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Hoarding is the storing of food or other goods.
Hoarding of food is a natural behaviour in certain species of animals. It occurs in two forms:
Humans are not natural hoarders in the same way. However, hoarding does occur in humans, as a common response to fear, whether fear of imminent society-wide danger or simple fear of a shortage of some good. When trouble looms (such as civil unrest or natural disaster), people's first instinct is to collect foodstuffs, water, gasoline and other essentials which they believe, rightly or wrongly, will soon be in short supply. (They also hoard money, especially if they expect deflation, in which falling prices mean that the purchasing power of money will rise.) This behaviour can often cause the very shortage which has been feared, and governments sometimes choose to introduce rationing in order to combat hoarding. However, those who have successfully hoarded the desired goods will not have to worry about the shortage, whether it was their fault or not.
The compulsive collecting of objects as a behaviour is known as pathological or compulsive hoarding. For an example of an extreme of this behaviour, see animal hoarding.
On a larger scale hoarding can be a business strategy similar to monopolisation, where an individual or organization attempts to temporarily control all available supplies of a given good in order to artificially increase the price. Sometimes known as "cornering the market".
For more on the large outdoor signboard, known as a hoarding see Billboard (advertising).