The Volokh Conspiracy
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Harris Scales Back Harmful Price Control Proposal
The narrower version put forward by her campaign is still bad, but much less so than the much broader one floated earlier.

Several weeks ago, in an article in The Hill, I outlined how both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris have put forward harmful economic policies that exploit widespread voter ignorance. One of the Harris policies I highlighted was a proposal for price controls on groceries. It's therefore only fair that I acknowledge she has since scaled back that proposal.
As originally described, Harris' proposal seemed to be a plan for broad, nationwide controls on grocery prices. The new version put out by her policy team, is still bad, but much less so than before. Michael Strain of the conservative National Review (which is not generally sympathetic to Harris) has the details:
There has been a great deal of confusion around Vice President Harris's plans to combat "price gouging." Last month, her campaign announced that, if elected, the vice president would push for "the first-ever federal ban on price gouging on food and groceries — setting clear rules of the road to make clear that big corporations can't unfairly exploit consumers to run up excessive corporate profits on food and groceries…."
This vague language — along with mixed messages from her advisers and surrogates — led many analysts and commentators to conclude that Harris would use a recent bill from Elizabeth Warren as a template for her policy. Senator Warren's bill is extremely broad and would give enormous power to the Federal Trade Commission to regulate prices.
If enacted, Warren's bill would, of course, be a disaster for the economy. If federal bureaucrats took charge of grocery prices, shortages would occur….
Does Harris support Warren-style price controls? For weeks, we've been left to speculate.
Yesterday [Sept. 24], the vice president released a policy book that answers this question: She does not support Warren-style price controls.
From Harris's book:
"Vice President Harris and Governor Walz's proposal—like many of the laws already on the books in 37 states—will go after nefarious price gouging on essential goods during emergencies or times of crisis. When an emergency strikes, the American people deserve to know the government can take on bad actors that take advantage of a crisis to excessively jack up prices."
The book makes two things clear: Harris would model her plan on existing state laws, not on Warren's bill. And her regulation would kick in only during emergencies….
To be clear, I don't think a federal price-gouging law is a good idea. Such laws at the state level are more defensible, but still questionable. Yes, cases of water became much more expensive in Texas following Hurricane Harvey. But if you were, say, a Colorado-based business that sold water, those higher prices for water in Texas meant that you wanted to stop selling water to folks in Colorado and to start selling it to folks in Texas. That $99-per-case price sent a signal to water sellers all across America that they should be sending more water to Texans than they normally do. The result: More water went to Texans, which was exactly what was needed following the hurricane.
But even though a federal price-gouging law isn't a good idea, it's not a terrible idea. It will likely have no real impact on consumers, producers, or economic activity.
I am less sanguine about Harris's scaled-down proposal than Strain is. What qualifies as an "emergency" or a "time of crisis" is far from clear. In recent years, presidents of both parties have abused "emergency" declarations to circumvent constraints on executive power in order to push through harmful policies, as with Trump's border wall funding diversion and Biden's student loan forgiveness program (eventually invalidated by the Supreme Court). When and if Harris tries to turn her new proposal into an actual bill, it will be important to keep an eye on whether and how the proposed law defines what counts as an "emergency."
In addition, as Strain points out, price controls are harmful even when there is an actual emergency. They tend to produce shortages of vital supplies precisely when those goods are most needed.
Nonetheless, it's worth noting that Harris's current price-control proposal is substantially narrower - and thus much less harmful - than the one originally floated in August. By contrast, Trump hasn't scaled back his even more harmful plans on immigration and tariffs.
It's also worth reiterating that either the narrow or the broad version of Harris's price controls would have to be enacted by Congress. By contrast, Trump could enact most of his most harmful ideas by unilateral executive action. As Trump himself recently put it, "I don't need Congress [to impose tariffs]…. I'll have the right to impose them myself, if they don't." That is one of a number of factors making his agenda more dangerous than Harris's, even though the latter also has serious flaws.
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There always has to be a Trump comment with Somin....
That’s because people like you on the right, or your opposite on the left, flip out anytime there is an article about one of them that doesn’t mention what the other is doing. Normally the whataboutism is irrelevant, but at least here it is about policies in the same general area. So either he mentions both and someone complains that he can’t write without mentioning both or he doesn’t and someone complains that he isn’t. It’s a no win.
And not everyone that will read this is familiar with his back catalog. When so many commenters out there only criticize one and lionize the other, putting both of their faults here means the person that is reading him for the first time can see his views on both candidates and see that while he may be an idealogue to his beliefs, he isn't beholden to either party
In an article about a price control proposal by a candidate for POTUS suddenly mentioning immigration seems off topic.
You may not agree with him but he believes immigration restriction is economically harmful. I grant he also believes hit morally wrong, but that doesn't negate the former. And in the article that he links to he argues only based on economic factors, not the moral ones.
without restriction on immigration and tariffs we can expect a country one day where it is people here looking to leave for a better life.
controlled immigration is good, run for the border immigration not so good
So what does immigration have to do with price controls?
When it comes to food prices, immigration is a key factor. Given that around half of all hired farm workers are undocumented immigrants. the connection is essential to consider.
Price controls and immigration are separate issues.
The premise is only true in the theoretical world, not the real world with existing welfare policies and actual humans instead of economic widgets. This only holds true if you only look at the benefits and not the whole cost-benefit for the nation, let alone the community or individual. But keep pushing that narrative lie.
MSE326 - fwiw there is an article out yesterday that indicates the crime rate by immigrants is substantially higher than the general population.
That is contrary to the what has been previously posted by Ilya, though worth noting
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2024/10/01/the_new_data_on_migrant_crime_151712.html
Amos, maybe you are not the one to cry about too much partisanship
It is not off topic to compare one candidate's policy proposals in an area with their opponent's proposals. The main thesis of this article is clearly about Harris's new statements on the topic as compared to past statements, but there is nothing inappropriate with including Trump's plans as well. If anything, it is essential for voters to consider the proposals of both candidates.
If Harris making bad economic policy proposals, but Trump is making horrendous ones, then the problem is with Trump. It is not with anyone pointing that out.
Anything that can be scaled back 36 days before an election can be scaled forward again after the election is safely past. Surely you understand that…
"It's also worth reiterating that either the narrow or the broad version of Harris's price controls would have to be enacted by Congress. "
And you seem not to be familiar with Harris' rather aggressive notions of what a President is entitled to do using executive orders.
Exactly. At this point in time, what she says is meaningless. The point in time to worry about is Jan 21st.
We can also judge her current comments based on what she has said and done in the past. Election time conversions should always be treated with skepticism.
The future Harris of Brett’s imagination just gets worse every day.
Will she be the one to usher in the camps?
You've been told a million times to stop exaggerating.
It's telling that you didn't quote Brett saying anything about camps.
Why not try responding to what he actually said?
Because Sarc is an idiot, and he reinforces that with almost every one of his comments. And he doesn't actually know that everybody sees him as such. He thinks he's advocating.
If a politician says two different things, one of them extreme and distant from the next election, and one of them vaguely reassuring and just before an election...
You're a fool if you believe the latter over the former. Because just before an election is when the words out of a politician's mouth are least to be trusted.
You are a fool if you take anything Harris says seriously. A lot of it does not make any sense. I doubt that we have heard even one honest sentence from her this campaign. She is just reading from a script.
Brett Bellmore 15 hours ago
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If a politician says two different things, one of them extreme and distant from the next election, and one of them vaguely reassuring and just before an election…
Concur -
Actions speak louder than words
her actions over the last 20 years , her statements over the last 20 years, her current advisors , her VP pick all say more about her and what her policies will be than her statements over the last couple of months.
Kamala Harris suggesting price controls on groceries shows how little she knows / understands how the real world works. Prices are a function of costs + margins (any idiot knows). Duh !! Outsiders can understand cost drivers therefore gross margins to see how much prices vary with costs. Too difficult for politicians with law degrees to understand so they make up b.s. story lines to make talking points. One could look at company level gross margins but that does not inform on which types of groceries Kroger is supposedly gouging its customers (not).