Perhaps, but it is still a driving force in certain areas. Take the used car industry for example. Used cars are selling way above KBB due to lack of availability. In a grocery store with fixed prices, it doesn't apply, except when the stores react to the run, on say TP, and raise the prices to dissuade the hoarders.
Maybe, sort of... Stores limit how many items one family can purchase even when their shelves are full, because they follow orders from central corporate. Used cars are fairly unregulated so yes I would believe they show more directly a supply and demand curve set.
Perhaps, but it is still a driving force in certain areas. Take the used car industry for example. Used cars are selling way above KBB due to lack of availability. In a grocery store with fixed prices, it doesn't apply, except when the stores react to the run, on say TP, and raise the prices to dissuade the hoarders.
Maybe, sort of... Stores limit how many items one family can purchase even when their shelves are full, because they follow orders from central corporate. Used cars are fairly unregulated so yes I would believe they show more directly a supply and demand curve set.