Here's a question: If there's a disaster, a war, a severe drought or some other calamity that restricts future supplies of a commodity — such as oil, coffee or corn — what is the intelligent thing for people to do right away? If you said "use less now and try to produce more," you'd be absolutely correct. That's not rocket science, but understanding the machinery involved in getting people to do so is a bit more challenging.
The best way to get people to use less and produce more is to allow prices to rise. For example, say a Middle East conflict restricts oil supplies and causes prices to rise. The effect of higher prices for oil is that it gives individuals incentive to eliminate or reduce the low-valued uses of oil. For example, a low-valued use of oil is for homeowners to allow the heat that it generates to seep through walls and leaky windows. Higher oil prices create incentives to homeowners to install insulation. Higher gasoline prices force motorists to economize by taking measures such as carpooling and taking fewer low-valued trips.
Suppose that in the wake of a natural disaster — in the name of anti-gouging or some other nonsense — government officials mandate that prices cannot rise. What's the economic message? The mandate encourages people to continue their consumption as if the disaster didn't happen. Let's use gasoline as a concrete example. Suppose a family is fleeing a pending hurricane and has a half-tank of gas, plenty to get them to a safe destination, but they would feel more comfortable topping off the tank. If the price of gasoline remained at a pre-hurricane price of $3 a gallon, they might do so. But if the price shot up to $5, they'd wait until they arrived at their destination. Their decision has the effect of making more gasoline available for others. So here's my question: Which alternative is preferable for a family, fleeing the hurricane with their gas gauge showing nearly empty, gasoline available at $5 a gallon or gasoline unavailable at $3?
You might say that when there's an emergency, the government should step in to prevent prices from rising by establishing price controls.
During the 1970s, the Nixon and Ford administrations, in reaction to a jump in fuel prices caused by cuts in production by OPEC, did just that. Price controls led to massive shortages, long lines at gasoline stations and massive misallocation of resources.
Whenever there are expected shortages of a commodity, there are millions of wonderful nongovernmental people who enter to help. These people, often vilified and called every name except child of God, are the speculators. Efficient allocation of resources requires allocation over time. If speculators guess there will be future shortages, they will buy the commodity now in the hopes of making a personal gain when prices rise. Their purchases have the effect of raising the commodity's price now and making more available in the future — and at a lower-than-otherwise price.
Last April, President Barack Obama called for his Department of Justice to lead a task force to root out manipulation of the oil market and gouging of consumers at the gas pump. U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., introduced legislation called the End Excessive Oil Speculation Now Act. White House and congressional attacks on oil speculation do not alter the oil market's fundamental demand-and-supply reality. What would lower the long-term price of oil is for Obama and Congress to permit exploration for the estimated billions upon billions of barrels of oil off our Atlantic and Pacific shores, the Gulf of Mexico, and Alaska — not to mention the estimated billions, possibly trillions, of barrels of shale oil in Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and North Dakota — but doing that would offend the sensitivities of environmental extremists who have the ears of Congress and the White House.
Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM

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Another great example of how government interferance in free markets has adverse effects. Its amazing that people haven't caught on by now. I just heard that the US has the 18th most free economy in the world. Unreal. I guess the land of the free is nothing but. We used to be 2nd or 3rd on that list until the last decade.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Mon Sep 24, 2012 9:22 AM
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Re: Chris McCoy;... A free economy is a thing of beauty; but how do you define it, and more importantly make it serve society... Look at how often our society has ended up using government money to support a free economy that because of its lack of restraint ended up surviving only with the support of government...
When people really needed to survive, and that survival was not at all certain they suffered a lot of control of their economy and also a lot of social control as well... We sort of take our survival for granted, and also believe without foundation that a free economy free of government regulations is the only economy certain to survive...
We have proof to the contrary, but never mind... Even the meaning of the word should tell you about economy... Ecos is the word for house, and the rest of the word means management... We don't manage our house so our house manages us, and our government and even our morality... Yes... We take our survival for granted, and if we did not we would apply reason to our problems rather than simply having faith in their resolution in time by our economy...If the economy does not survive, then it will not be because it has taken its medicine, but that the medicine of regulation and kyennsian deficit spending was already blown for a great party for the rich...
Comment: #2
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Mon Sep 24, 2012 10:52 AM
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Sir... There is more than one way to reach an objective... Raising prices to take advantage of scared people is not always the best course... People could be encouraged to stay moving, show restraint and practice conservation, and buy only what they need, and ultimately prices could be kept reasonable and a disaster that forces people to be refugees will not be a cause for another to profit on their pain... As a last resort people could be forced to ration, and business people could be enlisted in the effort... There is something about being used by ones country men that makes the word patriotism sour in the mouth... The fact is that as soon as we ran out of worlds to conquor the rich turned to feeding off the poor and justifying it at every turn...It is not the poor who destry union or unity in a land... It is always the rich who take too much for themselves and leave others with nothing to defend but poverty...Nation is a great word with a long history, but it has to mean something to everyone for the thought to be effective... If one man says nation, and nation to him only means his right to screw you, then he is taking the proper meaning out of the thing and making it mean nothing if not something else entirely...We should consider the word freedom, and ask whether that word attached to economy as in 'free economy' does not mean freedom for the economy at the expense of freedom for the people...
Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #3
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Mon Sep 24, 2012 11:04 AM
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Dr. Williams,
Impeccable logic, well thought out and presented thoroughly, as usual! Thank you!
Comment: #4
Posted by: M. A. P.
Tue Sep 25, 2012 6:41 AM
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Excellent article, I think much of the substance of the argument on the statist side is what Thomas Sowell calls stage 1 thinking. We must think beyond stage 1 and see the longer term impact of policies. When we analyze problems beyond stage 1 we find that markets solve problems much more efficiently than planners can. Economists and writers must continue to point out the consequences of short sided government planning and interventions into markets.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Josh Kline
Tue Sep 25, 2012 11:03 AM
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Let's say there is a hurricane headed for South Florida. If I'm an out of work roofer, I might head down there because I can make some money repairing roofs. I consider borrowing some money to load up my truck withbottled water, plywood, tarps, and generators because I know those things will be in short supply. But I see on the news that the prices of those items are fixed and poeple seeling them for more than the fixed price can be arrested.
I would probably still make the trip, but I certainly wouldn't load up with the aforementioned items. I would lose money taking those things along; more gas, interest on the loan, not to mention the time and effort. In addition, I would be taking a huge risk, what if they were stolen or I got in an accident on the way there? I might lose tens of thousands of dollars. It simply wouldn't be worth the risk and effort to take those things along.
Comment: #6
Posted by: mark wells
Wed Sep 26, 2012 3:58 AM
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Now let's say there is a hurricane headed for Texas. I'm the same out of wrok roofer. I see on the news that $5 tarps are selling for $25 and plywood, normally around $40 a sheet, is selling for $100 a sheet. I immediately borrow some money, load up my truck with tarps, plywood, bottled water, and generators, and head down there.
The additional supplies available create more competition and brings the prices down. Not to pre-hurricane levels, but down nevertheless. The end result is that there are more supplies available for people who needs them. No government intervention required.
Comment: #7
Posted by: mark wells
Wed Sep 26, 2012 4:05 AM
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Wow, sorry for all the typos. I agree with Mr. Williams entirely. My examples are intended to show Mr. Sweeney that it's not necessarily people trying to screw their fellow citizen. But resourceful people motivated by profit. The roofer doesn't want to hurt those people. But in order for him to take a giant risk, there must be a giant reward.
High prices and corresponding high profit are an incentive to bring goods to areas that need them badly. When the government intervenes it usually harms the people that need the items most. It seems nice on the surface, but it isn't.
Comment: #8
Posted by: mark wells
Wed Sep 26, 2012 4:14 AM
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Mark your points are well thought out and well taken. I woulden't worry too much about convincing sweeny though. His views from what I can tell are a cross between communism, socialism, and naziism.
Comment: #9
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Thu Sep 27, 2012 9:38 AM
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Re: James A, Sweeney RE: "...make it serve society..." Aye. There's the rub. Bending one to the will of another, no matter how good the intention, is tyranny.
Comment: #10
Posted by: David Henricks
Thu Sep 27, 2012 12:58 PM
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