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by dahart
655 days ago
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There is a real (and sometimes large) but also subjective distinction between price gouging and market (supply & demand) pricing. The article discussed higher prices during peak demand school holidays, which isn’t price gouging on its own, and only suggests normal market high-demand pricing. Most importantly, the high demand pricing is regular and predictable: everyone knows when the school holidays are coming and they know in advance when the prices will be higher. Price gouging is most often used to describe selling basic needs at very extreme prices during an emergency. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_gouging Also important to note here, the UK has anti price gouging laws. This doesn’t mean Center Parcs isn’t violating them, but without any specific evidence, I’d guess a good default assumption is that what they’re doing isn’t price gouging by the law’s definition. |
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This is more a defense of price-gouging by bringing in market-based price fixing arguments than a strong argument to defend a "fair" price.
We can take the price of insulin in the US as an example fitting that description:
- It is a "normal market" high-demand pricing
- The demand is regular and predictable.
- There no emergency (except for the diabetics that cannot afford the medicine they desperately need)
And yet, at 10x the average price of insulin on the European market, it is clearly price-gouging.