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by ardy42
2252 days ago
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> In a survey of economists, only 8% supported legislation against price gouging. 51% were against. The economists opposing the proposal argued that such legislation would lead to a misallocation of resources and lead to lower supply and greater scarcity of the resources, or argued that the proposal in question was vague. I wouldn't put too much stock in that survey. It was about a specific Connecticut law, it only included 40 economists, many chose not to answer, and many of the others took issue with some vagueness in the wording. Furthermore, I wouldn't blindly follow "economists" on any policy matter. Sure, their ideas have some merit, but their discipline has its biases, too. > The advantages show the Soviet Union industrializing... while starving to death because the central planners did not have infinite knowledge, which the central planning idea requires. Oh, please. Anti-price gauging legislation is not central planning. It's pretty weak to trot out the Soviet Union to refute anything but the purest capitalism. > It doesn't matter where you go, everywhere you will see markets are better at allocating resources. The first army to learn to allocate supplies to the front lines on free market principles will be unstoppable! /s |
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https://www.marketplace.org/2017/09/01/why-economists-dont-t... "Economists don't think price gouging is a problem"
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffreydorfman/2016/09/23/price... "Price gouging laws are good politics but bad economics"
https://hbr.org/2013/07/the-problem-with-price-gouging-laws "The problem with price gouging laws"
https://www.thoughtco.com/the-economics-of-price-gouging-114... supports price gouging
Can you provide ANY literature suggesting mainstream economists, on average, support price fixing, confiscation, or purchase limits as a means to allocate resources effectively in a crisis?
>The first army to learn to allocate supplies to the front lines on free market principles will be unstoppable! /s
The military primarily gets work done by allowing private contractors to bid on projects. In order to get troops near the front lines, most military personnel take commercial airline flights to get there because it's more efficient. Military operations are wildly inefficient, but they still use markets wherever possible because it gets things done as efficiently as possible.