In the first episode of Why We Can’t Have Nice Things, a new podcast series from Reason, we’re diving into the causes and consequences of last year’s baby formula shortage. Though it was a crisis kicked off by unexpected supply chain issues and contamination problems at a major production facility in Michigan, the roots of the shortage ran straight through Washington, D.C., where poor government policy left American infants hungry and their parents scrambling…

It took last year’s crisis for Congress to consider lifting those tariffs—and only on a temporary basis. The dairy lobby and other special interests like the isolated, and fragile, American market for baby formula just the way it is.

On this week’s episode of Why We Can’t Have Nice Things, we’ll explain how this crisis unfolded, why the government’s efforts to alleviate the shortage mostly failed, and ask whether a free market might have done a better job. Spoiler alert: It would have.

Further reading/viewing for this week’s episode:

My Baby Needed Special Formula From Europe. U.S. Trade Policy Made It Almost Unobtainable,” by Kelli Pierce