Differences in time horizons among social groups change the effectiveness of social policies involving either benefits or penalties, especially when one social group, with a given time horizon, predominates among the policy makers and another social group, with a different time horizon, predominates among those to whom the policy applies. For example, “job training” programs which require present efforts to increase prospective employment and earnings sometime in the future may prove relatively ineffective with age, ethnic, or socioeconomic groups with short time horizons. Participation in such programs may be based on such
Jobs are a meaningful alternative to crime when the jobs have similarly short time dimensions. The availability of casual, day-to-day jobs is apparently inversely correlated with petty crime rates. Where the opportunity for such pickup jobs is reduced — as by bad weather — petty crimes tend to increase, since people who live from day to day “have to eat” when the jobs stop and seldom have much money saved.3
One of the reasons why relatively simple precautions reduce the incidence of crime is the short time horizon of many criminals. Almost no feasible precaution can make it impossible to steal, break-in, or victimize by violence. But merely by raising the immediate cost — in time, effort, or risk — it discourages many whose aversion to perseverance and postponed benefits is part of the reason for their being criminals. Few homes are burglar-proof and few people mugger-proof, but the incidence of burglary is much lower in New York than in Los Angeles while the incidence of mugging is just the reverse, because access to New York apartments is usually a little more difficult than in Los Angeles (due to architectural style differences) and access to people to mug is somewhat more difficult in Los Angeles (due to fewer pedestrians in residential neighborhoods). Apparently criminals are rational within their framework. One of the reasons for the absence of simple precautions is the subsidization of losses: insurance policies spread and thus minimize the impact of the cost of theft; police property recovery costs paid for by the taxpayers likewise reduce the connection between carelessness and consequences; “victim compensation” policies by government extends this externalization of costs still further. Insofar as individual precautions merely cause the criminal to turn to someone else as an easier victim, the private benefits exceed the social benefits. An argument might be made for legal compulsion to reduce vulnerability in general — antitheft devices in cars, better locks required by building codes, brighter lighted streets, etc. — but since such requirements would be categorical rather than incremental, they could easily go past the point where the benefits balanced the costs.
THE ANIMISTIC FALLACY
From the point of view of the social utilization of knowledge, time permits entirely different methods for the production and distribution of knowledge from those usually conceived of, and does not depend upon articulation, rationality, cognition, or any of the other formal processes taught in academic institutions. With unlimited time, either the processes of nature or the competition among men may lead to an intricate pattern of results unplanned by anybody. The fitness or accuracy of these systemic adaptations may be revealed primarily — or even exclusively — in results rather than in articulated rationality. But because man insists on