Raising the prices of rooms helps the situation by encouraging self-rationing. People have a financial motivation to take no more than they need when prices are high.Montegriffo wrote: I get that there may be a shortage of rooms I just don't see how raising the price of a room helps that problem.
If it were my hotel I would let people know that they will have to share a twin room and that nobody gets to have a room to themselves once all the single rooms have gone. If you aren't prepared to share a room then you are welcome to try elsewhere.
No need to be greedy and charge extra for a bed just because people have no choice.
The farmer who pulled my car out of a snow drift today didn't ask for money before he helped me out. He just did it because he could and it was the kind thing to do. Maybe you think he was a sucker for not screwing me out of 20 quid because supply and demand or something.
Your solution is an economic one as well (central planning) that has it’s own positives and negatives. Sticking strangers in rooms together Is a risky proposition, given that your hotel is accepting responsibility for how those strangers interact by virtue of forcing cohabitation on them. But it’s one way to go about it. It still leaves some people out in the cold.
I don’t think the guy who pulled you out of a snowbank is a sucker, unless he feeds his family by pulling people out of snowbanks (in which case, he is). Sounds like a nice guy.