Managing a Disaster

Guest Post by Walter E. Williams

Managing a Disaster

I’m not sure whether COVID-19, first identified in Wuhan, China, in the U.S. qualifies as a true disaster. Putting the disease in perspective, we might look at current influenza illnesses. According to Centers for Disease Control estimates, between Oct. 1, 2019, and March 14, 2020, there have been 390,000 to 710,000 hospitalizations as a result of the flu, 38,000,000 to 54,000,000 flu illnesses and 23,000 to 59,000 flu deaths. That’s compared with, as of March 27, a total of 85,356 cases of COVID-19 resulting in the deaths of 1,246 people.

But let’s agree that COVID-19 is a disaster and ask what the appropriate steps are to deal with it. One of the first observations about any disaster is that the quantity demanded of many goods greatly exceeds the supply. There is a shortage. The natural market response when there is a shortage is for prices to rise. Rising prices produce several beneficial effects. They reduce the incentive for people to hoard while suppliers, motivated by the prospect of higher profits, are incentivized to produce more of the good in short supply.

Thirty-four states and the District of Columbia have anti-price gouging laws that prohibit “excessive and unjustified” increases in prices of essential consumer goods and services during a federal, state or local declared emergency. Price gouging is legally defined as charging 10 to 25% more for something than you charged for it during the month before an emergency. Sellers convicted of price gouging face stiff fines and perhaps prison terms.

But what about hoarding? Often hoarding creates the shortage. In uncertain times, people may purchase three dozen eggs instead of one dozen. They may want to maintain stockpiles of canned goods and buy up large quantities of cleaners, paper towels and toilet paper. This kind of behavior has left some with overflowing freezers, shelves of sanitizers and garages full of toilet paper while their neighbors are left either wanting for the same items or paying what some call “excessive and unjustified” prices.

While it’s difficult to get beyond emotions, the fact is that consumers are not forced to buy products for the higher (gouged) price. If they pay, it is likely because they see themselves as being better off acquiring the good than the alternative – keeping their money in their pocket. Higher prices charged have a couple of unappreciated benefits. First, they get people to economize on the use of the good whose price has risen. That is higher prices reduce demand and encourage conservation. That helps with the disaster.

With higher prices, profit-seeking suppliers know that they can make more money by bringing additional quantities of the goods to the market. This increases the supply of goods, which helps to drive prices back down. Anti-price gouging laws disrupt these two very important functions of the marketplace and enhance and prolong a disaster. In other words, in a disaster, we want people to economize their use of goods and services and we want suppliers of these goods and services to produce more. Rising prices encourage these actions. Anti-price gouging laws stymie those incentives and create the pretense that a disaster does not exist.

Some people might reluctantly agree that allowing prices to rise during a disaster helps allocate resources. But they’ll complain that’s not the intention of greedy sellers who are out to profit. I say, so what? It’s not sellers’ intentions that count but what their actions accomplish that’s important — namely, getting people to conserve more and suppliers to produce more.

Many of the problems associated with a disaster would be eliminated if people’s buying behavior were the same as it was before the disaster. To get people to behave nicely and consider their neighbors is the ultimate challenge. I think rising prices are the best and most dependable way to get people to be considerate of their fellow man.

Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

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14 Comments
musket
musket
April 1, 2020 9:02 am

Things would be even better if we weren’t consistently lied to by the media as well………

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  musket
April 1, 2020 9:53 am

Don’t forget their partners in government.

musket
musket
  TN Patriot
April 1, 2020 1:09 pm

Agree…..it’s on all of their annual review support forms

Annie
Annie
April 1, 2020 9:55 am

I’m tired of this. As soon as anybody says or implies that the COVID-19 virus isn’t as bad as the seasonal flu I stop reading. They were saying this when there was only a handful of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the US. They’re still saying this when, a month and a half later, there’s 200,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases in the US. COVID-19 is not the flu. The number of confirmed cases worldwide (minus China who you can’t believe for a minute) is still going up exponentially to the tune of 10 times every 14 days. When you’re going from 10 to 100 this doesn’t feel like much, but now when you’re going from 800,000 to 8,000,000 it seems like people would take notice. This is a novel virus which means that nobody has any immunity to it so we don’t know what percentage of the world population it will go through, but probably over 50%. Maybe well over 50%. We don’t know what percentage of those people (us) will die, but even if it’s the same percentage as they claim for the seasonal flu that’s a lot of people. Besides, they’ve been lying to us about the seasonal flu for years, pumping up the statistics to promote the vaccines. Comparing anything to a lie is just stupid. Not bothering to do your research so you don’t know that the flu statistics are a lie is just stupid. WE DON’T KNOW WHAT THE END RESULT WILL BE but one thing we do know, THIS IS NOT THE FLU. I stopped reading this at the second sentence.

splurge
splurge
  Annie
April 1, 2020 10:14 am

They are counting every case of the flu, pneumonia, and any death in a hospital where covid-19 has been found as due to to the covid-19 without any regard for facts. Calm down.

Annie
Annie
  splurge
April 1, 2020 10:26 am

They have been doing that for decades with the flu. Anybody who doesn’t know that about the flu is stupid.

Annie
Annie
  splurge
April 1, 2020 10:30 am

Oh, and f*** off asshole. You obviously have no clue what I said and what it means.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Annie
April 1, 2020 11:44 am

Great way to get people to listen to anything you have to say, Annie. 😉

gman
gman
  Annie
April 1, 2020 11:28 am

“We don’t know what percentage of those people (us) will die, but …”

… we can freak out about it.

Annie
Annie
  gman
April 1, 2020 11:45 am

You can f*** off too. Absolutely no content to your comment you just want to be an asshole. My summary “WE DON’T KNOW WHAT THE END RESULT WILL BE but one thing we do know, THIS IS NOT THE FLU.” Just facts, not freaking out. A coronavirus is not an influenza virus. All the government “data” about the flu is wrong. Anybody comparing this coronavirus to the flu is just stupid on several levels. We don’t know. Anybody whining that this is no worse than the seasonal flu
because they believe the government data on the flu is just as much an idiot, or maybe more so, than the “TEOTEAWKI we’re all going to die” crowd.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Annie
April 1, 2020 2:31 pm

Wow. You’re quite the cunt.

gman
gman
April 1, 2020 11:25 am

assembly and travel lockdowns, primary election voting suspended, national guard being called up, authorities to shut down water and electricity being seized, $2 trillion being printed and distributed to the deep state ruling class – they’re managing it just fine, probably wondering why they didn’t do this sooner.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  gman
April 1, 2020 3:47 pm

They have been busy moving all of the pieces into place.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
April 1, 2020 4:29 pm

“Orchestrating A Disaster.” There…fixed it.