Price Controls Would Make a Dire Economic Situation Worse
Certain politicians would do well to learn that inflation is not caused by corporate "greed."

History has a way of repeating itself. Or maybe it's that people cling to defunct beliefs, stubbornly refusing to learn from experience. Such stubbornness is on display when pundits, legislators, and President Joe Biden blame inflation on corporate "greed." The fix, they claim, is price controls. But such controls would only bring further economic calamity.
To explain hikes in the prices of meat, poultry, and energy, many politicians and pundits say we must look no further than cold-hearted corporate CEOs padding their bottom lines at the expense of ordinary Americans. Companies today are allegedly so greedy that they use the pandemic as an excuse to charge extortionate prices. For example, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) told MSNBC's Chris Hayes that "giant corporations who say, wow, a lot of talk about high prices and inflation. This is a chance to get in there and not only pass along costs, but to inflate prices beyond that and just engage in a little straightforward price gouging."
Playing along with this blame game is Biden, who asserts that "oil and gas companies shouldn't pad their profits at the expense of hardworking Americans."
Biden is not the first president to demonstrate ignorance of the complex factors that determine prices at the pump. His and others' grandstanding complaints about high prices—especially as they rise during inflationary times—aren't novel. George Mason University's Don Boudreaux recently highlighted a still-relevant observation from 1976 by the late UCLA economist Armen Alchian:
"Direct attacks on the symptoms known to flow from inflation are politically convenient. As inflation occurs, politicians and the public blame businessmen and producers for raising prices and mulcting the public….The so-called shortage of gasoline and energy in the United States was precisely and only such a political attack."
Today, we should remember Alchian's sobering description of what happened when economically illiterate politicians attempted to control inflation by imposing price controls:
"Inflate the money stock; when prices rise, impose price controls to correct the situation. These controls lead to shortages which 'require' government intervention to assure appropriate use of the limited supply and to allocate it and even to control and nationalize the production of energy. The powers of political authorities are increased; the open society is suppressed."
The unrealistic assumptions underpinning the logic of those who argue for price controls are quite amazing. First, hikes in prices apparently have no impact on consumers' demand for goods. That's because monopolies are supposedly everywhere, and most goods—we are to believe—are so indispensable to consumers that we will buy nearly all of them at any price.
In addition, the price controllers bizarrely assume that when faced with bans on price increases, producers (who are also coping with inflation and other challenges) will keep supplying the same goods to market. So, the only impact price controls are said to have is to decrease the amounts consumers pay, while having no effect on consumption or production.
This belief, of course, is nonsense. When prices rise, consumers reduce their demands for goods (unless inflation expectations come into play, and consumers increase purchases today to avoid even higher prices tomorrow). Also, companies prohibited by law from raising their prices will reduce their supplies, thus creating the shortages Alchian warned about.
To believe that inflation is the product of corporate greed requires even more obliviousness to reality. Inflation is truly a general and ongoing increase of all prices, including wages (which are the price of our labor). This reality means that all companies would have to be getting greedier simultaneously, and that all workers are, at the same time, overcome with similar avarice.
On that note, if corporate greed is sufficient to allow companies to get away with raising prices, why isn't it sufficient to allow them to resist demands for higher wages?
The fact is that inflation isn't caused by corporate greed. Readers of this column know by now that it's caused by government's excessive deficit spending, fueled in part by loose monetary policy. Therefore, getting rid of inflation requires an increase of interest rates theoretically higher than the current inflation, along with some overdue fiscal discipline. Reforms like deregulation that promote faster growth in the supply of goods and services would also help.
What we don't need, but what we'll likely get, is more government spending and more debt accumulation. The result will only fuel the inflation fire. Let's hope that we at least avoid making matters even worse with price controls.
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Well, those of us who were there know that the long gas lines of the seventies started the day that the feds imposed price controls. Before that, gas was more expensive, but available everywhere. Then "Hi! We're from the federal government and we're here to help you". Bingo. No gas anywhere. Long lines caused by "shortages".
Let's go Brandon!
Brandon was in the senate when they passed those price controls in the 70's
I remember.
"Cut out the middleman!"
"Whip inflation now!"
"Daisy Chains evil!"
Say, when are midterms again?
Say, when are midterms again?
They won’t be soon enough.
Remember, remember the eighth of November.
Honestly, I don't think the low information voter will vote for , or against, the the currently blamed politician or would have cared to understand why that politician's policies caused the inflation. Sometime before now and election day the short termed memory of the low information voter, will be dazzled by something else.
"Dire Economic Situation"
Huh? Reason's leading economics expert says the Biden economy is the best ever — rig count is up and Warren Buffett is getting richer.
#DefendBidenAtAllCosts
Don’t forget about the spittin tobaccy problem.
Not long ago I was listening to the Freakonomics podcast. It's interesting, though it seems to have gone in a totally different direction than the book.
When talking about inflation they never once mentioned that money follows the law of supply and demand, so more of it means it is worth less.
Instead they talked of "the inflationary spiral" where greedy corporations raise prices, which causes workers to demand more money, which raises costs, so greedy corporations raise prices, and around and around it goes.
That's mainstream thought. Blame the corporations. Forget Econ101 and applying those principles to money.
Didn't they call that the "wage/price spiral" in the 1970s? Pretty sure the thinking behind imposing price controls then was to stop it from developing.
That inflationary spiral is a symptom which exacerbates inflation, not the root cause. That symptom is also a big part of the reason why a "living wage" law can't really deliver on its alleged purpose for very long.
I know exactly which gas stations are ripping people off and they never get my business. That's my small contribution to price control. I want the govt to use its purchasing power in the same way.
LOL
You're the idiot who goes 20 miles out of his way to save 3 cents a gallon.
Hey! It works out if you buy enough of it!
By which I mean, you're in a tractor trailer and buying 200+ gallons...
You're not serious...are you?
So you want your government to spend as little as possible to keep prices down?
I don’t believe you.
I'd love for reason to explain how the corporate tax cut in the TCJA helped us. Last I checked they did stock buybacks and prices never went down. Hell, they never stopped rising. Now they are rising even higher.
So please, explain to me why we cut their taxes when they're just going to fuck us in perpetuity? It's almost as if you're arguing not in defense of some economic theory but because your master is the one doing the fucking.
Would you rather the corporations have less capital? I mean, isn't capital what they use to create wealth? Takes money to make money.
Would you rather these corporations be stripped of their wealth?
hell even if the corporations are "price gouging" just so the executives can buy 3rd and 4th yachts, thats still preferential to the government taking the money and funneling it to their cronies.
Someone has to build, maintain, and pilot those yachts. It's still job creation. Better than government taking the wealth and distributing it without anything of value being produced.
Lower taxes are good because they allow wealth to be controlled by those who produce it. Producers are more efficient at using capital than consumers.
The point isn’t to lower prices; with the government policies as they are, that will never happen. The point is to keep the money away from the government.
If you want lower prices, you need a less-involved government.
Price Controls Would Make a Dire Economic Situation Worse
Feature, not bug. They want to destroy the middle class.
Price controls would be a disaster. Expect Biden to implement them on Monday.
The great P. J. O'Rourke once observed "When politicians control how things are bought and sold, the first thing to be bought is politicians."
I wonder if there was a meeting in the White House where someone said "Why not try price controls? Look what they did for Nixon and Carter!"
The simplistic libertarian minds needs only one source from 1976 to justify their deranged pursuit to cede all their freedom and liberty to a private business more powerful and controlling than Stalin's government could have dreamed of.
It's also hysterical that after all the anti government garbage "loose monetary policy" a.k.a. not enough government control of markets is identified as part of the problem. This shit would get laughed out of 100 level college courses for its stupidity and contradictory nature, but then you'd cry they're discriminating against conservatives.
their deranged pursuit to cede all their freedom and liberty to a private business more powerful and controlling than Stalin's government could have dreamed of.
So true. The NKVD could only dream of the ease with which American "private businesses" can whisk me away in the middle of the night, never to be seen again.
I would suggest you both take and pass a "100 level college course" before you share any more of your worldly knowledge. Better to be silent and thought the fool than to shove your foot in your mouth and remove all doubt.
I would suggest you both take and pass a "100 level college course" before you share any more of your worldly knowledge.
But how can you expect us to survive a decade or more without his scintillating wit?
The democrats are overrun by childlike reasoning. It is the platform they run on.
For those with a long memory, it was Richard Nixon who imposed wage and price controls in 1970
"Certain politicians" --- Oh you mean practically the entire Democrat Party?
On the Venn diagram, the intersection of people who say "We don't plan on becoming Venezuela!" with "Let's try price controls!" is surprisingly large.
Yes.... Price "fixing" makes things worse. But please.... Corporate greed is alive and well in the energy industries. As they LOOK for any reason to hike prices for AS LONG as they can. When gasoline goes up...., EVERYTHING goes up. The petro dollar makes sure it's ALL attached throughout the world.
The Phucko Knows
Nixon proved price controls don't work, so this would be insanity, going the same thing over expecting different results.
Or maybe the government wants the same results, to further government repression?