California's Terrible Price-Gouging Law Puts Markets at Mercy of Ambitious Prosecutors
Higher egg prices are not a crisis in the middle of a pandemic full of supply problems.

California's incredibly stupid, market-denying emergency "price-gouging" laws have struck again, this time hitting a grocery store chain for raising egg prices beyond what the state allows during pandemic-related shortages.
Value grocery chain Smart & Final has agreed to pay California $175,000 because, between March and June 2020, it increased the price of four different types of eggs during a period in which stores were struggling to keep their shelves stocked.
This was in the early days of the pandemic, when Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency. That declaration triggered California's "price-gouging" law, which says that businesses cannot raise prices by more than 10 percent during state emergencies unless they can prove the price increase is due to increased production or labor costs. According to Attorney General Rob Bonta, Smart & Final raised prices for some eggs by as much as 25 percent.
The Los Angeles Times notes that Smart & Final did have a reason for raising the prices—suppliers were also jacking up prices of eggs. But apparently Smart & Final acknowledged that suppliers were raising the prices of "standard" eggs, and that the chain commensurately raised the price of "premium" eggs.
Laws against price-gouging are bad, wrong, and counter-productive, and Bonta's own observations about this case, quoted by the Times, explain why. He notes that, "When California first went into lockdown at the beginning of the pandemic, there was a run on essential supplies, and unfortunately, some businesses saw this as an opportunity to pad their bottom line."
"While these were premium products, remember that during this time, shelves were often bare, there weren't a lot of choices. Consumers had few, if any options."
This is an economically illiterate grasp of why stores jack up prices in a crisis situation. The "run on essential supplies" caused absurd amounts of hoarding and over-purchasing, which many customers were able to do largely because stores were prohibited from raising prices. That sharp increase in demand travels up the supply chain, ultimately leading to some combination of empty shelves and higher prices as suppliers ramp up production.
Price-gouging laws simply attempt to legislate away basic economics at the retail point, and the end result is reasonable prices for goods that are seldom or never available. It doesn't matter how much eggs cost when a supermarket doesn't have any in stock. If people actually had to pay more for goods in an emergency situation, they'd be more careful about what they bought and we wouldn't have had people pushing entire carts of toilet paper out of the grocery stores (and then attempting to resell them online).
The way Bonta describes the store's situation is that people were buying the more expensive premium eggs due to shortages of the standard eggs. The same demand issues were most certainly going to come into play if people continued to purchase the premium eggs at the same rate they purchased the standard eggs. (And none of this even gets into how much of California's higher food prices are the direct result of bad state policies.)
Bonta, like Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.), trying to convince the public that supermarkets have big profit margins they're trying to pad and that's why they're "gouging" consumers. The reality is that most grocery stores have very tiny profit margins—for 2018, Smart & Final actually reported a net loss of more than $100 million.
What's more, the money that Smart & Final agreed to pay the attorney general's office will not be going back to consumers who allegedly got "gouged" on fancy eggs. Under state law, when the attorney general gets a judgment or agreement for a civil penalty for violating consumer protection laws, half of that money goes to the county where the judgment was rendered—San Mateo county in this case—and half into the state's General Fund.
San Mateo County is one of the wealthiest counties in the entire country with a median annual household income of $138,500. So, just to be clear here, a grocery store with a negligible (sometimes even negative) profit margin is being forced to fork over money to the wealthiest government in California, all in the name of protecting poor consumers, who won't see a dime from this settlement.
The money does get earmarked, however, but for "the enforcement of consumer protection laws." This creates some twisted profit incentives, then, for city and county attorneys to find businesses to sue because their offices stand to financially gain from the settlements. It's almost like civil asset forfeiture, but for big businesses.
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The Top Men always know best.
San Mateo County is one of the wealthiest counties in the entire country with a median annual household income of $138,500. So, just to be clear here, a grocery store with a negligible (sometimes even negative) profit margin is being forced to fork over money to the wealthiest government in California, all in the name of protecting poor consumers, who won't see a dime from this settlement.
White privilege exists, but it ain't where you think. Or hell, maybe it's exactly where you think.
I bet they only sell white eggs.
They break all the brown eggs to make egg salad - - - - - - - -
Yegg central.
Not only do the consumers not see any of the money, the store will likely have to raise its prices again to cover the fine
Or the store will say fuck it and close down, leaving the poorer local population with one less place to shop at, likely sending them to drive farther for food or shop at more expensive places. Whatever, it's not like gas is expensive these days.
Value grocery chain Smart & Final has agreed to pay California $175,000 because, between March and June 2020, it increased the price of four different types of eggs during a period in which stores were struggling to keep their shelves stocked.
A few years back, Maduro not only banned "price gouging", but also made it illegal for stores not to keep their shelves stocked. Worked out real well, from what I understand.
Everyone got down to a “ healthy weight “.
The government is just the biggest gang
…. in the middle of a pandemic…
Dude, it’s over.
It is now, but the store in question was in trouble for price hikes in June 2020.
I know.
Pretty much every law and regulation is california is stupid and terrible.
A good rule of thumb for having a great state government is to just do the opposite of whatever California does.
I can't wait until everyone starves to death when there's no food at all to be sold at a "fair" price.
Food supplies will stretch much further if we execute the democrats making the shortages happen.
"Under state law, when the attorney general gets a judgment or agreement for a civil penalty for violating consumer protection laws, half of that money goes to the county where the judgment was rendered—San Mateo county in this case—and half into the state's General Fund."
While California has laws against many things, it does not have a law addressing conflicts of interest.
There simply is no such thing as "price gouging". The buyer sets the price; the seller can only guess at what the buyer's find acceptable.
This is what you get when people who are totally ignorant of economics are put in charge of economics by voters who are equally ignorant of economics.
Stores at risk for fines for raising prices in an "emergency circumstances" whether it's for eggs after a nuclear chicken massacre, or toilet paper in national diarrhea pandemic, or plywood and nails after a hurricane, need to look to their own interests.
How do they do that? Why, it's simple! Don't change any price tags - none - not a single one! Let the hoarders pile up and stock up. Leave those pre-emergency prices in place on empty display cases and shelves and plywood racks. If you really want to watch the bureaucrats boil, post notices that says: "Dear Customers: All the eggs and toilet paper and plywood you want would be available at such-and-such a price, but unfortunately, the government prevents us from providing you with those eggs or toilet paper or plywood for which you would be more than willing to pay a market price by their price gouging laws, and as good corporate citizens, we follow the government's requirement to let you do without rather having to pay a market price."
California residents deserve everything they get. Businesses that remain in California deserve no sympathy whatsoever - there are no walls (yet) preventing closures and departures. Some of them may even be making profit - raise the taxes on those greedy bastards!!
"Price-gouging laws simply attempt to legislate away basic economics"
We need to find another term for things like supply and demand. When we call them "economic laws" politicians think, "We pass and amend and revoke laws all the time. We can just change these laws as well."