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Inflation

Price Controls Are the Worst Possible Solution to Inflation

Addressing a distortion of the market with another distortion of the market will only make the problem worse.

Joe Lancaster | 1.3.2022 11:20 AM

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Nearly nine out of 10 Americans are worried about inflation, according to one recent survey. And they're right to be concerned: When inflation outpaces growth in wages, your money is worth less. As with any political issue, opinions vary on what can be done about inflation, which hit its highest level since 1982 in November. But some suggestions are simply not worth trying.

In an article published in The Guardian on Wednesday, economics professor Isabella Weber made the case that World War II–style price controls are "a powerful weapon to fight inflation." Weber works at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, home to one of the few Marxist economics departments in the country.

Weber posits that after World War II ended, President Harry Truman lifted the wartime price controls, resulting in "inflation and a boom-bust cycle." At the time, economists had advised him to retain some "strategic" limits on certain prices, arguing that "as long as bottlenecks made it impossible for supply to meet demand, price controls for important goods should be continued to prevent prices from shooting up." Weber concludes that as the pandemic continues to cause supply chain issues and inflation remains high, the U.S. should impose such strategic "targeted" price controls in order to allow supply to catch up with demand.

Of course, what this ignores are the actual effects of the price controls during World War II. The agency tasked with setting prices, the Office of Price Administration, was woefully unprepared to respond to the dynamic changes in supply and demand. It tried to impose a one-size-fits-all plan on pricing food and failed to account for the myriad dietary needs of various regions and religious or ethnic groups. Black markets sprung up to satisfy the demand that legal markets were not allowed to meet.

Price controls have a tendency to create shortages and surpluses regardless of their effects on inflation. When a price for a good is set too high, nobody can afford it, creating a surplus. And when a price for a good is set too low, people are incentivized to overbuy and hoard, and the supply is depleted. You do not have to look to far-flung autocracies like Venezuela to find examples: All across the U.S., price controls lead to astronomical health care costs and a scarcity of rental homes.

Figures on the political right have, unsurprisingly, criticized Weber's defense of such a top-down pricing mandate. But her position is so meritless that it was also critiqued by some on the political left, including Nobel Prize–winning economist Paul Krugman (yes, that Paul Krugman). In a Twitter thread (since deleted), Krugman called Weber's argument "truly stupid."

Former Bloomberg columnist and finance professor Noah Smith also blogged about the issue over the weekend, taking the position that price controls would be the exact wrong response to current inflation. Smith posits that price controls would really only be appropriate in a situation where prices were rising because of widespread monopolies, rather than our current spending and supply chain issues. He also refers to a study showing that when price controls were instituted in 1971 to fight inflation, the ending of the controls in 1974 caused a burst of "catch-up" inflation.

The massive COVID-19 spending bills certainly seem to have driven up the inflation rate. Hopefully some of the worst effects will dissipate once the supply chain stabilizes and manufacturers are able to catch up with demand. But setting artificial caps on prices would only exacerbate the problem.

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NEXT: CDC: 61% of Teenagers Hospitalized for COVID-19 Had Obesity

Joe Lancaster is an assistant editor at Reason.

InflationPrice controlsRegulationFiscal policyEconomics
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  1. rbike   3 years ago

    FPK FJB

    1. Ebony London   3 years ago

      Cash is trash, the future is crypto, even gold is flat.

      1. PaulaFox   3 years ago

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  2. Chumby   3 years ago

    Price cap Hunter Biden paintings at $500,000 each would limit the number of people paying to influence the White House.

  3. OpenBordersLiberal-tarian   3 years ago

    Inflation doesn't even exist, so doing anything to "fight inflation" doesn't make sense.

    1. Moonrocks   3 years ago

      So then what's the deal with spending another 4 trillion dollars? If it isn't to fight inflation, then what is it for?

      1. CE   3 years ago

        Repairing crumbling infrastructure, addressing climate change, and saving American families. Or so I'm told.

        1. One-Punch_Man   3 years ago

          You forgot that infrastructure isn't just roads and power lines anymore.

    2. Gasman   3 years ago

      Maybe we can just spend our way out of inflation. If prices jump 10%, the gov can print and distribute enough to make everyone whole again.

  4. Longtobefree   3 years ago

    Price controls are not fiscal tools, they are fascist tools of oppression.

    1. Longtobefree   3 years ago

      As a reference, the great gas lines of the seventies did not occur until the day after federal price controls went into effect.

      1. Sevo   3 years ago

        Federal price controls which kept the gas where it wasn't needed.

    2. Carey Allison   3 years ago

      Nay, nay, I say again NAY! Price controls are not tools of oppression - they prevent oppression of the poor by the wealthy! Without price controls, prices always go up (look at how computers have increased in price while having progressively less computing ability). When prices go up, only the rich can afford to buy and the poor are forced to do without. Some people would fatuously argue that price controls that impose a "price" that is less than the cost of production would result in less production and ultimately empty store shelves, and repeat the old shibboleth that profits are inherently evila and no one except greedy capitalists would object to producing and selling below cost and at a loss - do you love your country or not? (Having a Universal Basic Income would protect those who can prove they were forced to sell something below at a loss if they can prove it was produced from organic sources and its manufacture involved only green energy.) If you love your country, you are more than willing to spend $1.00 to produce a hammer that you must sell for $0.75 because after all, you can always make it up on volume.

      Every honest patriot knows that price controls - real controls - imposing absolute price constraints on (white) sellers and backing these controls up with steep fines and long prison sentences always -always - results in full retail shelves and an unlimited supply of individually produced "goods and services". In short, it results in a utopia where the rich can't have even a little bit more of anything than the poorest among us and that's only fair!! Let the rich try to eat their dirty money!! What could go wrong?

      Nurse! Nurse!! DAMMIT NURSE!!! Where's my medicine?! I haven't had it this morning and I'm starting to have that tingle running down my leg again, and while we're at it, how come my pants are wet. The voices are talking to me again, but they won't tell me why my pants are wet.

  5. Moderation4ever   3 years ago

    The only reliable way to address inflation is to allow the market to settle. I am concern that becoming overly focused on inflation will force politician to act hastily with things like price controls. Trick here is to be aware of inflation, possibly take modest steps to slow the economy but avoid panicked actions. Question is can this be done with an election coming in 2022?

    1. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

      We should feed the hungry too. Also war is bad.

    2. Squirrelloid   3 years ago

      It's not the economy that needs slowing, it's government spending. You can't solve a supply shortage by pumping cash into it - that only makes it worse.

      1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

        Pumping cash into the economy speeds it up. Cutting government spending slows it down.

        You two might be in agreement.

  6. sarcasmic   3 years ago

    Price controls don't control prices. The laws of economics can't be changed by legislative fiat.

    If the government prohibits the raising of prices, well people pay another way. They may pay with time, like they did waiting in gas lines in the 70s. They may pay by paying out the nose on the black market. They may pay by going completely without thanks to shortages. They may pay with personal clout and connections that enable them to skip the line.

    But one thing is for certain. No matter how much government tries to control monetary prices, people will always pay the total price.

    1. Titanium Dragon   3 years ago

      Price controls work on goods where a monopoly is artificially jacking up prices or the expectation that prices will go up.

      They don't work if the price spiral is caused by shortages or overprinting of money.

  7. Ken Shultz   3 years ago

    The worst possible solution to inflation is full on nationalization, but price controls are a part of that. One third of capitalism is about prices being set by markets rather than the government, and to the extent that the government sets our prices, we become a socialist economy. Price controls are marginally better than 100% nationalization.

    One of the other terrible solutions to inflation is cutting interest rates--something the Turkish government is doing right now.

    "This year, despite massive purchases of foreign currency by the Turkish central bank, the lira has declined from 7 per U.S. dollar in February to about 18 in mid-December . . . .

    On Dec. 19, Mr. Erdogan explained that he is crafting policy on his interpretation of the Quran’s commandment prohibiting paying interest on money: “They complain we keep decreasing the interest rate. Don’t expect anything else from me. As a Muslim, I will continue doing what our religion tells us. This is the command.”

    ----WSJ, December 29, 2021

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-religious-roots-of-turkey-currency-crisis-lira-value-price-monetary-economic-policy-islam-banks-erdogan-quran-interest-rates-11640807383?

    That may seem stupid, but is it really any dumber than Biden and the progressives telling us that we need to pass the Build Back Better bill to fight inflation? At least Erdogan believes God is telling him to lower interest rates. What's the Biden White House's excuse for believing that increasing the money supply faster than the rate of economic growth won't contribute to inflation?

    Religious stupidity is probably better than willful stupidity in this regard. Religious people aren't necessarily or completely lost to reason. There are devout Muslims who don't see interest rates at the nation's central bank that way in a modern economy. When Biden and the progressives close their eyes to facts and reason, they're shutting themselves off from persuasion completely.

    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      Inflation benefits debtors because they dollars they repay their loans with are worth less than the dollars they borrowed.

      What's the biggest debtor on the planet? The federal government.

      This means that the federal government wants inflation. They want it, they love it, they cherish it, and they're going to do what they can to make it happen.

      Regardless of which party is in charge.

      1. JesseAz   3 years ago

        For current debt, not new debt where costs have been built into the goods being sold based on estimated inflation. Like buying a new car that increased by 17% since 2020 as an example. Wonder who would do that.

        Prices do change based on lending costs.

        1. Consensus_Denier   3 years ago

          just stop

      2. ElvisIsReal   3 years ago

        Holy shit sarc is making sense.

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          Bzzzzzt. The correct answer was "BOFF SIDES!"

    2. Ken Shultz   3 years ago

      Q: And then, broadly, on the state of America right now: inflation, obviously, at a 31-year high right now. Americans are seeing their dollars, their paychecks stretched right now. Why should Americans not be concerned that injecting another $1.75 trillion or more would further raise inflation?

      MS. PSAKI: Because no economist out there is projecting that this will have a negative impact on inflation. And actually, what it will help do is it will help increase economic productivity. It’s — it will help economic growth in this country. That and the Build Back Better Agenda will help reduce inflation, will help cut costs for the American people over the long term.

      ----Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jen Psaki, November 15, 2021

      https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/press-briefings/2021/11/15/press-briefing-by-press-secretary-jen-psaki-november-15-2021/

      Schumer is trying to bring the BBB bill up for a vote in the Senate as I type.

      1. Squirrelloid   3 years ago

        Stupidity is truly infinite.

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          “The first lesson of economics is scarcity: There is never enough of anything to satisfy all those who want it. The first lesson of politics is to disregard the first lesson of economics.”

          ― Thomas Sowell

          Stupid can be unlearned. A little economics can go a long way in curing someone of partisanship and setting them on a path of libertarianism.

      2. Titus PUllo   3 years ago

        Honestly she deserves to be tried for treason for a statement like that. Woke assholes who enrich themselves through govt privilege is disgusting...

  8. Bill Godshall   3 years ago

    It appears that Biden's handlers believe they and their legions of left wing media propagandists can dupe most Americans yet again by blaming Trump for Biden's counterproductive price controls (and the stagflation they'll perpetuate).

  9. A Thinking Mind   3 years ago

    There are people who argue that inflation is a result of the economy booming. They claim it means people are so eagerly spending that production can't keep up.

    I wish we could send these people all to Venezuela.

  10. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

    The Democratic Party looked at Venezuela and said "What a good idea".

  11. CE   3 years ago

    Weber concludes that as the pandemic continues to cause supply chain issues and inflation remains high, the U.S. should impose such strategic "targeted" price controls in order to allow supply to catch up with demand.

    The only way price controls would allow supply to catch up with demand would be if the prices were set even higher than they are now, to tamp down demand. And somehow I don't think that's what she has in mind.

  12. Squirrelloid   3 years ago

    Krugman: 'deleting because its never appropriate to use that tone against someone arguing in good faith'

    ...

    No one arguing for price controls is arguing in good faith. Marxists are the economics equivalent of a crank, and should be treated as such.

  13. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    Weber works at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, home to one of the few Marxist economics departments in the country.

    Lol

  14. Eeyore   3 years ago

    Anyone entertaining the idea that price controls might work is a stupid fuck.

    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      It makes sense if you think the economy is a zero-sum game, and if you conflate wealth with money. Unfortunately that's typical "man on the street" economics. Can't fault politicians for exploiting it for personal gain. Doesn't make people stupid. Stupid people can learn. Makes them ignorant of basic economics. That's not a personal fault.

      1. Eeyore   3 years ago

        This is coming from a so called finance professor. They have had ever opportunity to learn basic economics. Sorry, at this point they are willfully ignorant. They are a stupid fuck.

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          Or they are doing their job which is to provide intellectual cover for political action.

          1. Eeyore   3 years ago

            Doing it for political reasons still qualifies in my book as - willfully stupid fuck.

        2. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          Just as the job of a constitutional judge is to justify violations of the Constitution.

          They're not stupid. They're engaging in politics.

    2. Hank Ferrous   3 years ago

      Anyone entertaining the idea that socialism might work is a stupid fuck...

      1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

        Except socialism does work. It works in families. At least I've never met a family who kicks out the children for their inability to buy groceries. It also works in small tribal communities. Heck, some workplaces allow people to give vacation time to coworkers who are on hard times. What all of these have in common is people knowing each other, and the sharing is all voluntary.

        Socialism fails because it doesn't scale. When groups get big the sharing becomes forced.

        We're cavemen with lots of toys. Wouldn't surprise me if socialism is hard-wired. It's so damn intuitive until you think about it.

        1. Eeyore   3 years ago

          That isn't really socialism, because it isn't an economy.

          Human cooperation is a great thing. In small groups it doesn't need to involve an exchange of goods, services, or money. The reason free markets work so well is because it can allow 2 people that actively hate each other to cooperate.

          1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

            Of course it's an economy. Just a small one. And a small economy can be part of a bigger economy.

      2. Ken Shultz   3 years ago

        If you're looking to enrich government bureaucrats at the expense of working Americans everywhere (and their future opportunities), then socialism works great.

        Terminal cancer is a great way to lose weight--if you don't mind the downsides.

  15. TJJ2000   3 years ago

    ...And State Slavery starts to show it's ugly face.

    The Nazi's print useless dollar bills; gets upset that those useless dollar bills are useless (inflation) so then proceeds to *FORCE* people to work for a lower wage than they're worth. But as long as people have enough freedom to quite their jobs the *FORCE* just creates massive demands that furthers the inflation. Therefore the Nazi's will FINALLY conclude that the only way is to *FORCE* all citizens to work for the State.

    Welcome to Nazi Germany ALL OVER AGAIN - because leftard criminals packing Gov-Guns are far too stupid to see the idiocy of their own agenda.

    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      I miss Agile Cyborg.

  16. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

    Everyone knows this except for the people in power who will decide to implement price controls.

  17. Brian   3 years ago

    The only thing worse than $5/gallon gas is $2.50/gallon gas that you can’t find because they’re all out.

    1. Chumby   3 years ago

      And a pedophile posting about how rationed gas at $2.50/gallon is a great thing.

  18. NoVaNick   3 years ago

    “It will work because I say so” seems to be the leftist response to anyone who dare question their ideas. They actually take pride in their ignorance and stupidity.

  19. Mark E Deardorff   3 years ago

    In 2018, economist Robert Murphy wrote, "In August 1971, President Richard Nixon enacted comprehensive wage-and-price controls in a misguided effort to contain inflationary pressures. (Contrary to the faulty memories of some Americans, this initial round of controls wasn’t due to the OPEC oil embargo, which didn’t occur until 1973.) Free-market economists like to use the long lines at the gas pump as a great teaching example of the problems with price controls. Yet the controls at the consumer and employee level were relaxed, and didn’t interfere with the market as much as, say, we are seeing in Venezuela today."

    I was about to enter the University of Southern California in Economics. I was already an avowed laissez-faire anarchist based on my distrust of the Establishment, fiat currency

  20. Mark E Deardorff   3 years ago

    ..., and crony democracy. Price controls were more of the same. They were an abject failure. Every item under control was in short supply or unavailable due to costs often exceeding the allowable sales price on low-margin goods.
    New versions of formerly available items were created without controls came into being. These new items, being profitable, were in great supply and were happily snapped up by demanding consumers.

    As usual, the incredibly stupid state, looking for easy solutions and evil profiteers, like blaming guns, are given to a labor theory of value analysis instead of the marginalist economic structure that would better serve them.

    If they would only allow capitalism to supply the needs of consumers rather than restrict them at every turn, prices would not be so high due to folks outbidding their neighbors for the limited supply of steaks, treadmills, underwear, milk, eggs, and Valium.

  21. DarrenM   3 years ago

    Krugman reverted to being an economist for one tweet. This was temporary, of course. He was quickly back to being a political hack. (I can't blame him for this since it does seem to pay more.)

    1. Marshal   3 years ago

      He was quickly back to being a political hack.

      I'm amused the man who contradicted himself to argue minimum wage laws don't increase unemployment then laments too few people argue in good faith. Apparently he expects us to forget he has been the world's leading culprit in bad faith arguing for decades.

  22. Titus PUllo   3 years ago

    please please please Joe Biden slap on price controls. Chuck Schumer and his band of bolshies can determine prices for everything (I'm sure we can get a bunch of "smart" ivy league gender study and diversity majors to do this..or hell just have Big Tech censors do it..they are pretty much the same Ivy league woke scum bags from NYC). The resulting chaos would be just what the GOP finally needs to grow a pair and take down big govt including the military industrial complex once and for all..come on corn pop..put in price controls...and ban ownership of gold and crypto..please please please

    1. Consensus_Denier   3 years ago

      once the democrat party dies all the former members will register as republicans.

      i predict the price of rope will increase due to demand. perhaps economy of scale will favor guillotines.

  23. One-Punch_Man   3 years ago

    " Nobel Prize–winning economist Paul Krugman"

    Really, Nobel prize-winning is part of his name now? Can we stop. That was so long ago. What have you done for me lately?

  24. Crikey   3 years ago

    Step 1: destroy restaurant industry through fear and policy decisions "for the children"
    Step 2: People go to grocery stores more
    Step 3: Chastise grocery stores for not allowing people to starve.

    Makes sense.

  25. Sevo   3 years ago

    Could be apocryphal, but perhaps not.
    Post WWII, when Truman (no economist, he) kept price controls in place for the same idiotic intent here, seems a certain dealership would sell you a car at the 'fixed' price, but you also had to buy that dog over there at $X. Which dog 'found its way back to the dealership to be sold many times.

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