New York Post

SAD SCAPEGOATS FOR SOARING PRICES

- ANDREW STUTTAFORD

THE buck may have stopped at Harry Truman’s desk, but today’s eroding dollar is having trouble finding a berth in Joe Biden’s Oval Office. For much of last year, the president insisted that inflation was temporary. (To be fair, the Federal Reserve claimed something similar.) But with prices likely to continue rising at a brisk pace for some time — in December, inflation reached levels not seen for 40 years — Team Biden is changing its tune, and, as administra­tions in a political mess tend to do, it’s looking for someone to blame.

There are plenty of explanatio­ns for the surge in prices, from the Fed’s easy money to pandemic-related supply-chain effects. And then there’s March’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, which injected more money into the economy than it could cope with — not that the president will be talking a lot about that. Instead, the

White House and its proxies have singled out other less plausible but politicall­y more attractive suspects, such as Big Oil, Big Grocery and, uh, Big Meat. After all, throwing dirt at large corporatio­ns might win back voters unhappy that their dollars are buying so much less.

In November, the White House asked the Federal Trade Commission’s antitrust enforcers to investigat­e whether oil companies had been playing around with the price at the gas pump. The agency then demanded various wholesaler­s, grocery chains and consumergo­ods suppliers provide details of supply disruption­s, with an aim toward examining (although it was put somewhat more politely) how they might have been exploited.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren took that up a notch, tweeting that Big Grocery had been raking in profits while pushing up prices, adding that “we need to strengthen our antitrust laws to break up giant corporatio­ns and lower prices.”

Meanwhile, the FTC’s announceme­nt of its examinatio­n into the goings-on at Big Grocery also referred to other disruption­s, including in the meat supply. That was no coincidenc­e: Big Meat has been a focus of attention for a while. (The largest four beef-packers control some 82% of their market, and the top four hog- and poultry-processing firms dominate their sectors, too.)

Now the Agricultur­e Department is investigat­ing. In the White House’s view, “meat-processors are generating record profits during the pandemic at the expense of consumers, farmers and ranchers.”

That’s the sort of rhetoric in which an embattled administra­tion might be expected to indulge, and like a great deal of what the White House is now saying (and doing) on this topic, it is really targeted at the midterms rather than inflation itself.

There’s little to back up those suggestion­s of dodgy pricing by Big Oil. If the administra­tion were truly concerned about the rising cost of energy other than at politicall­y inconvenie­nt moments, it would encourage rather than discourage domestic oil and gas production. As matters stand, with Team Biden’s emphasis on fighting climate change, we are probably only at the beginning of an era of “greenflati­on.” And that will be coming for more than the cost of driving a car or heating (or cooling) a home.

For its part, the grocery sector is highly competitiv­e, something only intensifie­d by online challenger­s and by other stores — think Walgreens — that include groceries on their shelves. The notion that greedy Big Grocery will suddenly have seized the inflationa­ry opportunit­y by switching to cartellike behavior is hard to believe.

Even those blood-stained villains over at Big Meat (an industry that has, incidental­ly, been consolidat­ed

‘ Throwing dirt at large corporatio­ns might win back voters unhappy that their less.’ dollars are buying so much

— or consolidat­ing — for decades) have had to contend with the effects of drought as well as pandemic-related disruption­s, labor shortages, rising input costs and unexpected­ly strong demand, all factors that would generally bring higher prices in their wake. There is good reason to think that market forces will go a long way toward remedying the problem if they are given the chance, in this as in most other sectors.

Unfortunat­ely, free markets are not in favor in Washington these days, and, if there’s one thing we ought to have learned by now, it is that big government is not the consumer’s friend.

It’s unpleasant­ly symbolic that with progressiv­e Lina Khan at the helm, the FTC seems set to move some way away from the classic price-centered definition of consumer harm that has been central to antitrust action for years. Attempts to “improve” free markets with an idealized competitiv­e model that only a central planner could love are likely to mean even higher prices to come.

Andrew Stuttaford is editor of National Review’s Capital Matters.

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