Idiots at the NY Times.

One part of a sentence in a leader. A demonstration of the most stunning ignorance:

…and profiteering must be brought under control at a moment when
television has been showing long lines at some pumps and spot prices
approaching $4 a gallon have been reported.

Guys, prices are signals. Prices go up it encourages people to offer more of the item for sale. What do we want to happen in those flood affected areas? Why, for more people to get gasoline in there to offer for sale. So high prices, in response to shocks like this, are a good idea.

Sheesh, you’d think that someone there would have read a textbook at some time of their lives.

8 responses

  1. European Governments do this kind of thing all the time. I bet the NYT wouldn’t criticise that.

  2. Remittance Man Avatar
    Remittance Man

    As well as being a signal for more supply, surely high prices encourage more disciplined usage in times of shortage.
    But enough of theory. On the practical side has the editor of the NYT considered how much harder (and thus more expensive) it must be to get a tanker load of diesel into Louisiana at the moment? From the news I that see any budding fuel baron will need skills more akin to those required to cross the Amazon basin on foot than those of a yorkie munching trucker.
    Typical effing NY liberals. Profit is always nasty (unless its from the movies, “art” or journalism, of course).
    RM

  3. I’m not sure that it is even necessary to have read a textbook: some experience of life, or possession of a few of zee leetle grey cells, would do.

  4. Effing NY liberalism seems to be spreading… One of its supporters is a certain George W Bush, speaking on ABC this morning.
    And Louisiana law makes it illegal for providers of goods and services to hike prices in the aftermath of a natural disaster. So the NYT is only calling for the rule of law to kick in.
    Tim adds: Dosn’t make me all that confident about the state of Louisiana law really.

  5. The City Of New Orleans

    While I was setting up a live sparring match between George W Bush and Tim Worstall over at New Economist I realised that George made his original provocative remarks on a show called Good Morning America. This put me back…

  6. Even fratboy can distinguish “market forces” and “price gouging”.
    “I think there ought to be zero tolerance of people breaking the law during an emergency such as this, whether it be looting, or price-gouging at the gasoline pump or taking advantage of charitable giving, or insurance fraud,” Bush said in an interview on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

  7. Even fratboy can distinguish “market forces” and “price gouging”.
    This makes every politician dumber than a fratboy. Which, honestly, isn’t all that shocking. Every time there’s a crisis, some idiot pol or another gets his/her panties in a bunch about price spikes. Like, they think both supply and demand are completely price inelastic, or that prices are determined by evil pixies. Morons.

  8. I’m a big fan of price-gouging, at least compared to shortages. Last year we had gasoline lines in Phoenix because there was a pipeline break that caused a shortage, but station owners were being threatened by the AG if they raised prices too much. So of course idiots were getting in line when they had 3/4 of a tank left just so they could top off. If somebody had been allowed to go to $5.00 a gallon those idiots would have waited while those running on fumes (i.e., me) would have been able to at least get enough to keep going.

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