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Free Markets Archive

Sunday

22

June 2008

0

COMMENTS

Kill The Speculators!

Written by , Posted in Energy and the Environment, Free Markets, Liberty & Limited Government

Democrats have responded to rising oil prices as one would predict: not by seeking to alleviate the primary cause of price increases (a widening gap between growth in supply versus demand), but by finding a new boogeyman to justify increasing government involvement in and control over markets.

The evil-doer behind the conspiracy to hurt average people at the gas station? Oil speculators!

Obama vows to crack down on oil speculation

U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama offered new steps on Sunday to crack down on speculation in oil markets, saying his plan would help rein in runaway fuel costs.

A jump in gasoline prices above $4 a gallon has spurred consumer anger and is a top theme in the race between Obama and his Republican rival in the November election, John McCain, who has proposed more U.S. offshore oil exploration as a way to boost energy supplies.

“I think everyone believes there’s too much speculation in the oil markets,” said New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, an Obama ally who announced the proposals in a conference call with reporters. “A lot of the price of oil, I think, people put at the doorstep of speculators bidding up and holding supplies off the market.”

Corzine said Obama’s plan aims to close the so-called Enron loophole, which exempts some energy speculators who trade electronically from U.S. regulation. It takes its name from the now-collapsed energy firm that benefited from the law.

Obama would require U.S. energy futures to trade on regulated exchanges. The campaign also said he backed legislation that would direct the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the top U.S. futures market regulator, to investigate proposals such as increasing margin requirements in the market.

In addition, the Illinois senator wants to see more transparency and oversight of institutional investors in commodities markets.

“Too much speculation!” cries Corzine. These people are vultures, preying on the misery of average Americans! Or are they? To listen to democrats, you wouldn’t even know speculators served a valuable economic purpose.

Speculators correct false prices in markets, allowing them to function more efficiently. This is not to say that prices are always at the appropriate level in the short run. Irrational exuberance can drive prices to unjustifiable heights, as we’ve seen in both the 90’s tech-bubble and the recent housing-bubble. But both of these bubbles were popped, and price followed with sustained down periods.

Market critics often sight the alleged near-sightedness of capitalism. Speculators incorporate future considerations into the current price of goods. If a war is likely to break out in several oil producing countries, thereby disrupting supply, speculators who buy now, and thus increase current prices, in anticipation of selling when supplies are more scarce, give markets time to react to coming changes and encourage reductions in consumption. This behavior softens the blow of sudden changes in market conditions.

Whether or not the current prices are at the correct (most efficient) level remains to be seen, but central authorities don’t have the capacity to make that determination. People may want lower prices for themselves, but that doesn’t make such prices are the correct ones. Pressuring the market either through price controls or regulation to implement lower prices will result in greater inefficiencies such as shortages. If people really desire such prices, they should argue for increases in supply, not greater regulation or a disruption in the functioning of speculators.

Tuesday

17

June 2008

0

COMMENTS

Market Beats Government, Again

Written by , Posted in Energy and the Environment, Free Markets

A mandate passed in 1994, in which Al Gore provided a celebrated tie-breaking vote, and over a decade’s worth of subsidies has not succeeded in replacing oil with ethanol. But where government has failed, the market appears to be succeeding:

Scientists find bugs that eat waste and excrete petrol

Unbelievably, this is not science fiction. Mr Pal holds up a small beaker of bug excretion that could, theoretically, be poured into the tank of the giant Lexus SUV next to us. Not that Mr Pal is willing to risk it just yet. He gives it a month before the first vehicle is filled up on what he calls “renewable petroleum”. After that, he grins, “it’s a brave new world”.

Mr Pal is a senior director of LS9, one of several companies in or near Silicon Valley that have spurned traditional high-tech activities such as software and networking and embarked instead on an extraordinary race to make $140-a-barrel oil (£70) from Saudi Arabia obsolete. “All of us here – everyone in this company and in this industry, are aware of the urgency,” Mr Pal says.

What is most remarkable about what they are doing is that instead of trying to reengineer the global economy – as is required, for example, for the use of hydrogen fuel – they are trying to make a product that is interchangeable with oil. The company claims that this “Oil 2.0” will not only be renewable but also carbon negative – meaning that the carbon it emits will be less than that sucked from the atmosphere by the raw materials from which it is made.

Actually what’s really most remarkable about what they are doing is the fact that they are doing it without government.  At least, statists must find that remarkable.

Who knows whether this can be applied on a large enough scale to be useful, and the article goes on to describe the difficulties. But what strikes me is the fact that no government official could have ever directed this. You cannot centrally plan this kind of innovation. Indeed, government efforts to direct resources distort the normal market behavior by giving incentives to focus on areas that may or may not be productive. Conversely, that leaves less resources for other areas.

Contrast: When markets are left alone they produce bugs that crap oil. When government directs action we get a worldwide food crisis.

Tuesday

10

June 2008

0

COMMENTS

Senate Privatizes Restaurants

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Waste & Government Reform

There’s a lesson to be learned here. Several, in fact. See if you can spot them (I’ll help).

Year after year, decade upon decade, the U.S. Senate’s network of restaurants has lost staggering amounts of money — more than $18 million since 1993, according to one report, and an estimated $2 million this year alone, according to another.

The financial condition of the world’s most exclusive dining hall and its affiliated Capitol Hill restaurants, cafeterias and coffee shops has become so dire that, without a $250,000 subsidy from taxpayers, the Senate won’t make payroll next month.

The embarrassment of the Senate food service struggling like some neighborhood pizza joint has quietly sparked change previously unthinkable for Democrats. Last week, in a late-night voice vote, the Senate agreed to privatize the operation of its food service, a decision that would, for the first time, put it under the control of a contractor and all but guarantee lower wages and benefits for the outfit’s new hires.

The House is expected to agree — its food service operation has been in private hands since the 1980s — and President Bush‘s signature on the bill would officially end a seven-month Democratic feud and more than four decades of taxpayer bailouts.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), chairman of the Rules and Administrations Committee, which oversees the operation of the Senate, said she had no choice.

“It’s cratering,” she said of the restaurant system. “Candidly, I don’t think the taxpayers should be subsidizing something that doesn’t need to be. There are parts of government that can be run like a business and should be run like businesses.”

In a letter to colleagues, Feinstein said that the Government Accountability Office found that “financially breaking even has not been the objective of the current management due to an expectation that the restaurants will operate at a deficit annually.”

But Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), speaking for the group of senators who opposed privatizing the restaurants, said that “you cannot stand on the Senate floor and condemn the privatization of workers, and then turn around and privatize the workers here in the Senate and leave them out on their own.”

The Senate Restaurants, as the food service network is known, has a range of offerings, from the ornate Senate Dining Room on the first floor of the Capitol, where senators and their guests are served by staffers wearing jackets and ties, to the huge cafeteria in the Dirksen Building and various coffee shops throughout the Senate complex.

All told, they bring in more than $10 million a year in food sales but have turned a profit in just seven of their 44 years in business, according to the GAO.

…The rules committee began exploring its outsourcing options in 2005, when Republicans controlled the chamber. When Democrats took power last year, Feinstein ordered several studies, including hiring a consultant to examine management practices, before deciding privatization was the only possibility.

In a closed-door meeting with Democrats in November, she was practically heckled by her peers for suggesting it, senators and aides said.

“I know what happens with privatization. Workers lose jobs, and the next generation of workers make less in wages. These are some of the lowest-paid workers in our country, and I want to help them,” Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), a staunch labor union ally, said recently. The wages of the approximately 100 Senate food service workers average $37,000 annually.

Feinstein made another presentation May 7, warning senators that if they did not agree to turn over the operation to a private contractor, prices would be increased 25 percent across the board.

Eventually, Democrats agreed to pass legislation that includes guarantees for those who go to work for Restaurant Associates. They would retain their current salaries and federal health and pension benefits. Employees who choose to leave instead would receive buyout packages of as much as $25,000 — paid by the Senate. Half the current employees are likely to take that deal.

If government can’t deliver food, why should we trust it to deliver health care? Or oil, as some want to do?

Sherrod Brown wants to “help” the workers. Of course, he wants to do so with your money.

Government run entities don’t have to worry about performance because they know they can get bailed out by government.

Thursday

22

May 2008

0

COMMENTS

Florida Deigns To Allows Cheap Health Insurance

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Health Care, Welfare & Entitlements, Liberty & Limited Government

Low-cost health coverage will now be “allowed” for Floridians! One can’t help but ask: who was disallowing it in the first place? Oh, that’s right, government was.

With considerable fanfare, Gov. Charlie Crist traveled the length of his state on Wednesday to sign a bill aimed at providing low-cost health coverage to the uninsured by allowing the sale of stripped-down insurance policies.

…His initiative, which both houses of the Republican-controlled Legislature approved unanimously, enables insurers to create bare-bones policies that the governor hopes will sell for no more than $150 a month. That is about 60 percent less than the average cost of a policy for a single person in Florida, according to state insurance regulators.

The policies would be available to any Floridian 19 to 64 who has been uninsured for at least six months and who is not eligible for public insurance. In a critical provision, insurers would be prohibited from rejecting applicants based on age or health status.

To make the policies affordable, Florida will allow insurers to offer policies that do not include many of the 52 services that standard policies must currently cover, like acupuncture and podiatry. The state added a mandate on Tuesday, when Mr. Crist signed a bill requiring coverage for treating autism.

The low-cost plans have to include preventive services, office visits, screenings, surgery, prescription drugs, durable medical equipment and diabetes supplies.

It’s amazing that no where in this coverage is the author able to articulate the most obvious point: if undoing government restrictions lowers cost, then government is at least partly to blame for high costs. It is also, therefore, responsible for the numbers of people without insurance. Anytime you have these restrictive standards which inflate production costs, you necessarily freeze people out of the market by preventing them from being serviced at a price they can afford.

Mr. Crist acknowledged that the low-cost plans would not provide “Cadillac coverage.” But he said he was optimistic that uninsured Floridians would buy the plans after they are able to analyze their costs and benefits, starting early next year.

Milton Friedman addressed the problem of “Cadillac standards” in Capitalism and Freedom:

At a meeting of lawyers at which problems of admission were being discussed, a colleague of mine, arguing against restrictive admission standards, used an analogy from the automobile industry. Would it not, he said, be absurd if the automobile industry were to argue that no one should drive a low quality car and therefore that no automobile manufacturer should be permitted to produce a car that did not come up to the Cadillac standard. One member of the audience rose and approved the analogy, saying that, of course, the country cannot afford any thing but Cadillac lawyers! This tends to be the professional attitude. The members look solely at technical standards of performance, and argue in effect that we must have only first-rate physicians even if this means that some people get no medical service – though of course they never put it that way. Nonetheless, the view that people should get only the “optimum” medical service always lead to a restrictive policy, a policy that keeps down the number of physicians.

While Friedman was addressing medical care itself, the analogy works equally well for insurance coverage. Government mandates enforcing “Cadillac coverage” have kept down the number of people who can afford coverage. In other words, the problem of high numbers of uninsured is government created. If you want to reduce the number of people without medical insurance, allow them to buy policies that are customized to their needs, not ones loaded with unnecessary mandates created by government nannies.

Friday

21

December 2007

0

COMMENTS

Energy Bill Provides Neither Independence Nor Security

Written by , Posted in Energy and the Environment, Free Markets

President Bush (White House comments can be found here) recently signed into law the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. If we lived in a world where titles have meaning, this would be a positive occasion. Sadly, this bill provides neither security nor independence. Rather, it forces on consumers a product they do not want, subsidizes a number of pipe-dream “alternative fuel” projects that, if they were truly sources of potential fuel, would be funded by the market, and adds a $1.4 billion tax burden on businesses and workers.

Ranking member of the Environment and Public Works Committee, Senator James Inhofe, finds much to fault in this legislation:

“I simply could not support an ‘energy bill’ that will further drive up the already high price of gas at the pump or the cost of energy in our homes,” Senator Inhofe said. “Absent from this ‘energy’ bill are domestic energy resources – such as oil, natural gas, nuclear and clean coal technologies – that are essential to securing an American energy supply that is stable, diverse, and affordable.”

“Further, I am disappointed that this bill significantly increases the renewable fuels mandate in an irresponsible manner. Through my leadership position on the EPW Committee in 2005, I successfully worked with my colleagues to create a comprehensive program to increase the use of renewable fuels in a measured way that makes economic sense. This bill, however, contains a nearly five-fold expansion in the bio-fuels mandate. The fact is there are a growing number of questions surrounding ethanol’s effect on feed prices and our agricultural community, its economic sustainability, its transportation and infrastructure needs, and its water usage. As a result, I believe it’s just too early to significantly increase the mandate. The fuels industry needs more time to adapt and catch-up with the many developing challenges facing corn-based ethanol.”

“Unfortunately, this bill raises $1.4 billion by extending the ‘temporary’ Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) surtax on businesses which was first established in 1976 to repay loans from the federal unemployment trust fund. Even though this money was fully repaid in 1987, Congress has extended this temporary tax five times, imposing an annual $1.4 billion tax burden on America’s workers and employers.”

“This bill could have been even worse. Fortunately, however, I was able to work with my Senate colleagues to ensure major sections of the bill were stripped out. Democrat attempts to include a tax increase of $21 billion dollars, mostly aimed at the oil and natural gas industry, were defeated, as well as the attempt to include a Renewable Portfolio Standard that would have significantly increased the cost of electricity in Oklahoma and across the country.”

Representative Barton said this of the bill on the House floor:

Let’s take the issue of fuel economy standards. If there is a crown jewel in this bill, it apparently is that we’re going to raise CAFE standards significantly for the first time in 30 years. On the surface, that may appear to be a good thing, but let me point out a few things.

There are over 350 models of automobiles and trucks that are currently available for sale to the American public. There are only eight vehicles that get 35 miles to the gallon. They are the Honda Fit, the Honda Civic, the Honda Civic Hybrid, the Toyota Yaris, both manual and automatic, Toyota Corolla, Toyota Camry Hybrid, and the Toyota Prius. That’s it.

Now, let’s look at the top eight selling vehicles that the American public have bought so far this year. Number one is the Ford F-series pickup. Number two is the Chevrolet Silverado pickup. Number three is the Toyota Camry, not the Camry Hybrid. Number four is the Dodge Ram pickup. Number five is the Honda Accord. Number six is the Toyota Corolla. Number seven is the Honda Civic. Number eight is the Nissan Altima. Only two or three of those get 35 miles to the gallon.

I will stipulate, as smart as our engineers in Detroit are, it is going to be very, very difficult, if not impossible, for the Ford F-series pickups, the Chevy Silverado and the Dodge Ram pickup to get 35 miles to the gallon by the year 2020.

Of course you won’t have any Ford F-series pickups getting 35 MPG, nor do the bill’s proponents care. They don’t believe in choice and freedom. They’d mandate everyone putz around in a Prius if they didn’t have that pesky problem of elections to deal with. He goes on to say:

What the bill before us is is a mandatory conservation bill. Now, conservation in and of itself is a good thing. I won’t deny that. But conservation without some supply is a bad thing, and that’s what this bill is. We’re preempting State and local building codes with Federal building standards for so-called “green buildings.” We’re mandating 35 billion gallons of alternative fuels that right now the technology simply doesn’t exist. Hopefully our engineers and scientists can make that happen, but what if they don’t?

We are also basically just changing the way that we operate in a market economy for energy in this country to the government knows the best and the government is going to tell the American people what’s best for them, whether the American people like it or not. I think that’s a mistake, Mr. Speaker. And for that reason, I would hope we vote against the bill.

There is no energy independence in this bill. There is no exploration of domestic fuel sources that we can make substantial use of now or in the immediate future. There is no new call for nuclear power. There is absolutely nothing tangible in terms of new energy sources from this legislation. We cannot merely conserve our way into energy independence, not if we expect to grow our economy at the same time.

In addition to these issues, that old socialist boogey-man of “price gouging” is yet again attacked. According to Project Vote Smart the bill includes the following on “price gouging”:

– Establishes that in times of energy emergency as declared by the President, price gouging and market manipulation is prohibited and punishable by a civil penalty up to $1,000,000 fine or a criminal penalty of up to a $5,000,000 fine or up to 5 years in prison (Title 1(Subtitle B(Sec. 609))).

– Defines “price gouging” as charging an unconscionably excessive price charged by a supplier. Defines “unconscionably excessive price” as a price that has a gross disparity from the average price at which the item was offered for sale in the usual course of the supplier’s business prior to the President’s declaration of an energy emergency, a price that grossly exceeds the prices at which similar crude oil gasoline or petroleum that is obtainable from other purchasers, represents an unfair leverage on the part of the supplier, or if the price cannot be attributable to increased wholesale or operational costs (Title 1(Subtitle B(Sec. 602))).

I’ve written on price gouging before (here, here and here), but the sheer folly of this idea compels me to challenge it yet again.

Price gouging, the argument goes, is when evil business operators raise prices in the midst of some crisis, emergency or other sudden event. This takes advantage of consumer’s extraordinary need of some good and shouldn’t be allowed. Or should it?

Let’s put this another way and do a little economics 101. What purpose do prices serve? Prices are a means to signal where goods and resources should be utilized. Rather than having some central planner direct scarce resources, the price system (in conjunction with the profit motive) works to get the right amount of resources into the right places to satisfy consumer preferences. So, when demand for certain goods increases during an emergency, the subsequent rise in its price serves to signal the need for more of that resource in a given area. Removing these signals has consequences. Price controls enacted to prohibit “price gouging” exacerbate shortages.

Take for example the case of a Miami man who responded to a shortage of generators by traveling to North Carolina and returning with 35 generators much desired by the area struck by Hurricane Wilma. That’s 35 generators that would not have been available to the people of Miami had this man not acted. If government had its way, he never would have. Miami-Dade County sued him for “price-gouging”. Never mind the fact that any purchase is voluntary and that his customers obviously found his prices reasonable (the act of purchasing says so). Never mind that without being able to charge those prices he wouldn’t have spent his time and energy bringing those goods where they were needed. This is the folly of “price-gouging” legislation. It harms economic activity and thus does a disservice to those it claims to protect. One estimate finds that, had price controls such as those proposed by anti-price-gougers been in place following hurricanes Katrina and Rita, an additional $1.5-$2.9 billion in economic damage would have been caused.[1]

Though President Bush ignored their findings in signing this energy bill, the White House Council of Economic Advisers, finding that such a law “contradicts standard economic principles” and thus that “‘price gouging’ legislation should be opposed,” sternly warned against the consequences of such legislation just 6 months ago:

Such legislation is harmful for primarily two reasons:

* “Price gouging” legislation that effectively places controls on prices exacerbates shortages and potentially increases lines at gasoline stations.

* The difficulty in defining “price gouging” would create an unnecessary regulatory regime with potentially high litigation costs and great uncertainty for sellers, enforcement agencies, and the courts. These added costs and uncertainties would deter investment in new supply, increasing prices in the long run.

“Price gouging” legislation would reduce incentives to supply areas facing a fuel shortage. For example, in the days after natural disasters, such as hurricanes, price increases induce domestic refineries outside the affected region and foreign suppliers to rapidly ship additional gasoline to affected areas. If this legislation were implemented, it could deter retailers from increasing prices and it might not be worthwhile for suppliers to divert their shipments. Retailers in the affected region would have even less gasoline and drivers would face additional hardship. With gasoline prices kept below market levels, there would be shortages. Consumers would be forced to line up at gas stations, but gasoline would run out before satisfying demand and many would be forced to do without.

Without the flexibility for prices to increase, supply disruptions last longer than they would otherwise. By disrupting the price mechanism, price controls make lines longer during emergencies, misallocate the available supply, and prevent those with the greatest need for gasoline from getting access. Also, by making it illegal for prices to increase when supplies are tight, price gouging legislation makes retailers reluctant to lower prices when supplies are readily available, for fear of not being able to adjust to future supply changes.

The White Paper also notes that law already prevents anticompetitive behavior, and that firms may not use disasters as an opportunity to collude. Real price fluctuations, however, are to be expected following a disaster and serve a vital role. Politicians can make easy sound-bytes out of attacking such price spikes, but they do nothing but harm by attempting to legislate them out of existence. So not only does this bill provide nothing to help with energy independence, it provides real and tangible harm to the functioning of the economy.

[1]Montgomery, W. David, Robert A. Baron, and Mary K. Weisskopf. 2007. POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF PROPOSED PRICE GOUGING LEGISLATION ON THE COST AND SEVERITY OF GASOLINE SUPPLY INTERRUPTIONS. Journal of Competition Law and Economics 3, no. 3 (September 1): 357-397. http://jcle.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/3/3/357.

Friday

21

September 2007

0

COMMENTS

Free Trade Is Always Fair

Written by , Posted in Free Markets

First term Democratic Congressman Phil Hare has a piece at Politico calling for “fair trade.”

I certainly support free trade. But trade must also be fair. Unfortunately, the pending trade agreements with Peru, Panama, Korea and Colombia follow the same flawed NAFTA model that resulted in the hemorrhaging of good paying jobs in America and a race to the bottom in Mexico.

I have seen the effects of unfair trade policies in my home state. The manufacturing sector, historically a key component of a once-thriving Midwest economy, has seen 3 million jobs lost to NAFTA. And our trade deficit has gone from $100 billion to over $700 billion since its passage.

There are indeed many countries we trade with that utilize practices inconsistent with a free market. They place restrictive tariffs on American goods while demanding open access to U.S. markets. But those policies hurt themselves more than us, just like it would harm ourselves more than them if we retaliated in kind. Nor is it unfair for other countries to compete with our labor force. The benefit of cheaper labor is cheaper goods. Artificially protecting American labor is itself a form of “unfair” trade practice.

Claiming that we need to ensure that free trade is also fair underscores a sad misunderstanding of what free trade means. If it’s not fair, then it’s not free. It is right to demand that trade be fair, but we must remember that the best way to ensure fairness is to guarantee that it is free. And the way to do that is not through protectionism.

As one of eight freshmen in the House Trade Working Group, I am committed to fighting for a new direction on trade that protects American jobs while promoting labor and environmental standards. Fortunately, these two goals reinforce each other.

What Congressman Hare calls for is unfair trade in which “protections” are offered for such and such groups. Exactly the type of practices he would condemn in another country.

Wednesday

13

June 2007

0

COMMENTS

Eroding Freedom Should Never "Feel Good"

Written by , Posted in Energy and the Environment, Free Markets, Liberty & Limited Government

I’ve addressed the folly of “price gouging” legislation here enough already, but something in this article caught my eye. Though loaded with most of the usual nonsense, a particular statement stood out.

For the first time, it would be a federal crime to charge “unconscionably excessive” prices for petroleum products at the wholesale or retail level. Critics of the provisions, including the Bush administration, said the measure amounts to price regulation and could lead to supply shortages.

“The federal government has all the legal tools necessary to address price gouging,” said the White House.

The oil industry has repeatedly argued that many investigations have failed to uncover price fixing by oil companies. “If there is no manipulation, there should be no fear of a strong federal statute,” Cantwell countered at a news conference Tuesday.

Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, called the price gouging provision “a feel-good vote” that he probably would support. “But does it bring gas prices down? Probably not,” he said.

And for whom does this vote “feel-good”? It shouldn’t feel good for anyone who believes in free enterprise. It shouldn’t feel good for anyone who believes in the fundamental principles this country was founded on. It might feel good for those who think the federal government should have the final say in everything, including the prices of our goods. So I’d expect it to feel great for a socialist, but it’s a sad state of affairs when such nonsense feels good to Senator and member of the supposedly free-market party. No wonder Republicans seem lost. No one has any principles any more; it’s all just “feelings”.

Thursday

24

May 2007

0

COMMENTS

Assault On Economic Liberty Passes House

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Free Markets

Almost the entire Democratic House majority, aided by 56 Republicans, passed a blatant assault on economic liberty in H.R. 1252: Federal Price Gouging Prevention Act. Price gouging is that terrible act of charging a price that the market will bear but that government or some other party judges to be “excessive”. Naturally, this attitude prevents the rapid influx of needed goods from arriving into disaster areas by prohibiting the market from providing incentives for the selling of these goods. The result is a prolonged period of shortages, but at least when you go to the store in search of needed supplies you can rest assured that, had they any in stock, you wouldn’t have paid too much for them.

This particular piece of legislation is aimed only at gasoline and petroleum products, but that provides little comfort. Price controls are never good policy, but when you elect a group of demagogues you get demagogic policy.

Tuesday

27

February 2007

0

COMMENTS

Rejecting Freedom…In Nevada?

Written by , Posted in Free Markets, Liberty & Limited Government

It’s a little weird to think of Nevada as a place to reject free behaviors that harm no one, but that is precisely what state Sen. Dina Titus is proposing to do with her quest to ban “price gouging”.

People like Mrs. Titus would argue that price gouging does harm people, but they are fundamentally wrong. The single most important concept behind any free trade is that everyone wins. If a person chooses to purchase a product, it is because they have decided it is to their advantage to do so. Only when they would not voluntarily purchase a product do they find it to be to their disadvantage to pay the cost of that item. Milton Friedman once said, “underlying most arguments against the free market is a lack of belief in freedom itself.” What Mrs. Titus is really objecting to is freedom. She does not want individuals to be free to choose when an item is worth its advertised cost to them and when it is not. What’s more, she is the one bringing harm upon consumers in her ill-conceived attempt to “protect” people.

[In an emergency], if ice prices rise to the market, the man who needs to keep his insulin cold for his diabetes treatment will place a higher value on it than the man who wants to keep his beer cold, and will have a better chance of getting it. The man who might rent two hotel rooms for his family for additional comfort might, in the face of appropriately higher prices, inconvenience himself and only get one, releasing one for another whole family.

Mrs. Titus can afford to harm these individuals in her populist chest-thumping attack on price gouging, because they’ll never know they’ve been harmed. When disaster strikes and there are no supplies, it will be the Mrs. Titus’ of the world that insure goods take longer to arrive than they otherwise would have, but no one will notice at the time that, if it weren’t for liberal meddling, they might have had crucial supplies a little bit sooner. Thus it usually goes when people try to step in and say they know better than the market.

Hat tip: Club for Growth

Thursday

9

November 2006

0

COMMENTS

Why Europe Fails

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Free Markets, Liberty & Limited Government

In Praise of Long Hours

The EU’s Working Time Directive, passed in 1993 as a health and safety measure, caps the workweek at 48 hours. Most of the EU’s 25 members signed on to it, but the U.K. and Malta have always exercised the option to opt out. Many members, however-and particularly France-say the opt-out option gives those countries an unfair advantage. They want it eliminated-and are proposing legislation to do just that.

“People in the UK are willing to work harder and are thus doing better then us? Well, we can’t have that. Don’t let them work so much!” How do people even come to think this way?

No wonder European economies are barely holding together. Their first answer to any competitive problem is to make the other guy worse instead of making themselves better.

Hat tip: The Locker Room