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Chris B's avatar

Some examples would drive your point home for those of us outside the field. Perhaps Professor Hanson has a book in the works?

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Caliban Darklock's avatar

I would explain #1 as being caused primarily by a desire for the market to behave differently. Most interventions don't happen because something is WRONG, but because somebody wants something else. Like right now people are complaining about high grocery prices, not because high grocery prices are unwarranted, but because they do not like it.

If I go to the store and find the shelf where the Oreos are completely empty, it is clear to me as someone with a moderate understanding of economics that demand is exceeding supply and the price of Oreos can be expected to go up until Nabisco can reliably increase production. But the average shopper complains that the stupid grocery store didn't order enough Oreos. When the store does restock, and the price goes up, the same shoppers will piss and moan that greedy corporate jackholes are price-gouging them. Then someone will write an article about record profits and shortages when the cost of production has barely gone up at all, but literally nobody asks "have people been eating a lot more Oreos lately?"

And if you make new price-gouging laws to interfere in the market WITHOUT asking that, you're gonna fuck things up. It's not a market failure when prices are high. It's only a failure when prices are IRRATIONALLY high, and I don't think people are even entertaining the idea that maybe the current prices are perfectly rational.

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