Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Empty store shelves? Thank price controls
Empty store shelves? Thank price controls
Oct 29, 2025 5:14 PM

The COVID-19 pandemic panic has caused an eerie, post-apocalyptic scene to monplace across the country: supermarkets with barren shelves. One would think that this is the time for an intervention to ensure that stores stay stocked with the things we need, but governors nationwide are taking the opposite approach.

This includes Michigan, Wisconsin, and Oregon. Several other states connect price controls to declared states of emergency, as well. Despite their good intentions, policies meant to curb price gouging will perpetuate shortages of high-demand goods such as toilet paper, hand sanitizer, and rice.

Why? For example, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s order states that “a person must not offer for sale or sell any product in this state at a price that is more than 20% higher than what the person offered or charged for that product as of March 9, 2020, unless the person demonstrates that the price increase is attributable to an increase in the cost of bringing the product to market.”

Price controls are meant to be fair, but they rarely plish that goal. By freezing prices in time, the governor has made it impossible for retailers to respond to increased demand. As a result, prices will stay the same, and people will keep hoarding high-demand goods. Thus, some will have an abundance while others are forced to go without.

Prices are a means by which society rations scarce goods. True, everyone needs toilet paper. But no one needs 12 packages of toilet paper. If demand is 10 times greater, so should the price be. The best means by which stores make sure everyone has enough are stigmatized under the label of “price gouging.”

This much probably makes sense, but there are a few objections that likely lead to these well-intentioned executive orders.

First and most important, some people are better able to pay higher prices than others. In particular, just like sales taxes, price increases are regressive. In proportion to a person’s e, they hurt the poor more than anyone else.

However, price fixing is not the only possible solution. Charitable persons and organizations can purchase needed goods for the higher price, then sell them to the poor at a discount or even give them away. Where feasible, governments could subsidize high-demand goods with vouchers or increased SNAP benefits for e buyers, as well.

It should also be noted how unlikely it is that the people currently hoarding goods take public transportation to the grocery store. No one is riding the bus home with a metric ton of rice. So, the current distribution of high-demand goods is likely regressive already, hurting the poor more than anyone else.

Second, perhaps stores could impose their own limits on purchase quantity while prices are artificially below the market price. While that might sound good on paper, it is easy to get around and difficult to enforce.

Many retailers use self-checkout machines, which would have to be specially reprogrammed to limit the quantity of, for example, hand sanitizer a single buyer can purchase. But even that couldn’t prevent a person from spreading out the goods between members of their family in order to purchase more. Indeed, I witnessed this at a local Meijer store in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on Sunday where the paper towels had been pletely cleaned out despite a sign saying “limit two per customer.” The last alternative would be draconian enforcement of the rule by retail workers, increasing customer frustration for people who are already heroically showing up to work in the midst of a pandemic.

This leads me to one last objection: Why should stores profit off of normal people’s desperation? It’s true that, to the extent price increases simply reflect demand rather than “the cost of bringing the product to market,” stores would increase their profits as a result of rationing high-demand goods through higher prices. But why is that bad?

Retail workers can’t work from home, and retail jobs generally aren’t high e. Increased profits could mean wage increases or bonuses for e workers. In this way, allowing demand-driven price increases could itself be a way of ensuring that at least some e buyers have the extra cash they need to buy the same goods.

While I personally prefer private solutions to problems like this in times of crisis, to the extent that the state needs to get involved as a matter of subsidiarity, it would do better to focus on finding ways to increase the buying power of the poor rather than perpetuating shortages through price controls to the detriment of mon good.

Corneschi. CC BY-SA 4.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Initial Thoughts on the ‘Obamacare’ Decision
Obviously many people are disappointed in the Supreme Court’s ruling today. The decision was rather surprising for a number of legal and political reasons. Writing about the HHS mandate in an mentary in January, Dr. Donald P. Condit pointed to the moral threat that his health care legislation poses. Nothing has changed with today’s Supreme Court ruling. Condit wrote: With the passing of time, it has e painfully obvious how relativistic and clouded are this administration’s sense of ethics. The...
Vocation Infusion Learning Community
This week, 40 pastors and church leaders are gathered to discuss important ideas of integrating faith, work, and vocation into our daily lives. Vocation is integral, not incidental to the missio Dei, the work that God has called us to do each day. The pastors and church leaders represent a diversity of evangelical traditions and geographic locations in the US. Over the next year, this group will meet for face-to-face retreats, field trips and a few webinars with the goal...
‘We didn’t pick the time, nor did we pick the fight’
Most Rev. Joseph F. Naumann, D.D., Archbishop of Kansas City, Kansas On Catholic World Report, Carl E. Olson interviews Rev. Joseph F. Naumann, the Archbishop of Kansas City, Kansas, about the HHS mandate, the Ryan budget, and what the Supreme Court ruling means for the religious freedom fight. “There are always some people who feel that the Church is ing partisan and political in this,” Archbishop Naumann said, referring to a collective response to the HHS mandate covering provision of...
Samuel Gregg on the Supreme Court and the Individual Mandate
In response to the Supreme Court ruling on Obamacare’a individual mandate, National Review Online launched a symposium — a roundup mentary — which posed the following question: “What’s next for both conservatives and the Republican party on health-care reform?” Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg contributed this analysis: Leaving aside the arguments that will continue about the SCOTUS ruling on Obamacare, one response of those who favor free markets and limited government must be for them to start preparing themselves for...
Bastiat’s Vision
This Saturday, June 30, is the 211th birthday of Frédéric Bastiat, one of the greatest political philosophers of the modern era. Considered among the founding fathers of classical liberalism, Bastiat is known for his simple and direct explanations of political and economic realities, his arguments against oppressive economic regulations and his clear and concise vision of a government of limited, enumerated powers, operating under the rule of law and unencumbered by favoritism or distributionist policies. Bastiat drew on his Catholic...
Rev. Robert Sirico: Reply to America Magazine
Anytime I can get a progressive/dissenting Catholic magazine/blog like the Jesuit-run America simultaneously to quote papal documents, defend the Magisterium of the Catholic Church, embrace the Natural Law and even yearn for a theological investigation “by those charged with oversight for the Church’s doctrine” of a writer suspected of heresy, I consider that I have had a good day. And to think that all this was prompted by two sentences of mine quoted in a New York Times story on...
Text of the Obamacare Ruling
For those wanting to read the recently released decision, the Alliance Defense Fund has a copy of the Supreme Court decision on Obamacare. ...
Growing Detroit
Renaissance Center (GM building). Creative Commons: paul (dex) bica via Compfight Some time back I argued that urban farming and the entrepreneurial spirit in Detroit was something that should be embraced rather than dismissed. Detroit mayor Dave Bing has given verbal support for urban munity farms in the past, but in many cases some regulatory hurdles remained and he was somewhat skeptical at times about the importance of large scale urban agriculture projects. But that ambivalence seems to be history,...
The True Social Contract
Uncontrolled public debt threatens to rupture society, says Niall Ferguson, as the older generation thrives at the expense of the young. In his Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790), Edmund Burke wrote that the real social contract is not Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s contract between the sovereign and the people or “general will”, but the “partnership” between the generations. He writes: “SOCIETY is indeed a contract… The state … is … a partnership not only between those who are living, but...
Obamacare ruling ‘a turn to tyranny’
Fr. Hans JacobseOn the Observer blog (and picked up on Catholic Online), Antiochian Orthodox priest Fr. Hans Jacobse predicts that the Supreme Court’s Obamacare ruling will, “by the middle of the next generation” lead those who worked for this program — or ignored the threat — to be “cursed” by their own children. “The children will weep by the waters of Babylon, unearthing old movies and books of an America they never knew,” Jacobse writes. Antonio Gramsci, that great architect...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved