Indonesia is also trying to limit eCommerce.
These are all forms of price controls.
Price controls conceal real world signals and always end up hurting.
My opinion is a limited control program "might" help. Such as during the shock of Covid-19 bs. Something like emergency money/supplies help. But beyond a week to a month, all initiatives should be stopped. But that's because i favor minarchism with a lean towards voluntarism.
A really good book from the Austrian perspective on this is the series "Defending the Undefendable: Price Gouging" https://austriancenter.com/defending-the-undefendable/
It's a real mind fuck, most of us are thinking about these things incorrectly.
Thanks for the book info. Got that scheduled for my next read. I agree it's maybe possible a temporary consumption stimulus might help in the very short term but I see that in this current Thailand case it's a payment stimulus to all Thai citizens plus, what seems like, a very radical cut in prices for a whole lot of goods and services. Obviously the government has paid for the distribution of money to citizens but I'm not sure whether the agreement with manufacturers/retailers to slash prices has been made by the government subsidising the cuts or if manufacturers/retailers "volunteered" to help. I imagine politics and business/government connections might have to be considered! I'll be watching with interest what happens in their economy over the next few months.
reply