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Why Kamala Harris’s price proposals could be damaging for the US economy

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Why Kamala Harris’s price proposals could be damaging for the US economy

This article is an on-site version of our Chris Giles on Central Banks newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every Tuesday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newsletters

Whether she is outlining her economic policies in a rally or answering questions in a CNN interview, Kamala Harris complains that grocery prices are wrong and she will stamp down on the injustices created.

It is good politics. In a YouGov poll last week, 60 per cent of US respondents supported the US vice-president’s plan to cap increases in grocery prices with only 27 per cent against. This is more popular than tariffs.

It is true, as my colleague Martin Sandbu has written, that Harris is unclear about her exact policy, but the Democratic presidential nominee clearly wants the public to believe that grocery prices are wrong and that she will lower them. The following sounds awfully like price controls to me.

Prices in particular for groceries are still too high. The American people know it. I know it. Which is why my agenda includes what we need to do to bring down the price of groceries. For example, dealing with an issue like price gouging.”

Since the topic of such controls tends to get supporters and detractors into a froth, I’m going to outline some obvious economic analysis on the topic I hope the majority of people can agree upon. Then we can look at what a Harris victory would imply.

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Price controls are bad

It is important to restate the standard economic finding. Price controls are bad in the majority of markets and circumstances. Even proponents of occasional controls do not think they are a policy for all seasons. In next week’s Economics Show with Soumaya Keynes, for example, Isabella Weber agrees with me that in normal times they have no place and her discourse about sellers’ inflation (often referred to as “greedflation”) is an exception rather than a rule, at least in the past.

The full horror story of price controls — whether on groceries, rents or other goods and services — is set out comprehensively and simply in The War on Prices, edited by Ryan Bourne. The effects of a cap can be summarised as destroying valuable price signals, creating shortages and queues, reducing quality, hindering innovation, generating inequality between those benefiting and those not, and (for rent controls) locking people into homes, preventing them moving.

Alan Beattie outlined the beneficial effects of price signals in global agriculture (upstream groceries) last week.

Let me repeat. Price controls are bad.

History is also not kind to them as a way of helping restrain increases in the cost of living. For a near contemporary view of president Richard Nixon’s early 1970s price controls, Alan Blinder and William Newton found that they did restrain increases, but this mostly unravelled when the limits were dismantled in 1974. Controls in the UK were no more successful.

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It’s fair to present the following chart with the period of widespread price control highlighted and allow readers to draw their own conclusions.

You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

The evidence from theory and practice that price controls are bad does not mean all examples of unconstrained pricing cannot go wrong.

The sale of Oasis concert tickets in the UK over the weekend was an example where price signals were doing their thing in matching supply and demand but at the same time having all the downsides of queueing normally expected of a controlled price.

There are some general exceptions

Almost every economic rule comes with some exceptions. Here, the most notable and widespread are in wages and pharmaceutical prices. Both of these have been found to be governed by significant market power, undermining the price-setting process.

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Low wages used to be considered simply a market price, demonstrating the low value of “unskilled” work. But empirical economic research, starting in the 1990s and led by David Card, showed that the expected relationships of raising minimum wages did not apply. Employment did not fall in New Jersey fast-food restaurants that were on the border of Pennsylvania when New Jersey’s minimum wage was raised. Card won a share of the Nobel Prize in 2021 for this body of work.

The finding that employers of low-wage workers might have market power has encouraged many countries to raise minimum wages significantly since the 1990s and without many downsides, although it has undoubtedly raised relative prices.

Take the UK, for example, which has raised minimum wages significantly since they were introduced in 1999. Unlike the $7.25 federal minimum, the chart below shows that the UK one definitively raises wages of the lowest paid. As the minimum wage has gone up, employment has not been noticeably affected and wage inequality has fallen a lot.

Minimum wages can have some unhelpful effects, of course, such as the elimination of pay premiums for unsocial hours. If you want to read how this affected a single company, I would recommend this legal judgment in the past month on a pay discrimination case for the retailer Next.

You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

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The second general exception is in drug prices. Again market power is the culprit where some companies raise prices way beyond what is reasonable and necessary to provide incentives to invent new drugs.

Competition policies would normally be the first port of call for government when companies are abusing a dominant position, but it can sometimes be simpler just to regulate the price. The Biden administration has done this with Medicare for insulin. The UK’s NHS and government negotiate drug prices on behalf of about 70mn people. This is not price control as such, but balancing one powerful supplier with an equally powerful purchaser, which has much the same effect.

There are some rare temporary exceptions

Weber’s concept of sellers’ inflation is an offshoot of much economic cost-push thinking. A shock disturbs prices, giving companies market power they do not normally have and this inflation becomes amplified and embedded as workers seek to defend their real wages.

Weber advocates governments taking early action to stop price rises and entering the conflict stages of inflation — through holding buffer stocks, price controls or subsidies. She praises Europe’s 2022 energy price intervention which limited the peak of inflation after wholesale natural gas prices rose 10-fold.

While Weber thinks these policies might be needed quite often in a future world of supply shocks, trade tensions and global warming, more mainstream economists disagree. But they do not disagree that price controls can be helpful.

For example, the IMF’s chief economist, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, highlighted last year how Europe’s energy subsidies probably lowered inflation and kept it closer to target by reducing headline inflation and limiting subsequent wage claims. It worked because there was significant slack in the Eurozone, he said. His chart is below. Note that the actions did not prevent inflation and only mitigated the effects a little.

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You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

The difference here among economists is not that the mainstream thinks it is impossible that Weber’s sellers’ inflation can happen; it is that they think the conditions are rare and the effects of price controls in these rare instances are pretty small.

An even more limited application is anti-price gouging laws. These exist in most US states, including red-blooded ones such as Texas, and are implemented generally after a natural disaster, aimed at stopping excessive profiteering by a few lucky suppliers who have stocks.

Just as in the European energy crisis, the price signal still applies, encouraging both new supply and a drop in demand, but the state imposes limits on the extent of price rises. While it is reasonable to have an argument about the effectiveness of these laws, they are, almost by definition, extremely limited in scope and not used in normal times.

Come on down, the price is wrong

Economists are happy for there to be competition investigations to ensure companies cannot exploit a position of market dominance.

The difficulty with Harris’s position on grocery pricing is that where Federal price-control regulations would be used sparingly, they cannot be very effective. Were the powers used extensively, they would be undesirable.

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What I’ve been reading and watching

  • In a sign of what might be to come in the US if Donald Trump wins the race to the White House, Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has chosen a political ally and former deputy finance minister to head its central bank. Lula has railed against Brazil’s 10.5 per cent interest rate

  • Russia’s central bank has warned that its overheating economy will slow sharply next year

  • Danger money. The Libyan central bank governor, Sadiq al-Kabir, and his staff have been forced to flee his divided country after threats from armed militia, leading to the shutdown of most of the country’s oil production

  • My column on the Bank of England’s coming decision on quantitative tightening provocatively suggested it was more important than the coming Budget

A chart that matters

In a must-read speech last week, Isabel Schnabel, an executive board member of the European Central Bank, said Eurozone inflation was on track to hit the ECB’s forecasts. But there was a sting in the tail. She put up a version of the chart below to show that the predictive power of ECB inflation forecasts become steadily worse the longer the forecasting horizon. They are pretty accurate one quarter ahead, but at two-year horizons, the forecasts are essentially useless.

Her conclusion was that you need to look closely at scenarios of what might go wrong. Very sensible. All three of her scenarios were of inflation proving higher than the central forecast, which was quite revelatory of her stance.

That said, the charts are marvellous. They came from Christian Conrad and Zeno Enders of Heidelberg university, using more than 20 years of data. Be a little careful in interpreting the 45 degree line in these charts, however, as the FT’s graphics software cannot produce an accurate line and I had to hack it as best I could.

You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

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Scott Adams, the controversial cartoonist behind ‘Dilbert,’ dies at 68

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Scott Adams, the controversial cartoonist behind ‘Dilbert,’ dies at 68

Cartoonist Scott Adams poses with his a life-size cutout of his creation, Dilbert, in 2014.

Lea Suzuki/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images


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Lea Suzuki/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

Scott Adams, the controversial cartoonist who skewered corporate culture, has died at age 68, He announced in May 2025 that he had metastatic prostate cancer and only months to live.

Months later, in November, Adams took to X to request — and receive — some very public help from President Trump and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in addressing health insurance issues that had delayed his treatment with an FDA-approved cancer drug called Pluvicto.

Adams said he was able to book an appointment the next day. Despite the Trump administration’s public intervention, Adams shared on his YouTube show in early January 2026 that “the odds of me recovering are essentially zero.”

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Adams’ former wife, Shelly Miles, announced his death Tuesday during a YouTube livestream, and then read a statement from Adams who said, “I had an amazing life. I gave it everything I had. If you got any benefits from my life, I ask you pay it forward as best you can.”

Adams rose to fame in the early 1990s with his comic strip Dilbert, satirizing white-collar culture based on his own experiences working in company offices. He made headlines again in the final years of his life for controversial comments about race, gender and other topics, which led to Dilbert‘s widespread cancellation in 2023.

Dilbert, which at its height was syndicated in some 2,000 newspapers across 65 countries, spawned a number of books, a video game and two seasons of an animated sitcom.

“I think you have to be fundamentally irrational to think that you can make money as a cartoonist, and so I can never answer succinctly why it is that I thought this would work,” Adams told NPR’s Weekend Edition in 1996. “It was about the same cost as buying a lottery ticket and about the same odds of succeeding. And I buy a lottery ticket, so why not?”

He said that he had “pretty much always wanted to be a famous cartoonist,” even applying to the Famous Artists School, a correspondence art course, as a pre-teen.

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“I was 11 years old, and I’d filled out the application saying that I wanted to be a cartoonist,” he said. “It turns out, as they explained in their rejection letter, that you have to be at least 12 years old to be a famous cartoonist.”

Turning to more practical matters, Adams studied economics at Hartwick College in Oneonta, N.Y. and earned an MBA from UC Berkeley. He also trained as a hypnotist at the Clement School of Hypnosis in the 1980s.

Adams began his career at Crocker National Bank, working what he described in a blog post as a “number of humiliating and low paying jobs: teller (robbed twice at gunpoint), computer programmer, financial analyst, product manager, and commercial lender.”

He then spent nearly a decade working at Pacific Bell — the California telephone company now owned by AT&T — in various jobs “that defy description but all involve technology and finances,” as Adams put it in his biography. It was there that he started drawing Dilbert, working on the strip on mornings, evenings and weekends from 1989 until 1995.

“You get real cynical if you spend more than five minutes in a cubicle,” he told NPR’s Weekend Edition in 2002. “But I certainly always planned that I would escape someday, as soon as I got escape velocity.”

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Adams satirized corporate culture for decades 

Scott Adams works on his comic strip in his California studio in 2006.

Scott Adams works on his comic strip in his California studio in 2006. He announced in May that he was dying of metastatic prostate cancer.

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Dilbert revolves around its eponymous white-collar engineer as he navigates his company’s comically dysfunctional bureaucracy, alongside his sidekick: an anthropomorphized, megalomaniac dog named Dogbert.

“Dilbert is a composite of my co-workers over the years,” Adams wrote on his website. “He emerged as the main character of my doodles. I started using him for business presentations and got great responses … Dogbert was created so Dilbert would have someone to talk to.”

Dilbert — with his trademark curly head, round glasses and always-upturned red and black tie — fights a constant battle for his sanity amidst a micromanaged, largely illogical corporate environment full of pointless meetings, technical difficulties, too many buzzwords and an out-of-touch manager known only as Pointy-haired Boss.

Even after Adams quit his day job, he kept a firm grasp on the absurdities and mundanities of cubicle life with help from his devoted audience.

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He included his email address on the strip and said he got hundreds of messages each day. Recurring reader suggestions ranged from stolen refrigerator lunches to bosses’ unrealistic expectations.

“So they all, for example, say, ‘I need this report in a week, but make sure that I get it two weeks early so I could look at it,’” Adams said. “Just bizarre stories where it’s clear that they either have never owned a watch or a calendar or they are in some kind of a time warp.”

Dilbert‘s storylines evolved alongside office culture, taking aim at a growing range of societal and technological topics over the years. In 2022, Adams introduced Dave, the strip’s first Black character, who identifies as white — a choice critics interpreted as poking fun at DEI initiatives.

That ushered in an era of anti-woke plotlines that saw dozens of U.S. newspapers drop the strip in 2022, foreshadowing its widespread cancellation just a year later.

The comic strip was cancelled over Adams’ comments

Adams didn’t limit himself to cartoons. He was a proponent of what he called the “talent stack,” combining multiple common skills in a unique and valuable way: like drawing, humor and risk tolerance, in his case.

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He ventured briefly into food retail at the turn of the millennium, selling vegetarian, microwavable burritos called Dilberitos. He published several novels and nonfiction books unrelated to the Dilbert universe over the years.

Adams was open about his health struggles throughout his career, including the movement disorder focal dystonia — which particularly affected his drawing hand — and, years later, spasmodic dysphonia, an involuntary clenching of the vocal cords that he managed to cure through an experimental surgery.

And he opined on social and political events on “Real Coffee with Scott Adams,” his YouTube talk series with over 180,000 subscribers.

His commentary, which often touched on race and other hot-button issues, led to Dilbert‘s widespread cancellation in February 2023.

In a YouTube livestream that month, Adams — while discussing a Rasmussen public opinion poll asking readers whether they agree “It’s OK to be white” (which is considered an alt-right slogan) — urged white people to “get the hell away from Black people,” labeling them a “hate group.” The backlash was swift: Dozens of newspapers across the country ditched Dilbert, and the comic’s distributor dropped Adams.

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The incident also renewed focus on numerous controversial comments Adams had made in the past, including about race, men’s rights, the Holocaust and COVID-19 vaccines. Adams defended his remarks as hyperbole, and later said getting “canceled” had improved his life, with public support coming from conservative figures like Elon Musk and Charlie Kirk.

Adams, in his final years, was a vocal supporter of President Trump and a critic of Democrats.

But he extended his “respect and compassion” to former President Joe Biden in a video the day after Biden’s prostate cancer diagnosis became public in May 2025.

The prognosis was personal for Adams: He shared that he too had metastatic prostate cancer and only months to live, saying he expected “to be checking out from this domain sometime this summer.”

“I’ve just sort of processed it, so it just sort of is what it is,” he said on his YouTube show. “Everybody has to die, as far as I know.”

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Iran acknowledges mass protest deaths, but claims situation under control as Trump mulls response

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Iran acknowledges mass protest deaths, but claims situation under control as Trump mulls response

Iran’s theocratic rulers are under the most intense pressure they’ve felt in years, as President Trump leaves the option of a U.S. military intervention on the table in the face of a fast-mounting death toll amid more than two weeks of anti-government protests across the Islamic Republic.

Mr. Trump said Sunday that Iranian officials had called him looking “to negotiate” after his repeated threats to intervene if authorities kill protesters. In an unusual move, meanwhile, Iran‘s state-controlled media aired video on Sunday showing mass casualties in and outside a morgue in a Tehran suburb.

The video shared widely online shows dozens of bodies outside the morgue, which CBS News has geolocated to the southern Tehran suburb of Kahrizak. The bodies were wrapped in black bags, and people can be seen grieving and searching for their loved ones at the site.

The state TV reporter says in the clip that some of those seen dead may have been involved in violence, but that “the majority of them are ordinary people, and their families are ordinary people as well.” 

An image from video posted on social media on Jan. 11, 2026, shows people outside the Kahrizak Forensic Medical Center in Tehran, trying to identify loved ones amid the bodies of dozens killed in a wave of deadly anti-government demonstrations across Iran.

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Reuters/Social media


Video posted by social media users on Sunday showed scenes from the same morgue, and people could be heard wailing in the background as others appeared to be looking for loved ones amid the bodies.  

It is unclear why Iranian authorities might have chosen to show the mass casualties, but it could be an attempt to show sympathy with the protesters and to bolster their narrative that it is more radical actors, inspired by Mr. Trump’s messages of support, behind the violence, not the government.

President Trump and Iranian officials have escalated their warnings over the past week, with both sides insisting they’re ready for, but not seeking a military confrontation. 

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On Sunday, however, Mr. Trump said Iran’s leadership had called looking to talk.

Trump issues fresh warning, says Iran seeking negotiations

“The leaders of Iran called” yesterday, he told reporters Sunday on Air Force One, saying “a meeting is being set up … They want to negotiate.”

“We may have to act before a meeting,” Mr. Trump warned. He first warned 10 days ago that if Iran killed protesters, the U.S. would “come to their rescue,” but he’s yet to say what exactly would prompt some action against the regime, or what that might entail.

A senior U.S. official confirmed to CBS News on Sunday that the president had been briefed on new options for military strikes in Iran, after Mr. Trump warned that if the regime started “killing people like they have in the past, we would get involved.”

“We’ll be hitting them very hard where it hurts,” he said at the White House. “And that doesn’t mean boots on the ground, but it means hitting them very, very hard where it hurts.”

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The U.S. has not yet moved any forces in preparation for potential strikes on Iran, officials with the military’s Central Command told CBS News over the weekend.   

Iran’s top diplomat claims protests “under total control”

Iran did not confirm any direct outreach to the Trump administration, but speaking on Monday, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi suggested the regime had brought the protests under control – repeating the government’s claim that the U.S. was to blame for the violence.

The “situation is now under total control,” Araghchi said, according to the Reuters news agency, as Iranian state TV aired video of massive pro-government demonstrations around the country.

iran-pro-regime-demo-jan-2026.jpg

An image from video aired on Jan. 12, 2026 by Iranian state TV, shows a funeral procession for protesters killed in what the network said were “terrorist acts” amid anti-regime protests across the country, in Ardabil, northwest Iran.

Reuters/Iranian state TV

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Government-controlled broadcaster IRIB called one demonstration and funeral march an “Iranian uprising against American-Zionist terrorism.”

In the face of Mr. Trump’s repeated threats, Araghchi said Iran was “ready for war, but also for dialogue” with the U.S. at any time.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi makes a speech amid amid evolving anti-government unrest, in Tehran

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi speaks on state television amid anti-government protests, in Tehran, Iran, Jan. 12, 2026, in a screengrab obtained from a handout video.

IRIB/Handout/REUTERS


In another indication that the regime may believe it is weathering the storm, the foreign minister said internet service would be resumed in coordination with Iran’s security services, though he offered no specific timeline. 

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Rights groups say death toll from protests could be in the thousands

According to human rights groups based outside the country, which rely on contacts inside Iran, the death toll has already climbed into the hundreds. 

The Washington D.C.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency said that, as of Sunday, the 15th day of protests, at least 544 people had been killed, including 483 protesters and 47 members of the security forces. HRANA said the unrest had manifested in 186 cities across all of Iran’s 31 provinces.

The Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI), which is also based in the U.S., said over the weekend that it had “eyewitness accounts and credible reports indicating that hundreds of protesters have been killed across Iran during the current internet shutdown,” accusing the regime of carrying out “a massacre.” 

The Iran Human Rights (IHR) organization, based in Norway, said Saturday that it had confirmed at least 192 protesters were killed, but that the number could be over 2,000.

“Unverified reports indicate that at least several hundreds, and according to some sources, more than 2,000 people may have been killed,” IHR said in a statement, adding that according to its estimate, more than 2,600 protesters had been arrested. 

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HRANA estimates that over 10,000 people have been detained.

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Video: What Our Photographer Saw in Minneapolis

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Video: What Our Photographer Saw in Minneapolis

new video loaded: What Our Photographer Saw in Minneapolis

David Guttenfelder, a visual journalist for The New York Times, was at the scene in Minneapolis immediately after an ICE agent killed a 37-year-old woman in her vehicle. He walks us through the photos and videos he took over the next few days as outrage and protests mounted in the city.

By David Guttenfelder, Coleman Lowndes and Nikolay Nikolov

January 12, 2026

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