Denmark, a 5.5-dollar disinfectant if you buy the second price, it's 134.

Denmark experienced a rush of “panic trading” on Friday and the weekend, but people now seem calmer after the government moved to secure them. According to Rasmussen Veybæk-Zerr, who owns the exclusiveness of the Manny supermarket in the suburb of Copenhagen, the only article that currently lacks is the gel of alcohol. [...]
Denmark experienced a rush of “panic trading” on Friday and the weekend, but people now seem calmer after the government moved to secure them.
According to Rasmussen Veybæk-Zerr, who owns the exclusiveness of the Manny supermarket in the suburb of Copenhagen, the only article that currently lacks is the gel of alcohol.
The “Powers in Denmark are now focused on hospitals, so now we don't have any of this alcohol gel to sell our elderly clients,” he said. “There is no supermarket that has any: it's sold everywhere in the country. ”
To prevent widespread panic purchases emptying shelves, supermarkets in Denmark have made a decision that has been widely welcomed, writes IndexOnline.
If someone buys a bottle of disinfectant costs $5.5 (40kr), but if the same person wants to buy two bottles of disinfectant, then the price goes to 134m (1000kr). The greater the amount of purchase costs go by spending a hundred percent.
This approach would probably have to apply to certain products in Kosovo and Albania, such as flour, masks, disinfectant... etc.













