+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Date post: 15-Feb-2016
Category:
Upload: lars
View: 40 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies . Controls on Prices. Price Ceiling : Legal maximum on the price at which a good can be sold Price Floor : Legal minimum on the price at which a good can be sold. How Price Ceilings affect Market Outcomes. Two outcomes: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
22
Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies
Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Chapter 6Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Page 2: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Price Ceiling: Legal maximum on the price at which a good can be sold

Price Floor: Legal minimum on the price at which a good can be sold

Controls on Prices

Page 3: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Two outcomes:1. If price ceiling is higher than or equal to

equilibrium price, it is not binding and has no effect on the price or quantity sold

How Price Ceilings affect Market Outcomes

Page 4: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

2. If the price ceiling is lower than the equilibrium price, the ceiling is a binding constraint and a shortage is created

How Price Ceilings Affect Market Outcomes

Page 5: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

If shortage occurs (and price can’t be adjusted), a method for rationing the good must be developed

Not all buyers benefit from a price ceiling because some will be unable to purchase the product

Results of Binding Price Ceiling

Page 6: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Lines at the Gas Pump Rent Control in Short Run & Long Run

Case Studies

Page 7: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

If price floor is lower than or equal to the equilibrium price, it is not binding and has no effect on the price or quantity sold

Price Floors

Page 8: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

If the price floor is higher than the equilibrium price, the floor is a binding constraint and a surplus is created

Price Floors

Page 9: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

The Minimum Wage

Case Study

Page 10: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Who bears the burden of taxation?

Tax Incidence

Page 11: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Does it affect supply and/or demand?

Demand curve shifts left/down by the amount of the tax

Amount = tax

Taxes on Buyers

Page 12: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Because market price falls when tax is introduced, sellers receive less than when market worked freely.

Buyers now pay more with the tax, so they are worse off as well.

So… taxes discourage market activity (Q drops) and buyers + sellers share burden of taxes.

Who pays the tax on buyers?

Page 13: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Does it affect supply or demand?

The Supply curve shifts left/upward by exactly the size of the tax

Taxes on Sellers

Page 14: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

With upward supply shift, equilibrium quantity will fall and price that buyers pay will go up, but the amount sellers receive after paying the tax will go down.

Thus taxes on buyers and taxes on sellers are equivalent – both buyers & sellers share the burden of the tax

Who pays the tax on sellers?

Page 15: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Payroll Taxes

Page 16: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

General rule: Tax burden falls more heavily on the side of the market that is less elastic

Therefore, it is not very likely that a tax will be split 50-50

Elasticity and Tax Incidence

Page 17: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Who really pays the tax?

Luxury Taxes

Page 18: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Using the graph for market X, what would there be if the gov’t imposed an effective price ceiling?

1 2 3 4 5

0% 0% 0%0%0%

1. Shortage of AB2. Surplus of AB3. Shortage of IH4. Surplus of IH5. Shortage of GE

Page 19: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

Using the same graph, what would there be if the gov’t imposed an effective price floor on the market?

1 2 3 4 5

0% 0% 0%0%0%

1. Shortage of AB2. Surplus of AB3. Shortage of IH4. Surplus of IH5. Shortage of GE

Page 20: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

A tax on producers will:

1 2 3 4 5

0% 0% 0%0%0%

1. Increase demand, causing P & Q to rise

2. Increase supply, causing P & Q to rise

3. Decrease supply, causing P to rise & Q to fall

4. Decrease demand, causing P to rise and Q to fall

5. Decrease supply, causing both P & Q to fall

Page 21: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

A tax on consumers will:

1 2 3 4 5

20% 20% 20%20%20%1. Shift supply to the left, raising P & lowering Q

2. Shift demand to right, raising both P & Q

3. Shift demand to the left, lowering both P & Q

4. Shift supply to the right, lowering P & raising Q

5. Shift demand to the left, lowering P & raising Q

Page 22: Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies

The more inelastic the supply curve and the more elastic the demand curve, the:

1 2 3 4 5

20% 20% 20%20%20%1. More of the tax the producer will pay

2. More of the tax the consumer will pay

3. More the tax will be split equally between the consumer & producer

4. Less likely the tax will have an effect on price

5. None of the above


Recommended