Price Gouging

Guest Post by John Stossel

Price Gouging

“We don’t have any…!” Fill in the blank.

People are stocking up on things, fearing that we will be stuck in our homes, under quarantine, without essential supplies.

Some hoard toilet paper. A popular internet video features someone driving up to what appears to be a drug dealer but is really someone selling toilet paper.

When it became hard to find hand sanitizer in New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo said the state would produce its own, made by prison labor.

Yet in-demand items like masks and hand sanitizer can still be found. It’s just that we have to pay an inflated price.

People on social media are outraged by that. They post pictures showing stores charging high prices, like $19.99 for a can of Lysol spray and $22.99 for a 12 oz bottle of Purell.

We’re encouraged to report such high prices to the government because “gouging” is illegal. New York has an online “price gouging complaint form” that people can fill out if they are charged “unconscionably high prices.”

“On my watch, we will not tolerate schemes or frauds designed to turn large profits by exploiting people’s health concerns,” said New York’s economically clueless Attorney General Letitia James. “Some people are looking to prey on others’ anxiety and line their own pockets.”

Well, yes.

People always look for ways to line their own pockets.

But what politicians call “gouging” is just supply and demand. Prices rise and fall all the time.

Most state’s anti-gouging laws never even say exactly what is “unconscionably excessive.” That invites abuse. Vague laws give politicians dangerous power. They can use anti-gouging law to punish any merchant who doesn’t give them money or kiss their rings.

It seems cruel to charge customers more during a crisis, but when there are no laws against sharp price increases, people don’t experience long lines and shortages.

Think about what happens when stores don’t raise their prices: People rush to buy all they can get. The store sells out. Only the first customers get what they want.

But if the store charges more for items in extraordinary demand, people are less likely to hoard. Customers buy what we need and leave some for others.

Prices should rise during emergencies. That’s because prices aren’t just money; they are signals, information. They tell suppliers what their customers want most.

Entrepreneurs then make more of them and work hard to get them to the people who need them most. If “anti-gouging” laws don’t crush these incentives, prices quickly fall to normal levels.

Stossel in the Classroom contest winners explained that in a video.

Last week, some people bought lots of hand sanitizers and masks and then sold them on the internet. One couple boasted that they made over $100,000 reselling Lysol wipes.

They’re not bad people. Their actions allow people desperate for supplies to buy what they need, even if it’s at a higher price.

We’re supposed to stay indoors, so it’s good that we can get these products online. Then we don’t leave home and infect others.

Unfortunately, Amazon, eBay and Facebook, worried about accusations of “profiteering,” cracked down on resellers. The companies removed listings for masks, hand sanitizers and disinfectants.

This will only cause more shortages. Bigger profit was what encouraged people to sell online. Now no one gets those products until the market returns to normal.

In China, there was a severe mask shortage. That raised the price of masks and kickstarted production of face masks all around the world. A factory in France hired more people and raised its production of face masks from 170 million a year to half a billion.

The French company didn’t do it only because they want to help people in China. Extra profit motivated them.

Price “gouging” saves lives. In a crisis, we like to think that everyone will volunteer and be altruistic. But it’s not realistic to believe that all will.

If we want more supplies, we ask sellers to risk their money, their safety and comfort. (Sellers often travel long distances to reach people most in need.) Most sellers won’t do that unless they’ll profit.

Government should dump its anti-price gouging laws and let the free market help those in need.

John Stossel is author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails — But Individuals Succeed.” For other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit www.creators.com.

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9 Comments
Dan
Dan
March 18, 2020 4:00 pm

As Father Guido Sarducci said, all you need to know about economics is “supply and demand”. It was meant to be funny, but it’s also true.

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
  Dan
March 19, 2020 12:14 am

(All these clips seem to be edited down, for some reason.)

Steve
Steve
March 18, 2020 4:03 pm

Govts complaining of price gouging- big problem
Hospitals charge $50 for an aspirin-no problem.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Steve
March 18, 2020 5:52 pm

they are fine with paying approved price gouging

Learn the truth
Learn the truth
March 18, 2020 6:07 pm

Stossel forgot to mention the blatent hypocrisy of the company owned by ~THE RICHEST MAN IN THE UNIVERSE~ cutting off the ability of an individual to sell product at huge profits.

tsquared
tsquared
March 18, 2020 9:01 pm

There has been a massive sell off of Gold and Silver where the spot price has dropped so quickly the online stores have shut down their sales. Silver was less than $12 an ounce and Gold around $1400.

The most recent run has been on guns and ammo. Sorry but if you are not stocked up there it is worse than the toilet paper crisis of the past 3 weeks.

The economy is in the toilet. My plans to fully retire in 3 years has gone to “full stock market recovery” +3 years. I expect I will die at work in 15 to 20 years.

BTW: I have 9mm bullets for sale. $50 or 36 rolls of Charmin for 100, shipped. Also 22LR, 100 rounds for $40 or 28 rolls of Charmin shipped. Limit 1 on each.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
March 19, 2020 12:14 am

100% right on the money.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
March 19, 2020 7:48 am

“Some people are looking to prey on others’ anxiety and line their own pockets.”

They’re called psychiatrists. And pharmacists. And counselors. And the media. And politicians.

RiNS
RiNS
  hardscrabble farmer
March 19, 2020 8:27 am

Funny how when it is big pharma doing the “gouging” it is free enterprise at work but when it is small guy trying to get a slice it is offside and outta bounds.

And Scrabble you hit the nail absolutely on the head… those folks listed above prey on anxiety and fear.. For them to now moralize on the peons with a tusk tusk and a dear dear is the Mt. Everest of Hypocrisy.