Skip to content

New Covenant Network News

Articles For The Kingdom Age

  • Biden, Powell to Discuss Economy, Inflation News
  • China Buys 700K Barrels of Iranian Oil Every Day, Violating US Sanctions News
  • 7 Mar 2022 Doomsday News
  • EU Drafting Legislation To Prepare For 'Doomsday' Brexit Protocol Legislation News
  • Durbin and Cornyn react to latest progress on gun bill Congress
  • Would You Want To Live In California’s Next Disney-Themed Subdivision? News
  • New Satellite Images Indicate Mass Graves Near Mariupol News
  • FDA Acknowledges Prenatal Screening Risks, But Fails to Condemn Eugenic Abortion News

Back to the Future: Progressives Imagine the Good Old Days of Price Controls

Posted on June 23, 2022June 23, 2022 By
Spread the love

When the Bourbon dynasty was restored to power in France in the early 1800s after Napoleon’s abdication, the French statesman Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand famously said of that family: “They had learned nothing and forgotten nothing.” In modern economic parlance, one can say the same thing about progressives, who once again are demanding price controls to “fight inflation.”

Not surprisingly, Sen. Elizabeth Warren is leading the way. She recently introduced a bill that outlaws “price gouging,” which in her definition involves a seller increasing prices for reasons that Warren would consider to be unjustified. It declares:

It shall be unlawful for a person to sell or offer for sale a good or service at an unconscionably excessive price during an exceptional market shock, regardless of the person’s position in a supply chain or distribution network.

While at least Warren is not calling (yet) for criminal penalties, she would empower the Federal Trade Commission to investigate such price gouging and to levy fines of either $25,000 or 5 percent of revenues, whichever is higher. That there is no way, economically speaking, to coherently define something like price gouging is no deterrence to Warren, who for many years has tried to move to the left of Bernie Sanders on nearly all issues.

But Warren is not the only progressive to call for price controls. Harold Meyerson, the socialist who also is an editor for the American Prospect, is demanding price controls, declaring that levying them will help keep Democrats in power. He writes:

As if inflation on that scale weren’t bad enough, its electoral consequences are likely to shift control of Congress to racist, insurrectionist, conspiracy-addled nitwits in November’s elections.

How, then, can the Democrats forestall or at least mitigate this grim double whammy? Joe Biden appears to grasp the peril he’s in; it’s compelling him to make a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia and its murderous crown prince in the hope that the prince will bring more of his nation’s oil to market, thereby driving down prices.

But there’s a less morally bankrupt, economically more effective, and far quicker way of achieving the same ends. It’s called price controls.

Before anyone rolls the eyes and reminds this socialist sage that price controls have a long history of failure, Meyerson has a ready answer:

Contrary to what economic orthodoxy would have us believe, such controls have been markedly successful at various times in our nation’s history. (Economic orthodoxy is often clueless about history in its preference for theory over fact.) According to Hugh Rockoff, a professor of economic history at Rutgers, price and wage controls brought the yearly rate of inflation down from 32.4 percent to 7.1 percent during World War I, and from 11.9 percent to 1.6 percent during World War II. Of course, as Jason Zweig pointed out in a recent Wall Street Journal column, people are more likely to accept such controls during wartime than they are during peacetime. Then again, having not really experienced a run of inflation for the past 40 years, Americans are rapidly going into shock as food and fuel prices continue to run amok. Selective controls on key commodities might not only provide the only way to achieve some fast relief, but also demonstrate, in tandem with legislation to cut the price of prescription drugs and the cost of child care, that the Democrats can actually and effectively legislate and implement policies in the public good.

One is not sure how sound economic theory such as the laws of demand, supply, marginal utility, and diminishing marginal returns really are nothing more than social constructs that easily are undone by “facts,” but one has to remember that socialists have their own rewritten history. Furthermore, like most progressives (and socialists), Meyerson assumes that the only things that will change under a price control regime are the prices themselves, with no accompanying shortages and other dislocations. But what about the “markedly successful” price controls of which he writes?

Not surprisingly, Meyerson turns to the experiences of the USA during two world wars as the example of success. While he does not define what “success” meant in those situations, he implies that price controls kept the official rate of inflation lower than it would have been without the controls.

Yet that tells us absolutely nothing, for he fails to mention the shortages, official rationing of goods, and the general economic misery that Americans faced during those conflicts, when the economy, geared to total war, vacuumed up vast numbers of resources, leaving Americans on the home front to scramble for the leftovers and, with much difficulty, scratch out a living. Economist Robert Higgs, who is well aware both of economic facts and theories, laid out a much different scene in his authoritative 1992 paper in the Journal of Economic History.

Entitled “Wartime Prosperity? A Reassessment of the U.S. Economy in the 1940s,” Higgs looks well beyond the official numbers that Meyerson gives to see how Americans really lived under price controls. Regarding the official inflation numbers, Higgs writes:

In fact, conditions were much worse than the data suggest for consumers during the war. Even if the price index corrections considered above are sufficient, which is doubtful, one must recognize that consumers had to contend with other extraordinary welfare-diminishing changes during the war. To get the available goods, millions of people had to move, many of them long distances, to centers of war production. (Of course, costly movements to areas of greater opportunity always occur; but the rate of migration during the war was exceptional because of the abrupt changes in the location of employment opportunities.) After bearing substantial costs of relocation, the migrants often found themselves crowded into poorer housing. Because of the disincentives created by rent controls, the housing got worse each ear, as landlords reduced or eliminated maintenance and repairs. Transportation, even commuting to work, became difficult for many workers. No new cars were being produced; used cars were hard to come by because of rationing and were sold on the black market at elevated prices; gasoline and tires were rationed; public transportation was crowded and inconvenient for many, as well as frequently pre-empted by the military authorities. Shoppers bore substantial costs of searching for sellers willing to sell goods, including rationed goods, at controlled prices; they spent much valuable time arranging (illegal) trades of ration coupons or standing in queues. The government exhorted the public to “use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without.” In thousands of ways, consumers lost their freedom of choice.

He adds:

People were also working harder, longer, more inconveniently, and at greater physical risk in order to get the available goods. The ratio of civilian employment to population (aged 14 and over) increased from 47.6 percent in 1940 to 57.9 percent in 1944, as many teenagers left school, women left their homes, and older people left retirement to work. The average work week in manufacturing, where most of the new jobs were, increased from 38.1 hours in 1940 to 45.2 hours in 1944; and the average work week increased in most other industries, too—in bituminous coal mining, it increased by more than 50 percent. Night shifts occupied a much larger proportion of the work force. The rate of disabling injuries per hour worked in manufacturing rose by more than 30 percent between 1940 and its wartime peak in 1943.

It is difficult to understand how working harder, longer, more inconveniently and dangerously in return for a diminished flow of consumer goods comports with the description that “economically speaking, Americans had never had it so good.”

Likewise, Meyerson does not remind his readers of the energy price control regime of the 1970s, which led to huge fuel shortages, long lines at the gasoline pumps, and huge disruptions in production. Then, like now, the progressives that supported price controls blamed “corporate greed” and “big oil” for the problems, not wanting to admit that price and allocation controls created the havoc that seemed to disappear once the government lifted controls in 1981.

Declaring that price controls were “successful” is reminiscent of the US end game strategy in the Vietnam War: declare victory and leave, paying no attention to what is happening on the ground. Likewise, the progressives and their socialist allies demanding yet another price control regime want to drag the rest of the country into their world of economic make-believe.

There is no doubt that if Joe Biden were to slap down price controls (declaring an “economic emergency” or something similar), such a move would resonate with at least some of the voters. Moreover, when the inevitable shortages and long lines appear, he can denounce “corporate greed” and he and his cabinet can look indignant at their photo ops. One suspects that the New York Times, Washington Post, and CNN would gladly jump on the bandwagon.

But none of these optics can hide the true costs of price controls. Progressives might control the media and the government, but they cannot control reality. Contra Meyerson, facts and economic theory have a long history of fitting one another.

Source: MisesInstitute

 54 total views,  2 views today

Opinion

Post navigation

Previous Post: Doug Casey On Crashing Markets, Commodities, & What Happens Next
Next Post: "Shockingly Predatory": Prosecutors Want 30-55 Years For Ghislaine As Her Lawyers Try To Halt Victim Testimony

Related Posts

  • Feds claw back $10 billion from bogus pandemic loans Opinion
  • Pandemic fraud syndicates eye next targets for theft of taxpayers’ money Opinion
  • Peace through Strength? Excessive US Military Spending Encourages More War Opinion
  • Economic Aspects of the Pension Problem Opinion
  • Honoring dad: Americans expected to drop $20 billion on Father's Day Opinion
  • Man acquitted of murder by reason of insanity escapes state hospital Opinion

Help Keep NCN Going – Could You Spare $5.00?

THIS WEEK'S 10 MOST READ ARTICLES

  • Flurry Of Calls Among Saudi Diplo Staff And Spy Coincided With 9/11 Hijackers' Arrival 3 views per day
  • Judge in Tennessee County Rules in Early Voting Lawsuit 2 views per day
  • The Age Of Discord 2 views per day
  • Finland's 'Bible Trial' to continue despite district court win for evangelical lawmaker 2 views per day
  • Banks Unveil Post-Stress-Test Dividend/Buyback Plans, Morgan Stanley Jumps On Boost To Both 2 views per day
  • Catholic Church: Roe decision 'challenges the whole world' 2 views per day
  • Liberal groups restart court-packing push following Supreme Court abortion decision 2 views per day
  • Icebergify: What is the Spotify iceberg music trend? 2 views per day
  • Mike Pompeo — Who Riled China While in Office — to Visit Taiwan 2 views per day
  • Louisiana and Utah trigger laws banning abortions temporarily blocked by courts – NBC News 2 views per day

Our Authors & Blogs

Visit Our Sister Site

Visit Live By Truth for classic New Covenant Podcasts

Visit Preterist Archives

Preterist Archives

Visit This Site

On Demand

Recent Posts

  • Major city to pay for travel costs when its employees seek out-of-state abortions
  • Fmr. Senate Sgt-At-Arms Michael Stenger Dies Ahead Of Last-Minute J6 Hearing
  • More than 40 migrants found dead inside 18-wheeler in Texas heat
  • More than 40 migrants found dead inside 18-wheeler in Texas heat
  • Susan Collins failed ‘to do her homework,’ former law clerk charges
  • Rabo: The Market Endlessly Wonders How Long Until We Cut Rates And Re-start QE Again
  • 'Morning after' pills get purchase limits from large drugstores
  • ‘Morning after’ pills get purchase limits from large drugstores
  • Ghislaine Maxwell To Be Sentenced Today As More Accusers Get Last Word
  • FDA official: New-look COVID-19 booster campaign could start in October

Archives

  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • May 2019

Categories

  • Bible Prophecy Questions
  • Christian Blog
  • Christian/Secular news
  • Congress
  • Doomsday News
  • Health
  • iTunes
  • Mel Gibson
  • News
  • Opinion
  • The Other Journal
  • Uncategorized
  • Video
  • Worthy News

Help Us Continue

  • Biden sides against union rank-and-file Christian/Secular news
  • CNN Plus Falling Apart After One Month Is A Symptom Of The Network’s Identity Crisis News
  • Hospitals Begin to Limp Out of the Latest COVID-19 Surge News
  • Ontario premier declares emergency, tells truckers to go home and end protest – NBC News News
  • Targeted doctor tells how government suppressed COVID treatments Health
  • Watch: Two More Black Hawks Down In Utah News
  • GOP Senators Object to Funding Government Without COVID Mandate Vote News
  • COLA increase 2022 Social Security update – How to know if you have to pay tax as $2,753 checks are sent out NEXT WEEK News

Copyright © 2022 New Covenant Network News.

Powered by PressBook News WordPress theme