Starkville Daily News

Both parties offer phony cures for inflation

T

- STEVE CHAPMAN

he American two-party political system exists to ensure that for any problem that emerges, there are at least two solutions that are just plain wrong. That is the sad case with inflation, where the most notable responses span the spectrum from useless to harmful.

Start with the harmful proposals, which involve trying to dictate what sellers can charge for their wares. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-mass., has introduced a bill to outlaw excessive prices "during all abnormal market disruption­s." Among her targets are oil companies and meat suppliers, which she vilifies for "reporting record profits and using inflation as cover to pad their bottom line." On Thursday, House Democrats approved a bill giving the president the power to ban "unconscion­ably excessive" prices for gasoline and home fuel.

It should come as no surprise that when the world price of oil soars, as it has this year, corporatio­ns that own, produce and sell it make more money than when prices are not rising. Just two years ago, oil companies sustained record losses when the pandemic caused sales to plummet.

Meat prices have also climbed, which is what you would expect given recent market conditions. During the pandemic, ranchers reduced the size of their beef cattle herds. But consumer demand for beef has risen. Tyson Foods CEO Donnie King is stating a simple fact when he says, "Customer demand continues to outpace our ability to supply product."

That combinatio­n affects many products right now, because consumers have jobs and money to spend, even as the pandemic and the war in Ukraine disrupt supply chains.

New Jersey's Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy followed Warren's lead by decreeing that retailers may not sell baby formula for more than 10% more than their cost. But limits on prices will make baby formula even harder for parents to find.

Big price increases, though painful, serve an important purpose: matching demand with supply. When prices are held down by government mandate, people will want to buy more than suppliers can provide — which leads to shortages.

Most parents would probably rather be able to get some formula at a high price than to get none at a lower price. Higher prices typically increase supply by spurring manufactur­ers to boost production — and dampen demand by discouragi­ng consumers from hoarding.

Inflation is not the product of a bunch of big corporatio­ns suddenly getting greedy and deciding to "pad their bottom lines." They are always greedy and always eager to pad their bottom lines. It's the result of monetary and fiscal policy, which in the past year

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States