Serial market pest Senator Nick Xenophon is at it again. Poker machines again? No it's ticket scalping prompted by Australian politicians' bi-partisan love for Adele and the fact that a ticket to see her recent show cost as much as $5000.
This is
an example of supply and demand economics - when demand outstrips supply
prices go up. As profiteers move in prices go up some more. This has
been a feature of the free market economy for some time now and is
well understood by Year 10 students everywhere.
However,
this being 2017, scalpers are thought to be unfairly aided by
software 'bots' which are conveniently taking the heat for the
situation.
Being a federal Senator and a market
sceptic Nick's solution is, of course, market
intervention through federal legislation. Firstly by following the US which last year passed the Better Online Ticket Sales
(BOTS) Act and banned these digital daleks.
Ticket
bots are basically hacker's tools that can be downloaded from the
internet. Banning them would be like banning a virus, or outlawing
hacking. Or banning crime.
There is so far no evidence that this legislation has affected ticket prices. No one has been charged let alone convicted under the Act.
There is so far no evidence that this legislation has affected ticket prices. No one has been charged let alone convicted under the Act.
Nick
has his own ideas though none of them could be described as bright.
Such as allowing tickets to be re-sold only when where a ticket
holder has a legitimate reason to do so and dis-allowing tickets to
be resold for more than 10 per cent profit. Really, Nick? Do you
really think such nonsense could be made law?
If it
could - we would end up with is a taxpayer funded Fair Ticket Pricing
Commission. The Federal Police will need a Ticket Scalping Strike
Force with offices in every state. Teams of hackers would be employed
by the government to fight the scalperbots in cyberspace. All paid
for by you and me. Would it affect ticket prices ? Unlikely. But even
if it did, you and I would be subsidising concert goers to the tune
of tens of millions of dollars.
Luckily for us all - Nick Xenophon speaks softly and carries a small stick – for he is just a Senator and cannot put forward a bill to Parliament. He can only put forward a motion which is a statement that other Senators can agree or disagree upon, and that's it. Such motions carry as much weight as the belligerent utterances of a drunk as he slides off his barstool to the ragged cheers of rival barflies.
Luckily for us all - Nick Xenophon speaks softly and carries a small stick – for he is just a Senator and cannot put forward a bill to Parliament. He can only put forward a motion which is a statement that other Senators can agree or disagree upon, and that's it. Such motions carry as much weight as the belligerent utterances of a drunk as he slides off his barstool to the ragged cheers of rival barflies.
Xenophon
is, and always was, a cheap populist hack.
Politicians
commonly branded as populists, like Trump and Hanson, actually have
ideas about society and government – big, weird ideas that make
them saviours to some and devils to others. Nick Xenophon is a true populist
in that he keeps to the centre to please as many voters as possible
and kindly offers to legislate against anything that might vex them.
But
those who seek to make laws purely to increase their popularity are
the enemies of liberty. Every law they make takes away our freedom.
And as we only have the right to do what is not prohibited by laws –
our rights are taken away too.
Government
interventions into the energy market have stuffed it up, particularly
for those in Nick's home state of South Australia. Nick's solution –
more interventions to stuff up the old stuffed up interventions.
To do
this he waved his little stick at a weak government and took tax
reform hostage to force his interventions upon us. Tax reform
meaning - the lowering of our taxes. His little stick just got a
little bigger.
So don't
encourage him. Don't vote for him. Don't fall for his populist
bullshit.
Remember
you are free.
More on the complex issue of ticket scalping to come. In the meantime check out,
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