134
1 MARKETS IN ACTION Principles of Microeconomic Theory, ECO 284 John Eastwood CBA 213 523-7353 e-mail address: [email protected]

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MARKETS IN ACTION. Principles of Microeconomic Theory, ECO 284 John Eastwood CBA 213 523-7353 e-mail address: [email protected]. Learning Objectives. Explain how price ceilings create shortages and inefficiency Explain how price floors create surpluses and inefficiency - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: MARKETS IN ACTION

1

MARKETS IN ACTION

Principles of Microeconomic Theory, ECO 284

John EastwoodCBA 213523-7353e-mail address:

[email protected]

Page 2: MARKETS IN ACTION

2

Learning Objectives

Explain how price ceilings create shortages and inefficiency

Explain how price floors create surpluses and inefficiency

Explain the effects of the sales tax

Define the total and excess burden of a tax.

Page 3: MARKETS IN ACTION

3

Learning Objectives (cont.)

Explain how markets for illegal goods work

Explain why farm prices and revenues fluctuate

Explain how speculation limits price fluctuations

Page 4: MARKETS IN ACTION

4

Learning Objectives

Explain how price ceilings create shortages and inefficiency

Explain how price floors create surpluses and inefficiency

Explain the effects of the sales tax

Define the total and excess burden of a tax.

Page 5: MARKETS IN ACTION

5

Housing Marketsand Rent Ceilings

San Francisco Earthquake — 1906 How does the market deal with a dramatic

reduction in the supply of housing?

Page 6: MARKETS IN ACTION

6

The San Francisco Housing Market in 1906

Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

Page 7: MARKETS IN ACTION

7Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

SS

The San Francisco Housing Market in 1906

Page 8: MARKETS IN ACTION

8Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

SS

LS

The San Francisco Housing Market in 1906

Page 9: MARKETS IN ACTION

9Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

SSa

LS

SS

The San Francisco Housing Market in 1906

Page 10: MARKETS IN ACTION

10Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

SSa

LS

SS

The San Francisco Housing Market in 1906

Page 11: MARKETS IN ACTION

11Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

SSa

LS

SS

The San Francisco Housing Market in 1906

Page 12: MARKETS IN ACTION

12Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

SSa

LS

SS

The San Francisco Housing Market in 1906

Page 13: MARKETS IN ACTION

13Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

SSa

LS

SS

The San Francisco Housing Market in 1906

Page 14: MARKETS IN ACTION

14Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

LS

SS

The San Francisco Housing Market in 1906

Page 15: MARKETS IN ACTION

15

A Regulated Housing Market

Price ceilings are regulations that make it illegal to charge a price higher than a specified level.

Rent ceilings are price ceilings applied to housing markets.

How does a rent ceiling affectthe housing market?

Page 16: MARKETS IN ACTION

16

A Regulated Housing Market

Rent ceilings set above equilibrium have no effect.

Rent ceilings set below equilibrium prevents price from regulating the quantities supplied and demanded.

Page 17: MARKETS IN ACTION

17

A Rent Ceiling

Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

SSa

Rentceiling

Page 18: MARKETS IN ACTION

18

A Rent Ceiling

Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

SSa

Rentceiling

SS

Housingshortage

Page 19: MARKETS IN ACTION

19

A Regulated Housing Market

The ceiling results in two developments

Search activity

Black markets

Page 20: MARKETS IN ACTION

20

A Regulated Housing Market

Search activity is the time spent looking for someone to do business. Search activity increases when there is a

shortage • an opportunity cost

Page 21: MARKETS IN ACTION

21

A Regulated Housing Market

Black markets are illegal markets in which the price exceeds the legally imposed price ceiling.

Page 22: MARKETS IN ACTION

22

Inefficiency of Rent Ceilings

Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

S

Rentceiling

24

30

Page 23: MARKETS IN ACTION

23Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

Rentceiling

30S

Inefficiency of Rent Ceilings

Page 24: MARKETS IN ACTION

24Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

Rentceiling

30S

Producersurplus

Inefficiency of Rent Ceilings

Page 25: MARKETS IN ACTION

25Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

Rentceiling

30S

Producersurplus

Deadweightloss

Inefficiency of Rent Ceilings

Page 26: MARKETS IN ACTION

26Quantity (thousands of units per month)

Ren

t (do

llars

per

uni

t per

mon

th)

0 44 72 100 150

12

16

20

24

D

Rentceiling

30S

Producersurplus

Deadweightloss

Consumersurplus

Inefficiency of Rent Ceilings

Page 27: MARKETS IN ACTION

27

Learning Objectives

Explain how price ceilings create shortages and inefficiency

Explain how price floors create surpluses and inefficiency

Explain the effects of the sales tax

Define the total and excess burden of a tax.

Page 28: MARKETS IN ACTION

28

The Labor Market and the Minimum Wage

Wage rates adjust to make the quantity demanded of labor equal to the quantity supplied Technology has reduced the demand for low-

skilled labor

Page 29: MARKETS IN ACTION

29

The Labor Market and the Minimum Wage

Short-run There is a given number of people with a given

skill.• Wages must be increased in order to increase the

number of hours worked.

Page 30: MARKETS IN ACTION

30

The Labor Market and the Minimum Wage

Long-run People can acquire new skills and find new

types of jobs

• If wage rates are too high or low, people will enter or leave this labor market.

• If people can freely enter and leave the labor market, the long-run supply of labor is perfectly elastic.

• The longer the period of adjustment, the greater the elasticity of supply of labor.

Page 31: MARKETS IN ACTION

31

A Market for Low-Skilled Labor

Quantity (millions of hours per year)

Wag

e R

ate

(dol

lars

per

hou

r)

20 21 22 23

3

4

5

6 SS

D

LS

Page 32: MARKETS IN ACTION

32

A Market for Low-Skilled Labor

Quantity (millions of hours per year)

Wag

e R

ate

(dol

lars

per

hou

r)

20 21 22 23

3

4

5

6 SS

D

LS

DA

Page 33: MARKETS IN ACTION

33

A Market for Low-Skilled Labor

Quantity (millions of hours per year)

Wag

e R

ate

(dol

lars

per

hou

r)

20 21 22 23

3

4

5

6 SS

D

LS

DA

Page 34: MARKETS IN ACTION

34

A Market for Low-Skilled Labor

Quantity (millions of hours per year)

Wag

e R

ate

(dol

lars

per

hou

r)

20 21 22 23

3

4

5

6 SS

D

LS

DA

SSA

Page 35: MARKETS IN ACTION

35

A Market for Low-Skilled Labor

Quantity (millions of hours per year)

Wag

e R

ate

(dol

lars

per

hou

r)

20 21 22 23

3

4

5

6 SS

D

LS

DA

SSA

Page 36: MARKETS IN ACTION

36

The Minimum Wage

A minimum wage law is a regulation that makes the hiring of labor below a specified wage illegal.

If the minimum wage is set below equilibrium it will have no effect.

If the minimum wage is set above equilibrium, it prevents price from regulating quantity supplied and demanded.

Page 37: MARKETS IN ACTION

37

Minimum Wage and Unemployment

Quantity (millions of hours per year)

Wag

e R

ate

(dol

lars

per

hou

r)

20 21 22 23

3

4

5

6 SS

DA

Page 38: MARKETS IN ACTION

38

Minimum Wage and Unemployment

Quantity (millions of hours per year)

Wag

e R

ate

(dol

lars

per

hou

r)

20 21 22 23

3

4

5

6 SS

DA

Minimumwage

a b

Unemployment

Page 39: MARKETS IN ACTION

39

Learning Objectives

Explain how price ceilings create shortages and inefficiency

Explain how price floors create surpluses and inefficiency

Explain the effects of the sales tax

Define the total and excess burden of a tax.

Page 40: MARKETS IN ACTION

40

Elasticity and the Burden of a Tax

The economic incidence of taxation falls on the persons who suffer reduced purchasing power because of the tax.

The legal incidence falls on the persons who are required by law to pay the tax to the government.

Page 41: MARKETS IN ACTION

41

Burden “Shifting”

If a tax is passed on to the consumer in the form of higher prices, we say that the tax is forward-shifted.

A tax is said to be backward-shifted if resource suppliers receive lower factor payments (e.g., workers get lower take home wages, or entrepreneurs earn lower profits.).

Page 42: MARKETS IN ACTION

42

Vocabulary

An ad valorem tax is a percentage of price.A specific tax is a fixed amount per unit

sold, e.g., the excise tax we pay on gasoline.

Page 43: MARKETS IN ACTION

43

Taxes

Who Pays the Sales Tax? Suppose a $10 sales tax is imposed on CD

players

There are two prices Including the tax — buyers respond to this

• what they pay -- P gross Excluding the tax — sellers respond to this

• what they receive -- P net

Page 44: MARKETS IN ACTION

44

The Sales Tax

Quantity (thousands of CD players per week)

Pric

e (d

olla

rs p

er p

laye

r)

3 4 5 6

95

100

105

S

DA

110

Page 45: MARKETS IN ACTION

45

The Sales Tax

Quantity (thousands of CD players per week)

Pric

e (d

olla

rs p

er p

laye

r)

3 4 5 6

95

100

105

110

DA

S

S + tax

$10 tax

Page 46: MARKETS IN ACTION

46

The Sales Tax

Quantity (thousands of CD players per week)

Pric

e (d

olla

rs p

er p

laye

r)

3 4 5 6

95

100

105

110 S

S + tax

$10 tax

Taxrevenue

DA

Page 47: MARKETS IN ACTION

47

Elasticity and Slope

ed and slope are inversely related.

e

e

d

d

Q

Q

P

P

Q

Q

P

P

Q

P

P

Q

PQ

P

Q Slope

P

Q

1 1

Page 48: MARKETS IN ACTION

48

Comparing Elasticities @ (Q,P)

If D and S have the same slope, andif D and S cross at a point (Q,P),then their elasticities must be equal!

d se eQ

P

P

Q Slope

P

Q

1

Page 49: MARKETS IN ACTION

49

Equal Elasticities, Equal Burdens

Slope of the demand curve = -5/1

Slope of the demand curve = 5/1

Original equilibrium = (5,100)

45

100

5

1ee sd

Page 50: MARKETS IN ACTION

50

Tax Incidence andElasticity of Demand

Two Extremes Perfectly inelastic demand--buyer pays

• Example: Insulin, Salt Perfectly elastic demand--seller pays

• Example: Pink marker pens, Imported paper clips

Page 51: MARKETS IN ACTION

51

Sales Tax and the Elasticity of Demand

Quantity (thousands of doses per day)

Pri

ce (d

olla

rs p

er d

ose)

2.00

2.20

100

D

S

Perfectly InelasticDemand

Page 52: MARKETS IN ACTION

52

Sales Tax and the Elasticity of Demand

Quantity (thousands of doses per day)

Pri

ce (d

olla

rs p

er d

ose)

2.00

2.20

100

D

S

S + taxBuyer paysentire tax

Perfectly InelasticDemand

Page 53: MARKETS IN ACTION

53

Sales Tax and the Elasticity of Demand

Quantity (thousands of marker pens per week)

Pri

ce (c

ents

per

pen

)

1 4

1.00

S

0.90

Perfectly ElasticDemand

Page 54: MARKETS IN ACTION

54

Sales Tax and the Elasticity of Demand

Quantity (thousands of marker pens per week)

1 4

0.90

1.00

SS + tax

Sellerpaysentiretax

Pri

ce (c

ents

per

pen

)

Perfectly ElasticDemand

Page 55: MARKETS IN ACTION

55

Tax Incidence andElasticity of Demand

The division of the tax depends upon elasticity. The more ________ the demand, the more the

buyer pays. The more_________ the demand, the more the

seller pays.

Page 56: MARKETS IN ACTION

56

Tax Incidence andElasticity of Demand

The division of the tax depends upon elasticity. The more inelastic the demand, the more the

buyer pays. The more elastic the demand, the more the

seller pays.

Page 57: MARKETS IN ACTION

57

Tax Incidence andElasticity of Supply

Two Extremes Perfectly inelastic supply — seller pays

• Example: water from a mineral spring Perfectly elastic supply — buyer pays

• Example: sand used to make silicon used by computer chip makers, aluminum

Page 58: MARKETS IN ACTION

58

Sales Tax and theElasticity of Supply

Quantity (thousands of bottles per week)

Pri

ce (d

olla

rs p

er b

ottl

e)

45

50

100

S

D

Perfectly InelasticSupply

Page 59: MARKETS IN ACTION

59

Sales Tax and theElasticity of Supply

Quantity (thousands of bottles per week)

Pri

ce (d

olla

rs p

er b

ottl

e)

45

50

100

S

D

Seller paysentire tax

Perfectly InelasticSupply

Page 60: MARKETS IN ACTION

60

Sales Tax and theElasticity of Supply

Quantity (thousands of pounds per week)

Pri

ce (c

ents

per

pou

nd)

10

11

S

D

Perfectly ElasticSupply

3 5

Page 61: MARKETS IN ACTION

61

Sales Tax and theElasticity of Supply

Quantity (thousands of pounds per week)

Pri

ce (c

ents

per

pou

nd)

10

11

3 5

S

D

S + taxbuyer paysentire tax

Perfectly ElasticSupply

Page 62: MARKETS IN ACTION

62

Tax Incidence andElasticity of Supply

The division of the tax depends upon elasticity. The more__________ the supply, the more the

seller pays.

The more __________ the supply, the more the buyer pays.

Page 63: MARKETS IN ACTION

63

Tax Incidence andElasticity of Supply

The division of the tax depends upon elasticity. The more inelastic the supply, the more the

seller pays.

The more elastic the supply, the more the buyer pays.

Page 64: MARKETS IN ACTION

64

Sales Taxes in Practice

Items with low elasticity of demand (alcohol, tobacco, & gasoline) are good sources of tax revenue for the government.

Why?Poor source: 1991 Luxury Tax

Page 65: MARKETS IN ACTION

65

Taxes and Efficiency

Inefficiency Due to the difference in price paid by the buyer

and received by the seller the marginal benefit does not equal the marginal cost.

The more inelastic demand or supply, the smaller the decrease in quantity and deadweight loss.

Page 66: MARKETS IN ACTION

66

Taxes and Efficiency

Quantity (thousands of CD players per week)

Pri

ce (d

olla

rs p

er p

laye

r)

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

75

100

130

95

105

D

S

Page 67: MARKETS IN ACTION

67

Taxes and Efficiency

Quantity (thousands of CD players per week)

Pri

ce (d

olla

rs p

er p

laye

r)

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

75

100

130

95

105

D

S

D

S

S + tax

Page 68: MARKETS IN ACTION

68

Taxes and Efficiency

Quantity (thousands of CD players per week)

Pri

ce (d

olla

rs p

er p

laye

r)

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

75

100

130

95

105

D

S

D

S

S + taxConsumersurplus

Producersurplus

Page 69: MARKETS IN ACTION

69

Taxes and Efficiency

Quantity (thousands of CD players per week)

Pri

ce (d

olla

rs p

er p

laye

r)

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

75

100

130

95

105

D

S

D

S

S + tax

Tax Revenue

Consumersurplus

Producersurplus

Page 70: MARKETS IN ACTION

70

Taxes and Efficiency

Quantity (thousands of CD players per week)

Pri

ce (d

olla

rs p

er p

laye

r)

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

75

100

130

95

105

D

S

D

S

S + taxConsumersurplus

Producersurplus

Deadweightloss

Tax Revenue

Page 71: MARKETS IN ACTION

71

Unit Tax when |ed|> es

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60

Demand

Supply

S + Tax

Quantity (kegs/day)

Pri

ce (

$/ke

g)

Page 72: MARKETS IN ACTION

72

Tax Burden:|ed| >1 and es< 1.

Demand from Keg Ex: P = $60 - QLet Supply be: P = -10 + 2Q. (es <1.)

Solve for equilibrium quantity:

Page 73: MARKETS IN ACTION

73

Tax Burden:|ed| >1 and es< 1.

Demand from Keg Ex: P = $60 - QLet Supply be: P = -10 + 2Q. (es <1.)

Solve for equilibrium quantity: -10 + 2Qe = 60 - Qe

Page 74: MARKETS IN ACTION

74

Tax Burden:|ed| >1 and es< 1.

Demand from Keg Ex: P = $60 - QLet Supply be: P = -10 + 2Q. (es <1.)

Solve for equilibrium quantity: -10 + 2Qe = 60 - Qe

3Qe = 70

Page 75: MARKETS IN ACTION

75

Tax Burden:|ed| >1 and es< 1.

Demand from Keg Ex: P = $60 - QLet Supply be: P = -10 + 2Q. (es <1.)

Solve for equilibrium quantity: -10 + 2Qe = 60 - Qe

3Qe = 70

Qe = 23.33 kegs per day (|ed|>1 if Q<30.)

Solve for equilibrium price: Pe =

Page 76: MARKETS IN ACTION

76

Tax Burden:|ed| >1 and es< 1.

Demand from Keg Ex: P = $60 - QLet Supply be: P = -10 + 2Q. (es <1.)

Solve for equilibrium quantity: -10 + 2Qe = 60 - Qe

3Qe = 70

Qe = 23.33 kegs per day (|ed|>1 if Q<30.)

Solve for equilibrium price: Pe = 60 - Qe = 60 - 23.33 = $36.67 per keg.

Page 77: MARKETS IN ACTION

77

Tax Burden with Demand More Elastic than Supply

Add the tax to Supply: P = -10 + 2Q + 10 = 2Q (Now es = 1.)

Solve for new equilibrium quantity, Qn : 2Qn = 60 - Qn

Page 78: MARKETS IN ACTION

78

Tax Burden with Demand More Elastic than Supply

Add the tax to Supply: P = -10 + 2Q + 10 = 2Q (Now es = 1.)

Solve for new equilibrium quantity, Qn : 2Qn = 60 - Qn

3Qn = 60

Qn =

Page 79: MARKETS IN ACTION

79

Tax Burden with Demand More Elastic than Supply

Add the tax to Supply: P = -10 + 2Q + 10 = 2Q (Now es = 1.)

Solve for new equilibrium quantity, Qn : 2Qn = 60 - Qn

3Qn = 60

Qn = 20 kegs per day

Page 80: MARKETS IN ACTION

80

Tax Burden with Demand More Elastic than SupplyAdd the tax to Supply:

P = -10 + 2Q + 10 = 2Q (Now es = 1.)

Solve for new equilibrium quantity, Qn : 2Qn = 60 - Qn

3Qn = 60

Qn = 20 kegs per day

Solve for gross price (buyers pay): Pgross =

Page 81: MARKETS IN ACTION

81

Tax Burden with Demand More Elastic than SupplyAdd the tax to Supply:

P = -10 + 2Q + 10 = 2Q (Now es = 1.)

Solve for new equilibrium quantity, Qn : 2Qn = 60 - Qn

3Qn = 60

Qn = 20 kegs per day

Solve for gross price (buyers pay): Pgross = 60 - Qn = 60 - 20 = $40 per keg.

Page 82: MARKETS IN ACTION

82

Tax Burden with Demand More Elastic than Supply

To solve for net price ($ seller keeps), subtract the tax from the gross price Pnet = Pgross -Tax =

Page 83: MARKETS IN ACTION

83

Tax Burden with Demand More Elastic than Supply

To solve for net price ($ seller keeps), subtract the tax from the gross price Pnet = Pgross -Tax = $40 - $10 = $30 per keg.

Or, find the net price by substituting Qn into the original supply curve: Pnet = -10 + 2 Qn =

Page 84: MARKETS IN ACTION

84

Tax Burden with Demand More Elastic than Supply

To solve for net price ($ seller keeps), subtract the tax from the gross price Pnet = Pgross -Tax = $40 - $10 = $30 per keg.

Or, find the net price by substituting Qn into the original supply curve: Pnet = -10 + 2 Qn = -10 + 2(20) = $30 per keg.

Page 85: MARKETS IN ACTION

85

Compute|ed| and es

Before the tax Pe = $36.67/keg and Qe = 23.33 kegs/day. The slope of D = -1, while the slope of S = 2.

33.23

67.36

1

11

Q

P

Slopeed

33.23

67.36

2

11

Q

P

Slopees

Page 86: MARKETS IN ACTION

86

Compute|ed| and es

Before the tax Pe = $36.67/keg and Qe = 23.33 kegs/day. The slope of D = -1, while the slope of S = 2.

de Slope

P

Q

1 1

1

36 67

2333157

.

..

se Slope

P

Q

1 1

2

36 67

23330 79

.

..

Page 87: MARKETS IN ACTION

87

Now Who Pays the Tax?

Consumers now pay ___ per keg $_____ / keg more than before the tax

Vendors now receive ___ per keg, but must pay the ___ per keg tax. Sellers keep only ___ per keg. _____ / keg less than before

Sellers respond ____ to a change in price, so they pay _____ of the tax.

Page 88: MARKETS IN ACTION

88

Now Who Pays the Tax?

Consumers now pay $40 per keg $3.33 / keg more than before the tax

Vendors now receive $40 per keg, but must pay the $10 per keg tax. Sellers keep only $30 per keg. $6.67 / keg less than before

Sellers respond less to a change in price, so they pay more of the tax.

Page 89: MARKETS IN ACTION

89

Unit Tax when |ed|< es

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60

Demand

Supply

S + Tax

Quantity (kegs/day)

Pri

ce (

$/ke

g)

Page 90: MARKETS IN ACTION

90

Tax Burden:|ed|< 1 and es> 1

Demand from Keg Ex: P = $60 - QLet Supply be: P = 4+ 0.4Q. (es >1.)

Solve for equilibrium quantity: 4+ 0.4Qe = 60 - Qe

Page 91: MARKETS IN ACTION

91

Tax Burden:|ed|< 1 and es> 1

Demand from Keg Ex: P = $60 - QLet Supply be: P = 4+ 0.4Q. (es >1.)

Solve for equilibrium quantity: 4+ 0.4Qe = 60 - Qe

1.4Qe = 56

Qe =

Page 92: MARKETS IN ACTION

92

Tax Burden:|ed|< 1 and es> 1

Demand from Keg Ex: P = $60 - QLet Supply be: P = 4+ 0.4Q. (es >1.)

Solve for equilibrium quantity: 4+ 0.4Qe = 60 - Qe

1.4Qe = 56

Qe = 40 kegs per day (|ed|<1 if Q>30.)

Solve for equilibrium price: Pe =

Page 93: MARKETS IN ACTION

93

Tax Burden:|ed|< 1 and es> 1

Demand from Keg Ex: P = $60 - QLet Supply be: P = 4+ 0.4Q. (es >1.)

Solve for equilibrium quantity: 4+ 0.4Qe = 60 - Qe

1.4Qe = 56

Qe = 40 kegs per day (|ed|<1 if Q>30.)

Solve for equilibrium price: Pe = 60 - Qe = 60 - 40 = $20 per keg.

Page 94: MARKETS IN ACTION

94

Tax Burden with Demand Less Elastic than Supply

Add the tax to Supply: P = 4+ 0.4Q + 10 = 14+ 0.4Q (es > 1.)

Solve for new equilibrium quantity, Qn : 14+ 0.4Qn = 60 - Qn

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95

Tax Burden with Demand Less Elastic than Supply

Add the tax to Supply: P = 4+ 0.4Q + 10 = 14+ 0.4Q (es > 1.)

Solve for new equilibrium quantity, Qn : 14+ 0.4Qn = 60 - Qn

1.4Qn = 46

Qn =

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Tax Burden with Demand Less Elastic than SupplyAdd the tax to Supply:

P = 4+ 0.4Q + 10 = 14+ 0.4Q (es > 1.)

Solve for new equilibrium quantity, Qn : 14+ 0.4Qn = 60 - Qn

1.4Qn = 46

Qn = 32.86 kegs per day

Solve for gross price (buyers pay): Pgross =

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Tax Burden with Demand Less Elastic than SupplyAdd the tax to Supply:

P = 4+ 0.4Q + 10 = 14+ 0.4Q (es > 1.)

Solve for new equilibrium quantity, Qn : 14+ 0.4Qn = 60 - Qn

1.4Qn = 46

Qn = 32.86 kegs per day

Solve for gross price (buyers pay): Pgross = 60 - Qn = 60 - 32.86 = $27.14 per keg.

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Tax Burden with Demand Less Elastic than Supply

To solve for net price ($ seller keeps), subtract the tax from the gross price Pnet = Pgross -Tax =

Or, find the net price by substituting Qn into the original supply curve: Pnet = 4 + 0.4Qn =

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Tax Burden with Demand Less Elastic than Supply

To solve for net price ($ seller keeps), subtract the tax from the gross price Pnet = Pgross -Tax = 27.14 - 10 = $17.14

Or, find the net price by substituting Qn into the original supply curve: Pnet = 4 + 0.4Qn = 4 + 0.4(32.86 ) = $17.14

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Compute|ed| and es

Before the tax Pe=$20/keg and Qe=40 kegs/day. The slope of D = -1, while the slope of S = 0.4

Q

P

Slopees1

Q

P

Slopeed1

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Compute|ed| and es

Before the tax Pe=$20/keg and Qe=40 kegs/day. The slope of D = -1, while the slope of S = 0.4

se Slope

P

Q

1 1

0 4

20

40125

..

de Slope

P

Q

1 1

1

20

400 50.

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Who Pays Most of the Tax?

Consumers now pay $_____ per keg, $_____ per keg more than before the tax.

Vendors now receive $_____ per keg, but must pay the $___ per keg tax. Sellers keep only $____ per keg, $_____ per keg less than before the tax.

Buyers respond _____ to a change in price, so they pay _____ of the tax.

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Who Pays Most of the Tax?

Consumers now pay $27.14 per keg, $7.14 per keg more than before the tax.

Vendors now receive $27.14 per keg, but must pay the $10 per keg tax. Sellers keep only $17.14 per keg, $2.86 per keg less than before the tax.

Buyers respond less to a change in price, so they pay more of the tax.

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Example with |ed| = es

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60

Demand

Supply

S + Tax

Quantity (kegs/day)

Pri

ce (

$/ke

g)

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Who Pays Most of the Tax?

Consumers now pay $_____ per keg, $_____ per keg more than before the tax.

Vendors now receive $_____ per keg, but must pay the $___ per keg tax. Sellers keep only $____ per keg, $_____ per keg less than before the tax.

When the buyers and sellers have the same elasticities, the tax burden is ___________.

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Who Pays Most of the Tax?

Consumers now pay $40 per keg, $5.00 per keg more than before the tax.

Vendors now receive $40 per keg, but must pay the $10 per keg tax. Sellers keep only $30 per keg, $5.00 per keg less than before the tax.

When the buyers and sellers have the same elasticities, the tax burden is equally shared.

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A Workable General Principle

They who respond least to the change in price pay the majority of the tax.

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Learning Objectives

Explain how price ceilings create shortages and inefficiency

Explain how price floors create surpluses and inefficiency

Explain the effects of the sales tax

Define the total and excess burden of a tax.

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Total Burden of a Tax

The amount that, if paid to “taxpayers,” would make them just as well off with the tax as without it.

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Excess Burden of a Tax

Excess burden = total burden - tax revenueIncludes:

administrative cost compliance cost deadweight loss

Further reading: Chapter 18, pages 398-403.

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Learning Objectives (cont.)

Explain how markets for illegal goods work

Explain why farm prices and revenues fluctuate

Explain how speculation limits price fluctuations

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Markets for Prohibited Goods

When a good is illegal, the cost of trading in the good increases.

Penalties and policing increase the cost. Decreases supply and/or demand

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A Market for a Prohibited Good

Quantity

Pri

ce

Pc

D

S

c

Qc

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A Market for a Prohibited Good

Quantity

Pri

ce

Pc

D

c

S

S + CBL

a

Qp Qc

Pp

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A Market for a Prohibited Good

Quantity

Pri

ce

Pc

D

c

Sa

D - CBL

bPp

Qp Qc

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A Market for a Prohibited Good

Quantity

Pri

ce

Q p Qc

Pc

D

c

S

S + CBL

a

D - CBL

b

d

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A Market for a Prohibited Good

Quantity

Pri

ce

Q p Qc

Pc

D

c

S

S + CBL

a

D - CBL

b

d

Cost per unitof breakingthe law...…to

buyer…to seller

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Markets for Prohibited Goods

Enforcement Price effects depend upon who receives the

most severe penalty — the buyer or seller Today, penalties on sellers are larger

• This causes the equilibrium quantity to decrease and price increases compared to an unregulated market.

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Learning Objectives (cont.)

Explain how markets for illegal goods work

Explain why farm prices and revenues fluctuate

Explain how speculation limits price fluctuations

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Stabilizing Farm Revenues

Farm output fluctuates considerably due to fluctuations in the weather.

How do changes in farm output affect farm prices and farm revenues?

How can farm revenues be stabilized?

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Stabilizing Farm Revenues

Farm Revenues during a bad harvest Total farm revenue actually increases due to

inelastic demand.

Some farmers, whose entire crop is destroyed,

lose.

Others, whose crop is unaffected, earn

enormous profits.

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Harvest, Farm Prices,and Farm Revenues

0 5 10 15 20 25

2

4

6

8

Quantity (billions of bushels per year)

Pri

ce (

doll

ar p

er b

ushe

l)MS0

D

Poor Harvest

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0 5 10 15 20 25

2

4

6

8

Quantity (billions of bushels per year)

Pri

ce (

doll

ar p

er b

ushe

l)MS0

D

MS1

$30 billion

$20billion

$60 billion

Poor Harvest

Harvest, Farm Prices,and Farm Revenues

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Stabilizing Farm Revenues

Farm Revenues during a bumper harvest Total farm revenue actually decreases due to

inelastic demand.

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0 5 10 15 20 25

2

4

6

8

Quantity (billions of bushels per year)

Pri

ce (

doll

ar p

er b

ushe

l)MS0

D

Bumper Harvest

Harvest, Farm Prices,and Farm Revenues

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0 5 10 15 20 25

2

4

6

8

Quantity (billions of bushels per year)

Pri

ce (

doll

ar p

er b

ushe

l)MS0

D

MS2

$40 billion $10billion

$40 billion

Bumper Harvest

Harvest, Farm Prices,and Farm Revenues

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Learning Objectives (cont.)

Explain how markets for illegal goods work

Explain why farm prices and revenues fluctuate

Explain how speculation limits price fluctuations

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Stabilizing Farm Revenues

Two institutions designed to stabilize farm revenue

Speculative markets in inventories

Farm price stabilization policy

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How Inventories LimitPrice Changes

0 5 10 15 20 25

2

4

6

8

Quantity (billions of bushels)

S

D

Pri

ce (

doll

ar p

er b

ushe

l)

Inventory Speculation

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0 5 10 15 20 25

2

4

6

8

Quantity (billions of bushels)

S

D

Pri

ce (

doll

ar p

er b

ushe

l)Q1

Inventory

5 billion frominventory

Inventory Speculation

How Inventories LimitPrice Changes

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0 5 10 15 20 25

2

4

6

8

Quantity (billions of bushels)

S

D

Pri

ce (

doll

ar p

er b

ushe

l)Q2

5 billion toinventory

Inventory

Inventory Speculation

How Inventories LimitPrice Changes

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Farm Revenue

Speculative markets in inventories do not stabilize farm revenue When price is stabilized, revenue fluctuates as

production fluctuates. Bumper crops bring larger revenues than poor

harvest do.

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Farm Revenue

Farm Price Stabilization Policy Set production limits Set price floors Hold inventories

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Farm Revenue

Farm Price Stabilization Policy Production limits

• Quotas restrict the quantity produced – can result in higher farm prices

Price floors • set above equilibrium create surpluses

Hold inventories• the government must hold inventory to maintain the

equilibrium price