Chapter 6 Supply, Demand, and Government Policies Supply, Demand, and Government Policies 1. Price...

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Chapter 6Chapter 6

Supply, Demand, and Supply, Demand, and

Government PoliciesGovernment Policies

Supply, Demand, and Supply, Demand, and

Government PoliciesGovernment Policies

1. Price Ceiling1. Price Ceiling

2. Price Floor2. Price Floor

3. Effect of Taxes3. Effect of Taxes

4. Tax Incidence4. Tax Incidence

1. Price Ceiling1. Price Ceiling

2. Price Floor2. Price Floor

3. Effect of Taxes3. Effect of Taxes

4. Tax Incidence4. Tax Incidence

Objectives1. Learn the consequences of government policies that

impose a ceiling (maximum)price on a market

2. learn the consequences of government policies that impose a floor (minimum)price on a market

3. Understand how a tax on a good affects market equilibrium price and quantity

4. Recognize the equivalence of taxes imposed on buyers and sellers and know how the burden of a tax is divided between buyersand sellers

Supply, Demand and Government Policies

In a “free”, unregulated market system, market forces establish equilibrium

prices and exchange quantities.

While equilibrium conditions may be efficient it may be true that not

everyone, i.e. buyer or seller are satisfied.

Hence, market controls!

Market Price Controls

Are usually enacted when policymakers believe that the market price is unfair to buyers and sellers.

Result in governmental policies, i.e., price ceilings and floors.

Price Ceilings & Price Floors

A Price Ceiling

– is a legally established maximum price which a seller can charge or a buyer must pay.

A Price Floor

– is a legally established minimum price which a seller can charge or a buyer must pay.

Price Ceilings

When the government imposes a price ceiling (i.e... a legal maximum on the price at which a good can be sold) two outcomes are possible:

1 . The price ceiling is not binding.

2 . The price ceiling is a binding constraint on the market, creating Shortages.

Market Impacts of a Price Ceiling

Supply

Demand

Price

Quantity

EquilibriumPrice

EquilibriumQuantity

A Non-Binding Price Ceiling

Supply

Demand

Price

Quantity

PE

QE

PriceCeiling

PC

A Binding Price Ceiling

Supply

Demand

Price

Quantity

PE

QE

PriceCeiling

PC

A Binding Price Ceiling Creates Shortages.

Supply

Demand

Price

Quantity

PE

QE

PC

QS QD

A Binding Price Ceiling Creates Shortages.

Supply

Demand

Price

Quantity

PE

QE

PC

QS QD

Shortage

Market Impacts of a Price Ceiling

A Binding Price Ceiling creates. . .

– Shortages (i.e... Demand > Supply)

Gasoline shortages of the 1970s

– Non-Price Rationing - An alternative mechanism for rationing of the good:

Long Lines (First-In-Line, Figure 6-2)

Discrimination criteria set by seller

Demand

Price ofGasoline

Quantity

P1

0 Q1

S1

Price ceiling

1. Initially, the price ceiling is not binding ...

The Market for Gasolinewith a Price Ceiling

Demand

Price ofGasoline

Quantity0 Q1

P2

S1

S2

P1

Price ceiling

2. ...but when supplyfalls ...

The Market for Gasolinewith a Price Ceiling

Demand

Price ofGasoline

Quantity0 Q1

P2

S1

S2

P1

Price ceiling

3. ...the price ceilingbecomes binding ...

The Market for Gasolinewith a Price Ceiling

Demand

Price ofGasoline

QuantityQs0 QD

Shortage

Q1

P2

S1

S2

P1

Price ceiling

4. Resulting ina shortage

The Market for Gasolinewith a Price Ceiling

Rent Control

Rent controls are ceilings placed on the rents that landlords may charge their tenants.

The goal of rent control policy is to help the poor by making housing more affordable.

One economist called rent control “the best way to destroy a city, other than bombing.”

Rent Control in the Short Run...

Quantity ofApartments

0

Rental Price of

Apartment

Demand

Supply

Controlled rent

Shortage

Supply and demand for apartments

are relatively inelastic

Rent Control in the Long Run...

Quantity ofApartments

0

Rental Price of

Apartment

Demand

Supply

Controlled rent

Shortage

Because the supply and demand for

apartments are more elastic...

…rent control causes a large

shortage

Price Floors

When the government imposes a price floor (i.e... a legal minimum on the price at which a good can be sold) two outcomes are possible:

1 . The price floor is not binding.

2 . The price floor is a binding constraint on the market, creating Surpluses

A Non-Binding Price Floor

Supply

Demand

Price

Quantity

PE

QE

PriceFloor

PF

A Binding Price Floor

Supply

Demand

Price

Quantity

PE

QE

PriceFloor

PF

Market Impacts of a Price Floor

A government imposed market price floor hinders the forces of supply and demand in moving toward the equilibrium price and quantity.

When the market price hits the floor, it can fall no further and the market price equals the floor price. A binding price floor causes a surplus.

A Binding Price Floor Creates a Surplus.

Supply

Demand

Price

Quantity

PE

QE

PF

QS QD

A Binding Price Floor Creates a Surplus.

Supply

Demand

Price

Quantity

PE

QE

PF

QS QD

Surplus

Market Impacts of a Price Floor A Binding Price Floor creates. . .

– Surpluses (i.e. Quantity Supplied > Quantity Demanded)

– Non-Price Rationing - An alternative mechanism for rationing of the good:

Discrimination Criteria

– Examples:

Minimum Wage

Agricultural Price Supports

Labor Supply

Labor Demand

EquilibriumUnemployment

Quantity of Labor

Wage

EquilibriumWage

A Free Labor Market

0

Labor Supply

Labor Demand

Quantityof Labor

Wage

A Labor Market with a BindingMinimum Wage

Quantitysupplied

Quantitydemanded

MinimumWage

0

Quick Quiz!

Define “price ceiling” and “price floor”

Give an exampleof each.

Which leads to a shortage, which a surplus? Why?

Taxes! Taxes! Taxes!

What is the purpose of government imposed taxes?

– To raise government revenues.

– To restrict allocation of a product.

What is an excise tax?

– A “per-unit” tax that’s independent of the price of the product.

Taxes! Taxes! Taxes! Who pays the tax on a good? The

buyer or the seller?

How is the burden of a tax divided between buyer and seller?

When the government levies a tax on a good, the equilibrium quantity of the good falls. The size of the market for that good shrinks, shifting either the demand or supply curve.

Tax Incidence

Tax incidence is the study of who actually bears the burden of taxation

Taxes: Impact

Taxes discourage market activity. The quantity of the good sold is smaller than

without the tax. Buyers and sellers

share the tax burden.

Taxes: Impact From a 50 Cent Tax

S1

$2.00

800

D1

Equilibrium without tax

Taxes: Impact From a 50 Cent Tax

S1

$2.00

800

D1

From the sellers viewpoint, the tax

causes the demand curve to

shift down by 50 cents.

$1.80

600

Taxes: Impact From a 50 Cent Tax

S1

$2.00

800

D1

$2.30

600

The tax increasesthe market price

to the buyer...

$1.80

Taxes: Impact From a 50 Cent Tax

S1

$2.00

800

D1

$2.30

600

The tax increasesthe market price

to the buyer......and decreases

demand.$1.80

Price buyerspay

$3.30

3.00

2.80

90 100 Quantity

Price

Price w/otax

Price sellersreceive

}Tax ($.50)

Demand, D1

S2

S1

A tax on sellers shiftsthe supply curve upwardby the amount of the tax($.50)

Equilibrium without tax

Equilibrium with tax

Figure 6-7A Tax on Sellers

Wage

Quantityof labor

0

Labor demand

Labor supply

Wage firms pay

Wage without tax

Wage workersreceive

{Tax Wedge

Figure 6-8A Payroll Tax

The Burden (incidence) of a Tax is Inversely Related to the Price Elasticities of Demand and Supply

Quantity

Price paid by buyersafter the tax = $2.40

Supply

Price without tax = $2.00

Price received by sellersafter the tax = $1.90

Demand

Price

relatively elastic

relatively inelastic

}$.50 tax

The Burden (incidence) of a Tax is Inversely Related to the Price Elasticities of Demand and Supply

Quantity

Price paid by buyersafter the tax = $2.10

Supply

Price without tax = $2.00

Price received by sellersafter the tax = $1.60

Demand

Pricerelatively inelastic

relatively elastic

}$.50 tax

The Incidence of Tax. . .How is the burden of the tax distributed?

Consider a tax levied on sellers of a good. What are the effects of this tax?

How do effects of the tax levied on the seller compare with those of the effects imposed on the buyer?

Depends on Elasticity of Demand and Elasticity of Supply.

The Incidence of Tax. . .How is the burden of the tax distributed?

The burden of a tax falls on the side of the market with the smaller price elasticity!

Elasticity and Taxes

The more INELASTIC the demand and the more ELASTIC the supply results in the consumer paying more of the tax.

The more ELASTIC the demand and the more INELASTIC the supply results in the supplier paying more of the tax.

Elastic Supply, Inelastic Demand...

Quantity0

Price

Demand

Supply

Tax

1. When supply is moreelastic than demand...

2. ...theincidence of thetax falls moreheavily onconsumers...

3. ...than onproducers.

Price without tax

Price buyers pay

Price sellers receive

Inelastic Supply, Elastic Demand...

Quantity0

Price

Demand

Supply

Price without tax

Tax

1. When demand is moreelastic than supply...

2. ...theincidence of the tax falls more heavily on producers...

3. ...than on consumers.

Price buyers pay

Price sellers receive

Quick Quiz

Show how a tax on car buyers of $1,000 per car affects the quantity of cars sold and the price of cars.

Show how a similar tax on car sellers affects quantity and price.

Summary

Price controls include price ceilings and price floors.

A price ceiling is a legal maximum on the price of a good or service. An example is rent control.

A price floor is a legal minimum on the price of a good or a service. An example is the minimum wage.

Summary

Taxes are used to raise revenue for public purposes.

When the government levies a tax on a good, the equilibrium quantity of the good falls.

A tax on a good places a wedge between the price paid by buyers and the price received by sellers.

Summary

The incidence of a tax refers to who bears the burden of a tax.

The incidence of a tax does not depend on whether the tax is levied on buyers or sellers.

The incidence of the tax depends on the price elasticities of supply and demand.

Supply, Demand & Government The economy is governed by two kinds of

laws:

– The laws of supply and demand

– The laws enacted by government.

Price controls and taxes are common in various markets in the economy:

– Price Ceilings

– Price Floors

– Excise Tax

Case Studies

1. Lines at gas pump - price ceiling

2. Rent control - price ceiling

3. The minimum wage - price floor

4. Burden of a payroll tax - tax incidence

5. Luxury tax - tax incidence