Critics of markets often argue that capitalism systematically fails consumers. Firms collude, corporations exploit their power, and powerful companies crush competitors. But there is a curious pattern in these critiques: regardless of what actually happens in the marketplace, the outcome is treated as proof that markets are broken.
If competing firms charge roughly the same price, critics suspect collusion. If one firm lowers its prices, they accuse it of predatory pricing. If prices rise, the explanation becomes monopoly power or “excessive profits.” In other words, the market cannot win. Whether prices remain stable, fall, or rise, the conclusion is the same: the market must be malfunctioning.
This pattern suggests that something deeper than empirical analysis may be at work.
When Prices are the Same: “Collusion!”
Consider the first scenario. A market critic notices that gas stations across town display nearly identical prices, or grocery stores charge similar amounts for staple goods. This is immediately taken as evidence that companies must be colluding and engaged in cartel behavior.
Yet similar prices are often exactly what competition predicts.
A driver filling their tank will usually not derive significantly higher value from doing so at one specific gas station, as compared to another. Further, modern markets are highly transparent and both competitors and customers can easily observe your prices. If one gas station raises its price above competitors, customers quickly go elsewhere. If another cuts its price significantly, competitors will match the change or risk losing their customers.
As such, while criticized for being an example of market failure, price similarity is the predictable result of functioning competition pushing prices toward a common market level.
When Prices Fall: “Predatory Pricing!”
Now consider a company cutting its prices. A different accusation emerges: predatory pricing. The firm is supposedly attempting to drive rivals out of the market so it can later raise prices and exploit consumers.
Yet price cutting is the very essence of competition. Businesses constantly search for ways to reduce costs and offer lower prices in order to attract customers. Consumers benefit immediately from this process.
True predatory pricing is far less plausible than it is often portrayed. A company attempting such a strategy must endure substantial losses by selling below cost, hoping for competitors to fail. Then it must raise prices high enough to recover those losses, all while preventing new competitors from entering the market once prices rise again.
In most industries, this sequence is extraordinarily difficult to achieve. What critics label predation is simply competition doing what it is supposed to do: forcing firms to offer better deals to attract customers.
When Prices Rise: “Exploitation!”
Finally, consider what happens when prices rise. The accusation shifts once again. Now critics attribute the increase to monopoly power or corporate greed. Rising prices are interpreted as evidence that firms possess excessive market power and are extracting “excessive profits.”
But prices can rise for many reasons that have nothing to do with monopoly. Demand may increase or supply may contract. Shortages, disruptions, or sudden shifts in consumer preferences can all push prices upward. In each case, rising prices signal scarcity and encourage producers to expand supply. Over time, these signals help coordinate supply and demand.
Treating every price increase as evidence of exploitation ignores the informational role that prices play in coordinating economic activity.
An Unfalsifiable Critique
Taken together, these three accusations reveal a deeper problem. When every outcome confirms the same conclusion, the critique ceases to be empirical. A theory that cannot be contradicted by evidence is not really being tested at all.
Of course, genuine collusion, predatory strategies, and monopoly power can occur. Markets are not populated by angels. But the frequency with which critics invoke these explanations far exceeds the evidence that supports them.
The deeper issue is that many critiques of markets begin with the assumption that profit-seeking behavior must be inherently suspect. Once that assumption is in, the market is treated as guilty regardless of the facts.
Markets are a Process
This entire way of evaluating markets misses the point. A more realistic perspective recognizes that markets are not static outcomes but dynamic processes. They are ongoing processes of discovery where prices are constantly adjusting as entrepreneurs experiment with new ideas in an attempt to serve consumers better than their competitors.
From this perspective, price movements are not inherently signs of failure. They are signals that guide the ongoing process of economic coordination.
The result is an evolving system that continually adjusts to new information.
Let Markets Work
None of this means markets are perfect or beyond criticism. But criticism should be grounded in careful analysis rather than automatic suspicion.
When equal prices are assumed to prove collusion, lower prices prove predation, and higher prices prove exploitation, the market cannot possibly pass the test. The verdict has been decided before the evidence is even considered.
A healthier approach would begin with a different assumption: that competitive markets are generally a discovery process, not a conspiracy. Prices move up, down, and sideways not because businesses are constantly manipulating them, but because millions of buyers and sellers are continuously adjusting their behavior.
That process may not always produce outcomes that critics like. Markets, like any institution, should be evaluated honestly. But that evaluation must allow for the possibility that markets sometimes work exactly as they are supposed to.