by joewp » Mon 05 Nov 2007, 00:17:36
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', '
')People on this board often forget that price controls tend to create shortages.
If gasoline prices had been allowed to rise further, demand destruction would have been higher and there wouldn't have been any shortages.
It is this misunderstanding of economics that leads some people to believe that demand can somehow outstrip supply.
Obviously, no one can consume a resource that doesn't exist.
The high oil prices of the 1970s lead to 2 decades of significantly reduced global demand.
It wasn't until 1997(ish) that we hit the 1980 level of oil consumption again.
Sometimes I think economics makes people stupid. Price controls are imposed because there's already a shortage, that's what's driving up prices in the first place. So-called "demand destruction"
is a shortage, people that want the commodity are priced out of the market, the market is short enough goods for them to afford any. The only thing price controls do is allocate the goods on a first-come/first-served basis rather than to the highest bidder, making the shortage somewhat more apparent.
I mean really, does it matter if the pumps are dry or you can't afford it? Either way it's a shortage to you.