cross-posted from: https://jorts.horse/users/fathermcgruder/statuses/113008342518705813
Instead of price controls to prevent gouging, why doesn’t the government build up reserves and stockpiles?
Google “government cheese”
One of the great examples of how the government participating in industry is seldom good for people.
TLDR: The government bought milk to give ice cream to the troops in WWII and that lead to the cheesy double down and “Got Milk?”.
“The Fat Electrician” on YouTube has a fairly succinct rundown on government cheese and WWII ice cream.
This is done in some instances, notably the strategic petroleum reserve.
But that is basically a special case, as petroleum is so central to the logistics of basically all economic activity.
But with … groceries? The main obvious problem is expiration dates. You can do this with food that does not perish so quickly, but thats like a hold over from great depression/cold war/nuclear apocalypse type policies.
It would still be a massive logistical effort to distribute even dry goods or preserves.
Currently we can barely operate a postal service and have the developed world’s most laughable ‘public’ train service.
Most industries, and groceries in particular, run on Just In Time delivery, ie, grocery stores get the food they are selling tomorrow on trucks that come in that night.
It is far, far easier for the government to say, eh you cannot raise prices by more than x amount in y amount of time, and then just monitor them, than it is to undertake a massively complex logistical endeavor.
If you wanted to do that, you would just nationalize Walmart and Amazon and Kroger.
I’d be okay with that.
Probably because that requires a ton of logistics in order to build up and store the reserve, not to mention whatever you’re imagining is done with the reserve in order to discourage price gouging.
I’m not sure what you think is supposed to be so difficult about the logistics. When regular supplies of certain good fall off the government would just sell from its stockpiles to increase the market supply and prevent gouging.
What stops private companies from gouging anyway?
The market. Consumers won’t have to pay more for toilet paper or whatever than for the price the government is selling it from the stockpile.
How are consumers getting it from the stockpile? Sounds like an even bigger logistics nightmare than companies switching suppliers.
There’s a reason people don’t buy barrels of oil in bulk when they need to refuel their commuter vehicles.
I still don’t understand. Why wouldn’t retailers buy from government stockpiles when their regular suppliers are short? The idea is to make up for the shortage so there’s no basis for gouging.
Gouging is thus called because it’s inherently gratuitous, and not truly due to market conditions.
How does gouging work when there’s no shortage of a given product?