Inflation: When Markets Are Rigged, Prices Skyrocket

Inflation is often blamed on supply chains, pandemics, global crises, or government spending. All of that may contribute—but they are not the whole story.

A major driver of rising prices today is the consolidation of industries into the hands of a few politically protected giants.

Monopoly + Political Protection = Higher Prices

When three or four companies dominate a sector, something predictable happens:

They stop competing.
They start coordinating.

Not in a smoke-filled room—just by watching each other.
One raises prices.
The others follow.
And because the market is rigged, consumers have nowhere else to go.

This is why inflation today is not just inflation—it is greedflation.

How Crony Capitalism Fuels Price Hikes

1. Reduced Competition

When small businesses cannot compete, mega-corporations can charge whatever they want.

Examples show up everywhere:

  • Airlines charging outrageous fees

  • Pharmaceutical companies pricing lifesaving drugs at 500% markup

  • Meatpacking giants raising prices even as their costs fall

  • Tech platforms extracting fees from every entrepreneur who uses their marketplace

When competition dies, prices rise.

2. Government Favors Distort Markets

Lobbyists push for regulations that sound good but function as weapons.

For example:

  • Licensing requirements that block new entrants

  • Zoning laws that prevent small housing developers

  • Patent extensions that keep cheaper drugs off the market

  • Subsidies that overproduce one crop while under producing another

These distortions create only one outcome:
Higher prices for families.

3. Bailouts and Backstops

When large companies know they will be rescued, they become reckless:

  • They raise prices aggressively.

  • They take more risks.

  • They pass costs onto consumers.

They are not afraid of failure because they are protected by political friends.

This is not a free market.
This is a guaranteed market—for them.

4. Artificial Scarcity

Sometimes corporations simply decide to produce less to increase profits.
This happened in energy, lumber, shipping, and food processing.

Less supply → higher prices → higher profits.

Crony capitalism turns inflation into a strategy.