Berry College is a private college located on a large campus adjacent to Rome, Georgia. In March 1998, the Berry College Student Government Association (SGA) used student activity funds to purchase 20 bicycles for student use on campus.
The bright red bicycles, each with an identifying plate
reading "Berry Bike," were available to al students on a "first-come,
first-served" basis, making
them a common property resource. In spite of the relatively favorable environment
for common-property bicycles at Berry, it took less than two months for
many of the bikes to be lost, stolen, or abused. This story illustrates
the importance of private property rights and the folly of common property.
The SGA purchased 20 Schwinn Cruiser bicycles for $190
each. The rationale for spending student fees was that the distance between
some buildings on campus made getting to classes on time difficult. Several
factors would seem to favor the plan. The campus is relatively self-contained;
it is unlikely that townspeople would enter college property to use the
bikes or that students would ride them off campus where they could be abandoned,
lost, or stolen. Berry students probably have a more cooperative ethic
than students at many other colleges. For example, there is relatively
high participation in student organizations, many of which are campus religious
groups. Observers report a tendency for students there to split the difference
during in-class market simulation exercises, rather than compete to maximize
personal gain, suggesting that Berry students are not unusually self-centered.
Moreover, the student body is relatively small. Anyone
who abused a bicycle could be readily identified, and the students harmed by
having bicycles
mistreated would not be strangers. These factors would presumably deter
would-be vandals. Finally,
and directly pertinent, privately owned bicycles were not being lost or
abused.
Dismal Results
Unfortunately, the results of the Berry bike project were
dismal. It took little time for the misuse of the bicycles to become evident.
Writing in the April 2, 1998, Campus Carrier, student Liz Hill reported that
"Chains have been broken, tires punctured,
handlebars bent, and seats torn after only a couple of weeks." Recognizing
the underlying cause of the mistreatment, Hill implored students to "treat
the bikes as if they were your own property." Evidently, her column spurred
little change.
On April 21, SGA President M. Lynsey Morris e-mailed all
students that "It has come to our attention here in the SGA office that
many students are failing to take care of the Berry Bikes. . . . These
bicycles are top quality and should not be bending and breaking the way
they are. The [SGA] officers and other students have seen many people riding
the bikes at absurd speeds, doing tricks, and just abusing the bicycles
in general." She too requested that students "treat [the bikes] as you
would your personal property." Morris's appeal apparently met with little
success; a survey at the end of the semester revealed that four of the
20 bikes were lost or stolen and 11 were in a state of disrepair - a 75
percent casualty rate in a mere two months.
Undeterred, the SGA had the bicycles repaired over the
summer recess and resumed the program in the fall. It soon became apparent
that the abuse would continue. The September 10 Campus Carrier editorialized
about "mangled corpses of twisted red metal that lie about campus" and
concluded that "Perhaps SGA put too much trust in human nature and Berry
students' respect for property." Was that the problem? Or was it that the
SGA did not understand the role of incentives? Only a month into the new
semester, the SGA suspended the program with the intention of leasing the
remaining bicycles to students on a semester-by-semester basis, thereby
alleviating the problems associated with common-property resources.
Although it may seem cynical or impolitic to point out
the failure of the project, we think just the
opposite. A primary goal of college is for students to
learn, both in and out of the classroom. At a cost of about $2 out of each
student's activity fees,
the failed Berry bike experiment provides an inexpensive example of the
"tragedy of the commons" that
students can remember vividly for the rest of their lives.