SEATTLE — Already tired of the holiday season? Stressed out about what to buy?
Whatever you choose, your kids will probably hate it anyway.
What a waste.
If it’s any consolation, economists largely agree with you. A gloomy bunch, them. But perhaps, even if you blow the gift, the giving act itself can eclipse the blunder.
Gift giving, the loose consensus goes, is economically inefficient. You’re spending time, effort, money to try to guess what your loved one wants. At best, you’ll guess right and buy what your loved one would have bought themself. At worst, you’ll buy a sweater that will sit in the back of the closet or a useless puzzle or some horrid candlesticks.
“It is more likely that the gift will leave the recipient worse off than if she had made her own consumption choice with an equal amount of cash,” Joel Waldfogel, a University of Minnesota economist, wrote in an influential 1993 paper, “The Deadweight Loss of Christmas.” “In short, gift giving is a potential source of dead-weight loss.”
Anthony Gill, a University of Washington political science professor, taught that paper for decades in his Introduction to Political Economy course.