MJinZ
Diamond Member
- Nov 4, 2009
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Pretty much, but there are shades of grey. You can have what we have here for many goods sold. Take milk for example. Provided by business, but regulated by government. It keeps the prices low and prevents gouging and collusion.
Business only ran doesn't work, and so far government only doesn't work to well either. At least those are the opinions of America. So since we can't do option three on your list, we do a hybrid of 1 and 2 to varying degrees. How much of a degree we should do is based upon the political compass of the person you are speaking to. Your average repub wants less government regulation of business provided goods or none at all, and your average democrat wants a fair system, and if that takes more regulation so be it.
The funny thing I find when it comes to Repubs and regulation is they have no problem with the government regulating the price of milk and produce for example. But they get pissy when it comes to new regulation where none existed previously even if it may help a faulty system. They fail to see collusion for example. Now, if it ain't broke, don't fix it is my philosophy, but if it is, don't ignore it either is also my philosophy.
I am going to use an arbitrary anecdote as an example. Let's take Starbuck style coffee as a business model. The goods sold are cups of coffee. Coffee by itself costs pennies to make, no matter what goes in it really. Go back before the land of latte's and you get your coffee from diners for cheap. Like a quarter a cup and unlimited refills from some place like Denny's. It was one good of many sold at a place selling fresh coffee. Someone comes up with a way to make coffee new, exciting, great tasting, and creates a business selling almost exclusively this new tasting coffee. The problem is, they can't go off the old model of selling coffee for a quarter a cup with refills. No business could survive. Since this is a new idea, and it has a startling amount of demand, the new business starts out charging an unheard of price. Instead of a quarter a cup, it's $4 with no free refills. However, with the demand, the market bears the price. The business is BOOMING, as now a cup of coffee that takes little investment and material costs to make is being sold for tens of thousands of a percent of markup profit. Here's the catcher though. Someone else is going to see this business model and also want to catch in. Now we have competition. With competition comes slightly better products we hope and reduced costs. The more competition, the lower the costs. Mainly because supply is now higher than demand with new competition.
If one would logically think about it, eventually the price of this new starbuck style coffees should eventually reach a low point as to not sustain ridiculously high margin prices. However, they still continue until today. Why? Eventually business realize that if competition ends up becoming to great, they will all lose out. No one wants to lose. So they all collude, either by expressed agreement or not. They space themselves out. They keep a floating low price point that none of them ever charges less for regardless. They eventually instead of competing on price, they compete on other things like flavor varieties instead.
Now if coffee was a necessity, this type of collusion would NOT be in the best interest for consumers. Without government intervention and regulation, prices would remain artificially high to the detriment of consumers.
Take note, I am not advocating the government intervention of Starbucks coffee in anyway at all. I was using it as an example as it was the first to come to mind of how artificial pricing via collusion ends up skewing supply versus demand. Coffee is a luxury and really luxuries are priced artificially because they can. Such as diamonds.
However, when collusion on some goods DOES start to hurt consumers and the economy, then government needs to see where it can step in to fix the problem in my opinion. I don't want them ham handedly messing up things and making it worse, which has happened before. They need to apply pressure gently and incrementally until the problem is solved.
Nice thought, except Starbucks is failing nationwide, Dunkin gives you twice as much coffee for nearly half the cost, and McDOnalds give you a large cup for $1. I get free coffee at work
$1 today is exactly how much coffee used to cost, 50-75 cents.
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