Media in a Frenzy over Oil Profits
The free market is lost in discussion of
reining in businesses’ profitability.
By Amy Menefee
Free Market Project
Oct. 28, 2005
    From
television to newspapers, the media have gone wild over oil
companies’ profit reports this week, asking “how much is too much?”
   Â
That question alone demonstrated journalists’ omission of free
market principles in their reporting. America’s free market
allows the small businessman to become a large business if he is
able. Once companies are publicly traded, millions of others
share in the business’s profits. Yet, the media have pitted
businesses against consumers, leaving out the fact that these
large companies distribute dividends to millions of individuals. |

CNN
Oct. 28, 2005
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Covering oil companies’ profits, reporters operated on the
assumption that there should be a profit ceiling for a business, and
that anything above that would be unacceptable. They also attempted
to whip up consumer “outrage,” even though it is consumer demand and
oil scarcity that drive up prices – not an arbitrary decision by oil
companies. Just a few highlights:
â–Ş Get angry!: CNN’s Miles O’Brien offered his audience
“something to get your blood boiling” and “get you a little
outraged” on the October 28 “American Morning.” He said,
“Profiteering is the term? … Could this be something that there is
some law they have violated?” When Andy Serwer said he didn’t think
so, O’Brien continued: “it must mean that the price they are
charging us is going up faster than the price of oil. I mean, I’m
not an economist, but …” O’Brien is indeed not an economist, and he
didn’t entertain the idea that increased demand for gas, combined
with a scarcity, would raise prices.
â–Ş Profits make us poorer?: “But those rising prices at the
pump are taking fuel out of the economy, by taking spending money
out of our pockets and making the country poorer.” – CBS’s Anthony
Mason on the October 27 “Evening News,” ignoring millions of
individual shareholders who benefit, not to mention how the exchange
of goods and services works in the economy. Although gas prices rose
in the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the rise in one
sector’s prices does not mean the entire economy is suffering from
inflation, as
the Free Market Project has reported.
â–Ş They swim, we sink: “Oil companies, ringing up profits that
boggle the mind. The outraged Americans who say they are paying
dearly, while the producers swim in money.” – ABC’s Bob Woodruff,
“World News Tonight,” October 27.
â–Ş The voice of reason: ABC’s financial contributor Mellody
Hobson finally added an economically sound perspective to the issue
on the October 28 “Good Morning America.” She said the widespread
outrage is “not warranted,” because the oil companies have “nothing
to do with how gas prices are set.” She explained the basic
principles of supply and demand, saying that market forces set
prices. Hobson also explained that additional regulation and
government price-setting are harmful to both businesses and
consumers in a capitalist system.
Stay tuned!
The Free Market Project has more analysis coming on this
topic.
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