divisive, with some finding it insightful and others considering it misguided. Overall, the book sparked debate and encouraged readers to question conventional wisdom.

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About the Author

Steven David Levitt is an American economist known for co-authoring the bestselling Freakonomics series with Stephen J. Dubner. He won the 2003 John Bates Clark Medal for his work in crime economics and currently serves as a professor at the University of Chicago. Levitt co-founded the Center for Radical Innovation for Social Change and the consulting company TGG Group. Time magazine named him one of the "100 People Who Shape Our World" in 2006. A survey of economics professors ranked him as their fourth favorite living economist under 60. Levitt's work often challenges conventional wisdom and applies economic principles to unconventional topics.

Other books by Steven D. Levitt

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