I don't disagree with anything here but it feels like it tiptoes around saying what's actually happening, which is that there isn't an effective competitive market anymore.
You say that prices go up because they can, and that's not wrong, but historically there were other providers also competing. It feels like there has been massive consolidation across industries, and that this centralization has created uncompetitive markets, where consumers don't have any option but to accept a providers price & profit increase.
That feels like the new thing, the new trouble: only the very large are left. Competition does not renew: even if there are fat profit margins waiting to be had, the risk of trying to start a new competitor is too high, too likely to get crushed, has too many personal risks (trying to provide healthcare for your family, not go bankrupt, etc).
The markets have ossified into a state where this ruin you speak is possible.
You say that prices go up because they can, and that's not wrong, but historically there were other providers also competing. It feels like there has been massive consolidation across industries, and that this centralization has created uncompetitive markets, where consumers don't have any option but to accept a providers price & profit increase.
That feels like the new thing, the new trouble: only the very large are left. Competition does not renew: even if there are fat profit margins waiting to be had, the risk of trying to start a new competitor is too high, too likely to get crushed, has too many personal risks (trying to provide healthcare for your family, not go bankrupt, etc).
The markets have ossified into a state where this ruin you speak is possible.