We all know about price-gouging. We see
it everyday when buying gasoline, diesel fuel, home heating oil,
prescription drugs and many other products or services. Price-gouging
is the result of an “all the market will bare” corporate mentality, as
opposed to the more traditional “reasonable rate of return on
investment” corporate mentality which prevailed in most corporate
boardrooms before the 1980’s Reagan Revolution changed government
policies and societal attitudes. This is the truly darkside of the
Reagan Era. We are still suffering from the negative impacts as
consumers and citizens.
Much of what is wrong with America
developed out of the Reagan Era “greed is good doctrine.” It
thoroughly corrupted the Republican Party and made serious inroads
among elements of the Democratic opposition. It corrupted government
policy and negatively influenced many average American citizens.
I believe we should return to the
traditional Christian outlook that excessive greed is a serious sin.
This is not just a Christian doctrine. Almost every religion and moral
code developed around the world agrees that greed is usually an evil
thing.
Excessive greed is what price-gouging
is all about if you apply even a minimum of common sense to examining
the issue. Greed is always present. It is why we have armed
robberies, burglaries, piracy and scores of other criminal activities.
Economic activities judged by society to be detrimental to most
consumers, workers or other businesses are usually outlawed or at
least heavily regulated by government. It is clear that price-gouging
falls into this category of detrimental economic activity. It should
be banned.
Corporations that exploit market
conditions to abuse consumers should face huge fines. The fines should
be multiples of all profits derived from the price-gouging. Zero
profits should be retained by those corporations from the
price-gouging activities. There is a legal pattern in much of American
government regulation of corporate misbehavior that actually permits
the corporations involved to retain large portions of illegally
obtained profits. This must be stopped.
Corporate executives who are
responsible for price-gouging consumers should face long mandatory
jail terms. There should be no parole options. The dollar amounts
involved should be reflected in the length of the jail terms imposed.
The personal assets of those executives should be seized as well as
art of the punishment for illegal price-gouging.
It is time to get tough on corporate
criminals. These corporate criminals are undermining the health of the
American economy, crippling the finances of hundreds of millions of
American citizens and undermining our long-term national security for
their personal gain. They are truly bad citizens.
Predatory pricing is the tactic of
temporarily selling below cost products or services just to drive
competitors out of business. After smaller competitors are driven out
of business, the predators can then raise prices to price-gouging
levels since consumers can no longer buy from the now bankrupt small
competitors. Chain stores often use this tactic to destroy local
businesses. Corporations like Wal-Mart have the economic ability to
destroy small competitors in one small town after another because they
have hundreds or thousands of other stores located outside the local
market to subsidize the predatory behavior in the local market.
Many states have laws against predatory
pricing but not all states. It is time to make the legal prohibition
national in scope. It is time to adopt penalties for predatory
pricing that are very similar to those I propose for price-gouging.
American consumers and small
businesses deserve a fair playing field that promotes economic
morality and fair competition. They deserve true economic justice. It
is time for the nation to turn our backs toward the Reagan Era “greed
is good” ethos and return to our traditional values.