DBTrek wrote:I think a lot of "water" is being muddied by equating "price gouging" with monopoly "price fixing". These are different things. StA's example is not price gouging, it's Fife and I trying to price fix with only 2/3rds of the water supply. Our attempt fails until StA depletes his 1/3rd of the supply, at which time Fife and I have 100% of the remaining water. That's monopoly price fixing - a different animal.
Price gouging is actually a normal market reaction to an enormous spike in demand. Natural disasters create incredible demand, which drives the price of goods higher, which attracts sellers who want to capitalize on these higher prices. That's it. Normal market activity demonized by the derogatory term "price gouging".
You already admitted that: (1) in order for price gouging to work, the sellers must all at least implicitly agree to engage in price gouging, else buyers will go to sellers who are not engaging in price gouging.
It follows from that premise, which you agreed to, that the fundamental mechanism that makes price gouging possible has nothing to do with scarcity but, rather, the sellers having locked down the supply of something no differently than is the case for a cartel, or a single seller cornering the entire market of that good (monopoly). There are no other alternatives. Any other arrangement of supply and sellers means competition exists and price gouging becomes impossible.
But your toy anecdotal defense of price gouging just implies all price gouging stems from scarcity and the price gougers are just upstanding folks trying to make a living bringing scarce resources to an otherwise starving market. But that's simply not true. That's not the basis for price gouging. The basis for price gouging is the exact same basis for something like OPEC or cocaine cartels: sellers control a large supply but only sell small portions of it at the highest possible price.
There's nothing inherently good about price gouging. It doesn't bring needed goods to the market (actually, quite the opposite). If you allow for price gouging in the aftermath of a disaster, you actually create an incentive for sellers to horde resources and sell only a fraction of their horde at exorbitant prices.