You are currently viewing the printable version of this article, to return to the normal page, please click here.
The Washington Times Online Edition

Price controls and supplies

Question of the Day

Who do you think, among the GOP presidential candidates, will raise the most funds?

View results

A recent Page One article in the Wall Street Journal told of rising hunger and malnutrition in India amid chronic agricultural surpluses. India now exports wheat, even donating some to Afghanistan, while malnutrition spreads in India itself.

This situation is both paradoxical and tragic, but what is also remarkable is that the long article omits the one key word that explains such a painful paradox: Price.

There can be a surplus of any given thing at any given time. But a chronic surplus of the same thing, year after year, means somebody prevent the price from falling. Otherwise, the excess supply would drive down the price, leading producers to produce less -- and consumers to consume more -- until the surplus was gone.

The Indian government keeps the price of wheat and some other agricultural produce from falling. That is exactly what the U.S. government has done for more than a half-century, leading to chronic agricultural surpluses here. Nor are India and the U.S. the only countries with such policies, leading to such results.

Although Americans wrestle with obesity while Indians suffer malnutrition, the economic principle is the same -- and that principle was totally ignored by the Wall Street Journal report.

There is no special need to single out the Journal for this criticism, except that when economic illiteracy shows up in one of the highest-quality publications in the country it illustrates one of the great deficiencies of journalists in general.

One of the many jobs offered to me over the years, to my wife's astonishment, was a job as dean of a school of journalism. While I was not about to give up my own research and writing to get tangled up in campus politics, the offer made me think about what a school of journalism ought to be teaching people whose jobs will be to inform the public.

They first and foremost ought to know what they are talking about, which requires a solid grounding in history, statistics, science -- and economics. Since journalists report on so many things with economic implications, they should have at least a year of introductory economics.

People with a basic knowledge of economics would understand that words like "surplus" and "shortage" imply another word that may not be mentioned explicitly: Price. And chronic surpluses or chronic shortages imply price controls.

Conversely, price controls imply chronic surpluses or shortages -- depending on whether price controls keep prices from falling to the level they would reach under supply and demand or keep them from rising to that level.

Controls that keep prices from falling as they would reach in response to supply and demand include not only agricultural price supports like those in India but also minimum wage laws, which are equally common in countries around the world.

Just as an artificially high price for wheat set by the government leads to a chronic surplus of wheat, so an artificially high labor price set by the government leads to a surplus of labor -- better known as unemployment.

Since all workers are not the same, this unemployment is concentrated among the less skilled and less experienced workers. Many of them are simply priced out of a job.

In the United States, for example, the highest unemployment rates are almost invariably among black teenagers. But this was not always the case.

Although the federal minimum wage law was passed in 1938, inflation during the Second World War meant the minimum wage law had no major effect until a new round of increases in the minimum wage level began in 1950. Unemployment rates among black teenagers before then were a fraction of what they are today -- and no higher than among white teenagers.

The time is long overdue for schools of journalism to start teaching economics. It would eliminate much of the nonsense and hysteria in the media, and with it perhaps some of the demagoguery in politics.

Thomas Sowell is a nationally syndicated columnist.

Comments
blog comments powered by Disqus
You Might Also Like
  • Antonya Huntenburg, 21, of Hillsborough, N.J., a student at the Corcoran College of Art and Design, says everyone she knows is under some kind of economic pressure, including her parents. She says she joined the Occupy D.C. encampment on McPherson Square "to be safe." (Rod Lamkey Jr./The Washington Times)

    Youths show economic frustration in streets around the world

    By Patrice Hill - The Washington Times

  • **FILE** Chief Warrant Officer Charlie Morgan attends the OutServe Armed Forces Leadership Summit on Oct. 15, 2011, in Las Vegas. (Associated Press)

    Military gay group growing, aiming for more rights

    By Rowan Scarborough - The Washington Times

  • ** FILE ** The Rev. William E. Lori, Roman Catholic bishop of Bridgeport, Conn., gestures while testifying on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Feb. 16, 2012, before the House Oversight and Government Reform committee hearing: "Lines Crossed: Separation of Church and State. Has the Obama Administration Trampled on Freedom of Religion & Freedom of Conscience." From left are, Lori, the Rev. Dr. Matthew C. Harrison, president of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod, and C. Ben Mitchell, professor of Moral Philosophy Union University. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    Battle lines are drawn over whether Obama is waging a war on religion

    By Cheryl Wetzstein - The Washington Times

  • Happening Now

          Independent voices from the TWT Communities

          Political Potpourri

          A collection of reader guest articles, thoughts and opinions by Communities writers and breaking news and information.

          Buzz on Bees

          Buzz on Bees is a column promoting the love and life of God’s greatest pollinators on earth: The Honeybee

          LifeCycles

          The “Silver Tsunami” created by aging Baby Boomers is hitting America. Let’s explore how we adjust to it, enjoy it and defy negative expectations about age.