The Dumb and Dumber of Kamala's 'Greedflation' Narrative
The American economy is robustly competitive. The federal government could just mess it up.

Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris' new call to regulate food prices and block mergers has drawn enormous flak from economists, given the poor track record of price controls. Democrats think they can make political headway with a "greedflation" narrative, blaming rising prices on business profit-seeking.
There are both disreputable and respectable versions of this narrative—dumb and dumber, if you will—but they both run into the same problem: the evidence is against them. The dumber version, the one no economists endorse, says corporations got especially greedy, which made prices go up. If this were true, we could explain surges and drops in inflation as an effect of surges and drops in corporate greed. Since greed is limitless, prices would never drop and this is clearly at odds with observable facts and history.
The merely dumb, or at least more respectable, version says that the American economy has become more monopolistic over time, and that is why businesses have been able to raise prices more. Consumers are the victims of a lack of competition. Harris nodded toward this explanation in her speech announcing the new policy, perhaps in response to early criticisms from economists.
Of course, it is absurd to believe that monopolies have developed so rapidly in the last three years that this caused the surge in inflation.
Putting that aside, while few economists would endorse price controls as a solution to insufficient competition—except for true natural monopolies—some would endorse blocking mergers through antitrust policy. The epicenter of the new optimism about antitrust is probably the Stigler Center at the University of Chicago. "The fact that you have prominent people at Chicago calling for antitrust enforcement is changing the game," says law professor and The New York Times writer Tim Wu.
There aren't many good case studies of successful antitrust enforcement. Indeed, mergers often create more competition, as when the recent T-Mobile/Sprint merger created a successful wireless network to compete with AT&T and Verizon. Evidence shows the merger raised wireless speeds and expanded 5G availability. Fortunately, the Obama administration did not block the merger (although they did delay it).
But one stylized fact seems to have taken hold of newly pro-antitrust economists: rising markups in the U.S. economy. Markups are the difference between the marginal cost to produce a good or service and the price at which it's sold. A search for "markups" on the Stigler Center's ProMarket blog yields dozens of hits. "Markups have increased because firms became better at creating product differentiation and erecting barriers to entry," Chicago economist Luigi Zingales hypothesized in 2016.
Sounds plausible. But two new papers show that the rise in markups has nothing to do with diminishing competition. The first, a working paper published by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, finds that markups are higher in the service sector, and consumers are shifting their consumption from manufactured goods to services. Therefore, the average markup in the economy is increasing.
The second, a working paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, finds that markups have increased because consumers have become less price-sensitive, a mechanism also explored in the first paper. In other words, consumers have been shopping around less to find lower prices, so markups have risen. But it hasn't happened because firms have taken advantage of inattentive consumers to raise prices; it's just that costs have fallen faster than prices, resulting in higher markups.
The two papers have discovered complementary explanations for the rise in U.S. markups. Wealthier households consume proportionately fewer manufactured goods and more services and are also less price-sensitive. As Americans in general have become wealthier, we have all consumed more services and have become less price-sensitive.
This makes sense. As we become wealthier, the cost of our time rises. We're more likely to quickly buy what we need without comparing prices at multiple locations. We're also more likely to buy higher-quality versions of the same item. When it comes to food, this is definitely happening; just stroll down the grocery aisles and look at the plethora of "fair-trade," "humane," and organic certifications.
These results should hearten us that the U.S. economy isn't rigged against the consumer.
Indeed, where we do see market power, it's usually not created by really big companies. A rural hardware store has market power if the next hardware store is a long drive away. Public services like public schools and water and sewer systems have immense market power.
Moreover, big business isn't necessarily bad. For example, Walmart, Costco, and Amazon have driven down retail prices by competing with each other.
Economists agree that excessive fiscal and monetary stimulus is the primary cause of inflation, not business profit-seeking. But even the best case for the Biden administration's aggressive antitrust policies, which Harris is promising to ratchet up, has just run into a wall of contrary evidence.
The American economy is robustly competitive. The federal government could just mess it up with a "big is bad" antitrust policy, which would be dumb, and price controls, which would be dumber.
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All that and no mention of property rights. A lot of "economists say this" and "studies show".
I'm glad to have the practical effects of statism reported. But it would be even nicer if they were reported as such.
This is supposed to be a libertarian rag, not Vox or Buzzfeed or Salon or any others which I long ago gave up reading or following links to. Please, at least pay a little lip service to liberty.
The federal government
couldwill just mess it up.It’s not enough to just be critical of Democrats. To truly be unbiased one must praise Republicans while dissing Democrats. This article, while critical of Harris, lack praise for Trump. That makes it praise for Democrats.
GFY
Yawn. No new material.
What's hilarious is this is exactly your behavior I called out in the roundup which you denied doing. Fucking hilarious.
This is just ridiculous at this point man.
When it comes to food, this is definitely happening; just stroll down the grocery aisles and look at the plethora of "fair-trade," "humane," and organic certifications.
Nobody wants the cheap-ass knock-off "Toms" version of Cheesy-Poofs. They insist on the Big Fat "Frito-Lay" high-price small package shrinkflation Poofs.
Didn't you lose your post-it note with the password to SPB1 in a pile of cheesy-poof bags?
No one brings up Netflix or Starbucks or Apple when discussing inflation
They're not indicative of inflation. (which could be your point)
The most painful inflation has been in rental housing. And the vast majority of that was capitalized prior to 2020.
So if the base cost is static why the increase?
Demand. Record jobs. RealPage rental maximizer.
Landlord greed!
Record jobs removed from the adjusted jobs report?
87,000 new high-paying jobs with great benefits, at the IRS?
Lots of jobs building those 8 EV charging stations?
Jobs revised down nearly every month for over a year. Just like under Obama.
Oopsies.
"could just mess it up."?????
Isn't that all they've been doing since the Federal Reserve Act?
Yeah! 1913. Since then we have created 98% of our national wealth.
You're truly an idiot.
^Radical capitalists for the Fed and against free banking.
LMFAO…. Do you think America’s Industry Revolution was just after 1913s??? Or wait; maybe that was America’s Great Depression.
If you leftards didn’t know how to self-project (“truly an idiot”) you’d be nothing at all.
Biden/Harris/Walz expect us to believe that corporations suddenly woke up in 2021 and realized they were leaving a lot of money on the table by undercharging all these years? Really?
Actually, they know we won't believe it, they're just hoping enough Democrats will believe it. But really they're just deflecting from their economic policy failures, to refocus on raising corporate taxes and directly regulating more of the economy, even though those policies will surely lead to recession and reduced 401k and IRA balances as stock prices are revalued lower.
I suppose everyone here understands economics better than that, but in case there are any DNC fans visiting:
If companies raise prices too high, consumers will buy less (or buy cheaper alternatives, or buy from competitors), and the company’s profits will fall, not increase. It’s called demand elasticity.
Companies (naturally) seek the profit maximizing price for their goods and services. If they set the price too low, they leave money on the table and do a disservice to their investors. If they set the price too high, profits drop as consumers turn elsewhere.
In a competitive market, prices will end up at some reasonable mark-up over input costs (labor, capital, and materials), at the point where the low-cost competitor can make a risk-adjusted rate of return that justifies the investment in that line of business.
When input costs go up, prices naturally have to go up to cover those higher costs, even if it leads to lower corporate profits as customers buy less. Democrat-backed policies like higher minimum wages and higher taxes will increase costs and force prices higher.
If you charge more than the competition, that's price gouging.
If you charge less than the competition, that's predatory pricing.
If you charge the same as the competition, that's collusion.
I think that's one reason the bureaucrats love anti-trust law, the malleability.
Pfft, the best and brightest Democrats told me that raising the minimums wage to a million wouldn't cost jobs or raise prices. Companies have Scrooge McDuck vaults.
Yeap, every company woke up on the same day and said "yeap, it's time to raise prices" It's odd how that happens.
We should ask Stepmom Warren how that happens.
Oil goes up - greedy companies. Oil goes down silence.
But hey if Harris wins, we can be taxed on unrealized gains so there is that.
Can I get child tax credit on my unrealized offspring?
We increased the money supply by 20% through stimulus spending.
Money has dropped 20% in value.
But that's not long enough to get published as an academic paper.
We need more articles from Jason. No TDS forced into the article. Actually talked about how bad this Democrat idea is.
* looks outside for the asteroid to hit earth now*
We should be so lucky.
"The Dumb and Dumber of Kamala's 'Greedflation' Narrative."
Dumb = Harris
Dumber = Walz
At least it's all patriotic, looking for new ways to make you richer and the poor poorer by resorting to destroying the basis of the economy on behalf of non-American political interests (if willing). Good Luck with taxation, which has given us the prosperous national debt and its chosen creditor monopoly :wave: