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Economy

How Self-Interest Civilizes Politics

by October 10, 2025
by October 10, 2025

Why do people vote, protest, or boycott, when their individual actions almost never change political outcomes? Economists have long emphasized that the probability that your single vote will swing a national election is around one in sixty million at the national level. The costs of becoming fully informed are immense, yet the payoff is virtually nil.

And yet, millions of people participate in politics. They show up to polling places, wear partisan badges, attend rallies, donate to campaigns, and argue online with strangers. The economist Anthony Downs called this rational ignorance: it doesn’t pay to be deeply informed about politics. Bryan Caplan goes further by arguing that voters are often rationally irrational, choosing to indulge flattering illusions and tribal loyalties because the personal cost of doing so is small and the emotional return can be substantial.

If politics is so inefficient, why bother? Because politics is not just about changing outcomes. It is also about signaling to tribal members. Voters and politicians alike use public acts not only to influence policy but to declare identities, loyalties, and values. This often looks corrosive—virtue signaling, rationalization, motivated reasoning—but there’s an invisible-hand dynamic at work. Just as in economics, where private greed can be channeled into public benefit, politics can turn even our vices into accidental virtues.

Let us back up a bit. Adam Smith’s original invisible hand insight was that markets transform private motives into social benefits. For example, the butcher, brewer, and baker do not serve us from benevolence, but from self-interest. It is easier for them to sell us stuff, to encourage us to voluntarily part with our money than to use deceit or coercion. They seek profit, and in doing so, they provide goods and services that meet the needs of others.

Markets do not eliminate greed. They discipline it. Institutions like competition, property rights, and prices channel self-interested behavior into productive forms. A generic takeaway here is that under the right conditions, bad motives can yield good outcomes. There is an abundance of food in my refrigerator in part because the market incentives food production for sale. A business that mistreats customers or delivers shoddy goods will lose reputation, revenue, and market share. The profit motive, filtered through competition, becomes a tool for cooperation.

As it happens, a similar dynamic occurs in politics. The filtering mechanism here is not price and competition, but publicity and reputational dynamics. And here, Jon Elster’s account of political hypocrisy offers a compelling parallel to Smith:

Generally speaking, the effect of an audience is to replace the language of interest by the language of reason and to replace impartial motives by passionate ones. The presence of a public makes it especially hard to appear motivated merely by self-interest. Even if one’s fellow assembly members would not be shocked, the audience would be. In general, this civilizing force of hypocrisy is a desirable effect of publicity… Publicity does not eliminate base motives, but forces and induces speakers to hide them.

This is the political invisible hand at work. Public debate doesn’t purge selfishness from our discourse any more than markets do from transactions. However, it can sometimes discipline it. Politicians, activists, and partisans are forced to translate narrow interests into reasons that appear universal when their words and deeds are publicly available to voters, special interest groups, politicians, activists, and so forth. And once those public justifications are out there, they can become constraints. Opponents, constituents, and observers can seize upon them, cite them, and demand consistency. A self-serving policy must now survive in the harsh light of impartial reasoning. Hypocrisy becomes a form of moral collateral for the simple reason that people hate hypocrites, and they are good at detecting them, and punishing them in the form of a damaged reputation and fewer, if any options, in the cooperation market.

Virtue signaling in politics plays a similar role. When someone posts a hashtag, marches in protest, or loudly denounces the villain of the week, they may be more interested in status than substance. But that doesn’t mean the act is meaningless. In fact, virtue signals function like prices in a market. And like prices, these signals are shaped by incentives and feedback. A person caught virtue signaling without backing it up risks reputational damage. Just as a company can’t long survive by advertising what it doesn’t deliver, neither can a person long enjoy moral prestige while violating the norms they espouse. The result is a rough reputational market that keeps moral signaling tethered, if loosely, to rational and moral consistency. The person who champions inclusion or charitable giving to effective charities to look good may still help move the culture toward greater inclusion with positive social and moral unintended consequences.

And like virtue signaling, rationalizations are common in politics. These are explanations that sound plausible but are actually false. Rationalization is often viewed as a kind of self-serving dishonesty. People offer flattering but false reasons for their behavior to look good to others. But rationalizations, once uttered, create reputational costs. If someone says that they oppose policies that harm the poor, they are then vulnerable, when their actions are inconsistent with that moral standard, to plausible charges of hypocrisy and reputational damage.

This creates a powerful consistency pressure. Over time, people may actually come to believe their own rationalizations and to act in ways that make them true. Social psychologists call this self-signaling, a process whereby we infer qualities about ourselves we may not know because we are partial strangers to ourselves.

The parallels between economics and politics are striking when seen via the idea of an invisible hand. On the one hand, market greed and the profit margin via institutions—by means of prices, contracts, competition—to redirect those impulses into productivity rewarded by profit. On the other hand, a similar, but somewhat distinct, form of invisible hand operates in politics, where self-interest is filtered through public institutions—via publicity, reputational and consistency pressure—to yield public justifications and reasons, norm enforcement, and even sometimes moral and societal progress.

In both spheres, the individual is free to act selfishly. But in both, the institutional structure disciplines behavior and channels it into forms that—at least sometimes—serve the public good. From there it doesn’t follow that systems are foolproof, but rather that the incentives are aligned with better outcomes.

Publicity forces politicians to speak in the language of reasons. Virtue signaling reinforces social expectations. Rationalization creates commitments that later constrain behavior. None of this requires noble motives. This is the other (political) invisible hand at work, not one that builds wealth, but one that disciplines virtue signaling, rationalization, and self-interest in politics. And like the market version, it depends less on individual virtue and more on institutions and incentives.

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