Showing posts with label population ecology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label population ecology. Show all posts

Sunday, August 4, 2024

Adding Anti-Trust to Monetary Policy: The Case of Groceries

Monetary inflation is a complex phenomenon. Not only can its causes be several; it can make it more difficult to distinguish immediate and medium-term economic conditions from more long term, or structural changes impacting our species economically.  Of the former, the relationship between inflation and whether the markets are competitive or oligarchic (or even monopolies) can be better understood, and this in term can put us in a better position to assess the impact of longer-term changes, such as those stemming from the huge increase in the population of human beings since before the industrial age. The price of food (i.e., groceries) is a case in point. Specifically, the impact from presumably temporary shocks during the Covid pandemic should be distinguished from the impact of oligopolistic markets in keeping prices high, and of the increase in human mouths more generally (and longer term) representing increased demand for foodstuff in on a relatively fixed planet.

In addition to a spike in the prices of raw materials, or, moreover, factors of production, and a growth in the money supply above the growth in GNP, the gradual consolidation of an industry from market competition to oligopoly and even a monopoly can increase inflation. The consolidation of the U.S. meat-producer market, for example, could be expected to result in higher meat prices at grocery stores. Similarly, barriers to entry facing discount grocery stores could result in food prices staying high even after a temporary increase in factor costs. In short, government action to keep markets competitive or return them to the discipline of competition should go side by side with monetary policy, lest it be assumed that inflation is primarily a result of the growth in the monetary supply. Otherwise, keeping interest rates higher than would otherwise be the case could unnecessarily put a damper on job growth.

In June, 2024, the U.S. official unemployment rate increased to 4.1 percent; the next month, that figure was even high, standing at 4.3 percent. This triggered the “Sahm rule,” according to which “a recession is imminent or underway if the three-month moving average of the unemployment rate rises by 0.5 percentage points or more relative to its prior 12 month low.”[1] The U.S. economy added 114,000, rather than the expected 175,000 jobs in July, and some people were nervous that a recession might be on the way.[2]

Accordingly, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren wrote, “Fed Chair Powell made a serious mistake not cutting interest rates. . . . He’s been warned over and over again that waiting too long risks driving the economy into a ditch. The jobs data is flashing red.”[3] The Fed kept the interest rate in place in order to fight inflation even though 4.3 percent is above the acceptable range for unemployment according to the Fed. In fact, Austan Goolsbee, President of the Chicago Federal Reserve, said at the time that 4.3 percent was something the Fed “has to respond to” by cutting interest rates.[4] Besides, he added, the “trends show inflation coming down across the board, multiple months in a row” as the labor market was cooling.[5]

Anyone shopping in a grocery store, however, would beg to differ, however, as the rise in food prices during the Coronavirus pandemic had not come down after the shocks, which included shipping as well as hoarding, had ended following the pandemic. Meat prices in particular had stayed very high even though such levels would be expected to attract new suppliers (or more supply) in a competitive market. But the meat-producer industry had been consolidating so a few large companies could essentially dictate prices to grocery stores, a related industry that had itself become oligopolistic. That the discount chain, Aldi, was not in the San Francisco region of California, for example, even in 2024 while Safeway and Whole Foods kept prices high suggests that the competitive mechanism, which protects consumers from the excessive greed of producers unrestrained by market discipline, was not working, for the basic logic of market competition holds that higher prices (and profits) attracts new producers such that supply increases and prices fall rather than stay high unless the cost of a factor of production has increased and stayed high.

To be sure, limits to the supply of food (and the cost of fuel for shipping) could be expected to become more salient as the human population level continues to increase dramatically. Whereas the 20th century had begun with about 2 billion human beings on the planet, the 21st century mark stood at 6 billion; by just 2023, that number had increased to 8 billion. At some point, the Earth’s agricultural potential being relatively fixed, could be expected to run up against increased demand for food. The common experience of having to pay more for groceries during and even after the pandemic due to temporary shocks and the lack of competition that would otherwise increase supply and thus reduce prices could be just a taste of what humans could expect in the 22nd century.

That a species’ population can increase beyond its ability to feed itself was posited by Thomas Malthus (1766-1834) in An Essay on the Principle of Population, published in 1798. The theological significance alone was startling, as the possibility threw off the notion that God had designed Creation and so the existence of God could be inferred from the excellence of the design found in nature itself. Malthus also claimed that famine, war, or disease is nature’s means of naturally correcting a schizogenic (i.e., maximizing) population, and subjecting the creatures who are in God’s image to such hardship hardly seems like part of the design of an omnibenevolent deity.

Therefore, the mechanism of a competitive market assumes not only lower barriers to entry, but also the capacity for increased supply when prices are relatively high, and this second assumption may be increasingly untenable as our species continues to grow while the natural resources of Earth remain relatively fixed, allowing of course for efficiency gains from technological advances. At the very least, from this macro perspective, governments should not shy away from enacting and enforcing anti-trust mechanisms so prices reflect not only demand, but also whatever supply is possible, given the Earth’s natural resources, especially in terms of energy and food (and also housing). Moreover, concurrent and sustained increases in several industries oriented to human sustenance ought to be especially concerning regarding toll from both uncompetitive markets and our species’ growth.


1. Alicia Wallace et al, “Markets End the Day Sharply Lower . . . “ CNN.com, August 2, 2024.
2. David Goldman, “Elizabeth Warren: The Fed Made ‘a Serious Mistake,” CNN.com, August 2, 2024.
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid.

Saturday, February 9, 2019

Greek Austerity: Pressure on the Environment

“While patrolling on a recent cold night, environmentalist Grigoris Gourdomichalis caught a young man illegally chopping down a tree on public land in the mountains above Athens. When confronted, the man broke down in tears, saying he was unemployed and needed the wood to warm the home he shares with his wife and four small children, because he could no longer afford heating oil. ‘It was a tough choice, but I decided just to let him go’ with the wood, said Mr. Gourdomichalis, head of the locally financed Environmental Association of Municipalities of Athens, which works to protect forests around Egaleo, a western suburb of the capital.”[1] Tens of thousands of trees had disappeared from parks and forests in Greece during the first half of the winter of 2013 alone as unemployed Greeks had to contend with the loss of the home heating-oil subsidy as part of the austerity program demanded by the state’s creditors. As impoverished residents too broke to pay for electricity or fuel turned to fireplaces and wood stoves for heat, smog was just one of the manifestations—the potential loss of forests being another. On Christmas Day, for example, pollution over Maroussi was more than two times the E.U.’s standard. Furthermore, many schools, especially in the north part of Greece, had to face hard choices for lack of money to heat classrooms.
Greek forests were succumbing  in 2012 to the Greeks' need to heat their homes as austerity hit.   source: Getty Images
Essentially, austerity was bringing many people back to pre-modern living, perhaps including a resurgence in vegetable gardens during the preceding summer. At least in respect to the wood, the problem was that the population was too big—and too concentrated in Athens—for the primitive ways to return, given the environment's capacity. 
To be sure, even in the Middle Ages, England had lost forests as the population (and royal plans) grew. In December 1953, many Londoners decided to use their fireplaces to burn wood, resulting in pollution blanketing the city. As a result, thousands died and the city outlawed the use of fireplaces. No one probably thought to ask whether the city had gotten too big—and too dense. No policy was enacted that would result in a shift in population out of the region.
Generally speaking, human population levels made possible by modern technology and medical advances have become too large for a return to pre-modern ways of life. Because of the extraordinarily large sizes of the modern city, including Athens, suddenly removing modern technology, which includes government subsidies, it is especially problematic when many people are forced to fend for themselves to meet basic needs. The efficiency of modern technology, including in regard to utilities and food distribution, is often taken for granted, even by governments, so the impacts on the environment when masses of people “return to nature” can be surprising. Nature has become "used to" seven billion humans on the planet in large part because we have economized via technology so the full brunt of the population-size is not felt. Particularly in industrial countries, societies are reliant on modern technology because without it the bulging population is unsustainable. 
Put another way, we have distanced ourselves from nature, and our growth in numbers in the meantime has made it impossible for us to “get back to nature” in a jolt, especially by many people. It is in this sense that governmental austerity programs that cut back on sustenance are dangerous not only for society, but also the ecosystems in which humans live. Accordingly, by mid-January, 2013, the Greek government was considering proposals to restore heating-oil subsidies. It is incredible that the financial interests of institutional creditors, including other governments, were even allowed to put the subsidies at risk.
In ethical terms, the basic sustenance of a people takes priority ethically over a creditor’s “need” for interest. The sin of usury is sourced back to the origins of lending as an instance of charity rather than money-making either from the plight of the poor or profit-uses.[2] When a person in antiquity was in trouble financially, someone with a bit of cash would lend some with the expectation that only that sum would be returned. The demand for interest on top was viewed by the historical Church as adding insult to injury (i.e., the bastardization of charity into a money-making ruse). Then exceptions were made for commercial lending, wherein a creditor could legitimately demand a share of the profit made from the borrowed money in addition to the return of the principal. As commercial lending came increasingly to characterize lending, the demand for interest became the norm, even on consumption loans when no profit would ensue to pay off the loan with interest. The notion that interest is conditional on a borrower having enough funds was lost, causing much pain to many in the name of fidelity of contract, as if it or the creditor’s financial interest were an absolute. Put another way, the default has swung over from the borrowers to the lenders to such an extent that society may look the other way as people literally have to cut down trees to heat their homes because creditors have demanded and won austerity touching on sustenance programs.
Therefore, especially in Christian Europe, putting people out by pressure being applied to state governments in the E.U. to make payments even in the context of a financial crisis can be considered to be untenable, ethically speaking. I am not suggesting that states should be profligate with borrowed funds. Rather, just as Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations is bracketed by his Theory of Moral Sentiments, so too an economy (and financial system) functions best within moral constraints. 

1. Nektaria Stamouli and Stelios Bouras, “Greeks Raid Forests in Search of Wood to Heat Homes,” The New York Times, January 11, 2013.
2. Skip Worden, God's Gold, available at Amazon.