~~for educational purposes only~~

Government and High Prices
By Thomas J. DiLorenzo

The U.S. Congress is holding hearings on why
gasoline prices have risen; pundits are
beginning to repeat the anti-capitalist oil
company bashing of the 1970s; and the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) recently issued a report blaming
prosperity for rising housing prices and
self-servingly calling for more HUD subsidies
for "the poor."

The Washington establishment has been quick
to blame "greedy oil companies" and American
prosperity for higher gas and housing prices,
but the government itself is at fault with
its policies of government-mandated price
increases.

Urged on by American environmentalists' hate
affair with the automobile, the U.S. government
has employed every possible means to restrict
the supply and drive up the price of gasoline.
Regulation places over 90 percent of the
outercontinental shelf off the California
coast off limits to oil exploration; there
are massive oil deposits in Alaska which are
also off limits for exploration despite the
fact that the existing oil wells there are
being bled dry; and myriad other environmental
regulations imposed on the oil industry drive
up the costs of oil production.

For example, the government recently mandated
that "reformulated" gasoline be sold in many
areas of the U.S., which caused an immediate
10 cents per gallon price increase. American
motorists have also been paying at least
another 10 cents more per gallon of gas
because of another Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) mandate for "oxygenated fuel,"
which the EPA itself claimed even before it
issued the mandate contains Methyl Tertiary
Butyl Ether, a water contaminant and potential
health hazard. Gasoline taxes add as much as
another 75 cents per gallon in some states.

Tax cuts and deregulation are the obvious
means to deal with rising gasoline prices,
but that would diminish the power and
influence of the state, so it is not likely
be achieved.

Housing prices have gone up sharply in some
American markets because of increased demand
for housing fueled by rising prosperity.
Normally, after a short lag, housing supply
increases will follow, which would moderate
the price increases. But zoning, building code,
and environmental regulations have made it
more difficult and costly to build houses.
More ominously, there is currently a nationwide
governmental movement to dramatically reduce
the supply and increase the cost of housing
under the rubric of "smart-growth" regulation,
one of the dumbest ideas to be hatched by the
state in many years.

Motivated in part by the environmentalist
hatred of the automobile, so-called smart-growth
proponents, which include dozens of governors,
hundreds of local government officials, and
Vice President Al Gore, want to force much of
the population back into the cities (and
presumably out of their automobiles and into
mass transit) by using regulation to drive up
the costs of housing in the suburbs.

Consequently, they have proposed or adopted
extra real estate development taxes; urban
"growth boundaries," beyond which development
simply cannot take place; regulatory pressures
on banks to get them to make fewer suburban
and more urban real estate loans; revision
of zoning laws to make suburban development
more costly; state and federal land purchases
which place more and more land off limits for
residential use; prohibitions on the sale of
farmland to developers; minimum-lot zoning
regulation, including "superzoning" in such
places as Marin County, California, where
60-acre lots are required in some parts of
the county; utility hook-up "moratoria"; and
endangered species lawsuits which stop
development.

If such policies succeed in driving up suburban
housing prices and causing a migration to the
cities, housing prices will rise there, too,
because of the increased demand and a supply
that is even more restricted by regulation
than in suburban housing markets.

Such policies were championed by the California
state and local governments in the 1970s, with
the result being a 500 percent increase in lot
prices from 1972 to 1978. More recently,
Portland, Oregon has become the "Mecca" of
"smart-growth" regulation; lot prices there
doubled from 1990 to 1995, and the increase
in housing prices during that period was three
times the rate of housing price increases of
a decade earlier. Of the 50 largest metropolitan
areas in the U.S., Portland experienced the
fifth-highest rate of housing price
appreciation from 1990 to 1995.

The politicians who are now acting indignant
over rising housing and gasoline prices are,
as usual, playing American citizens for suckers
by offering even more intervention as the
"solution." It is their own out-of-control
regulations, coupled with the Fed's expansionist
monetary policies, that are the real culprits.
While persecuting companies like Microsoft
for cutting prices, the government itself is
the dominant cause of higher or "monopolistic"
prices. Naturally, it exempts itself from
antitrust prosecution.

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