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Rick Perry gives 'economics lesson' where he gets basic concept of supply and demand completely wrong

'You put the supply out there and the demand will follow,' Mr Perry said 

Alexandra Wilts
Washington, DC
Thursday 06 July 2017 22:58 BST
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Energy Secretary Rick Perry, right, talks with Democratic Senator Joe Manchin and Republican Senator Shelley Moore Capito outside the coal-burning Longview Power Plant in Maidsville, West Virginia
Energy Secretary Rick Perry, right, talks with Democratic Senator Joe Manchin and Republican Senator Shelley Moore Capito outside the coal-burning Longview Power Plant in Maidsville, West Virginia (AP)

“Build it and they shall come” is the fundamental law of economics – if only according to Rick Perry, Donald Trump’s Energy Secretary.

While touring a coal-burning power plant in West Virginia, Mr Perry attempted to explain the basic economic concept of supply and demand to reporters – but he may not have been the best teacher.

“Here's a little economics lesson: supply and demand. You put the supply out there and the demand will follow,” Mr Perry said, responding to a question about a shale gas boom, according to comments captured by S&P Global Market Intelligence.

“The market will decide which of these — they're going to pick and choose,” Mr Perry continued at Longview Power Plant. “I mean, that's really pretty simple. All too often, you have in the last eight years, you have an administration that was over here putting its thumb on the economic scale as well as the technology scale because they said this is where we want to go.”

Apparently, when a reporter tried to ask a follow-up question about the prevalence of shale gas, Democratic Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia stepped in.

If Mr Perry was referencing the economic theory that describes the interaction between supply and demand, then his explanation was incorrect.

According to the long-held theory, if the supply for a product is low but its demand is high, the price of the product is likely to increase. But if a product's supply is high and the demand for a product is low, then the product's price is likely to decrease.

However, there is a chance that Mr Perry could have been referencing Say's law of markets, an economic theory that argues supply is the origin of demand.

The US Department of Energy did not respond to CBS News’ request for clarification on what the former governor of Texas meant.

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