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Chapter 6
 What are price ceilings and price floors?
  What are some examples of each?
 How do price ceilings and price floors affect market
  outcomes?
 How do taxes affect market outcomes?
  How does the outcome depend on whether
  the tax is imposed on buyers or sellers?
 What is the incidence (rate/range of
  influence/occurrence) of a tax?
  What determines the incidence?
SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
Government Policies That Alter the
         Private Market Outcome
 Price Controls
   – Price Ceiling: a legal maximum on the price
     of a good or service. Example: rent control.
   – Price Floor: a legal minimum on the price of
     a good or service. Example: minimum wage.
 Taxes
   – The Government can make buyers or sellers pay a specific
     amount on each unit bought/sold.




SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
EXAMPLE 1: The Market for Apartments

            Rental                 P            S
            price of
          apartments

                            $800


     Equilibrium
       without
        price                                          D
                                                             Q
       controls                           300
                                                    Quantity of
                                                    apartments

SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
How Price Ceilings Affect Market Outcomes
                                    P            S
                                                         Price
                           $1000
   A price ceiling                                       Ceiling

                             $800
   above the
    equilibrium
   price is
   not binding –
   has no effect                                     D
                                                            Q
   on the market                           300
   outcome.

 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
How Price Ceilings Affect Market Outcomes
                                    P
 The equilibrium                                  S
 price ($800) is
 above the
 ceiling and                 $800
 therefore illegal.
                                                           Price
 The ceiling                 $500
                                                           Ceiling
 is a binding                               Shortage
 constraint                                            D
 on the price,                                                Q
                                           250   400
 causes a
 shortage.
 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
How Price Ceilings Affect Market Outcomes
                                   P                              S
     In the long
     run, supply
     and demand      $800
     are more
     price-elastic.  $500
                                                                      Price
     Therefore, the                                                   Ceiling
                                                 Shortage
     shortage                                                           D
     will be larger.                                                     Q
                                           150              450



 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
Shortages and Rationing
 With a shortage, sellers must ration the goods among
  buyers.
 Some rationing mechanisms: (1) long lines
  (2) discrimination according to sellers’ biases
 These mechanisms are often unfair, and inefficient:
  the goods do not necessarily go to the buyers who
  value them most highly.
 In contrast, when prices are not controlled,
  the rationing mechanism is efficient (the goods
  go to the buyers that value them most highly)
  and impersonal (and thus fair).
SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
EXAMPLE 2: The Market for Unskilled Labor

               Wage               W            S
               paid to
              unskilled
              workers
                               $4


    Equilibrium
       without
                                                    D
        price                                             L
       controls                           500
                                             Quantity of
                                          unskilled workers
SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
How Price Floors Affect Market Outcomes
                                  W             S
  A price floor
  below the
   equilibrium
  price is                     $4
  not binding –                                         Price
                               $3
  has no effect                                         floor
  on the market
                                                    D
  outcome.                                                 L
                                          500



SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
How Price Floors Affect Market Outcomes
                                            Labor
The equilibrium                   W        Surplus S
wage ($4) is below                                         Price
                               $5
the floor and                                              Floor
therefore illegal.
                               $4
The floor is a
binding constraint
on the wage,
causes a surplus                                       D
(i.e.,unemployment).                                          L
                                          400   550



SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
The Minimum Wage
                                          Unemployment
                                  W                      S
                                                                 Minimum
Minimum wage                   $5                                Wage

laws do not affect
highly skilled                 $4
workers.
Often, they affect
teen workers.
                                                             D
                                                                     L
                                          400      550



SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
Price Floors & Ceilings
                                           The market for
                             P
                            140             hotel rooms
Determine                                                   S
                            130
effects of:
                            120
 A. $90 price
                            110
    ceiling
                            100
 B. $90 price
    floor                    90
                             80                             D
 C. $120 price
    floor                    70
                             60
                             50
                             40
                               0                           Q
                                50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130
 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
A. $90 Price Ceiling                      The market for
                            P
                           140             hotel rooms
                                                                  S
 The price                 130
 falls to $90.             120
                           110
 Buyers
                           100
 demand                           Price ceiling
                            90
 120 rooms,
                            80                                D
 sellers supply                                   shortage = 30
                            70
 90, leaving a
                            60
 shortage.
                            50
                            40
                              0                           Q
                               50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130
SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
B. $90 Price Floor                         The market for
                            P
                           140              hotel rooms
                                                            S
                           130
 Equilibrium
 price is above            120
 the floor, so the         110
 floor is not              100
 binding.                    90
                                  Price floor
 P = $100,                   80                             D
 Q = 100 rooms.              70
                             60
                             50
                             40
                               0                           Q
                                50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130
 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
C. $120 price floor                         The market for
                            P
                           140               hotel rooms
                                             surplus = 60     S
                           130
 The price
                           120
 rises to $120.                                 Price floor
                           110
 Buyers
                           100
 demand
 60 rooms,                  90
 sellers supply             80                                D
 120, causing a             70
 surplus.                   60
                            50
                            40
                              0                           Q
                               50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130
  SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
Evaluating Price Controls
 Recall one of the Ten Principles of
  Economics:
  Markets are usually a good way to organize
  economic activity.
 Prices are the signals that guide the allocation of
  society’s resources. This allocation is altered
  when policymakers restrict prices.
 Price controls often intended to help the poor,
  but often hurt more than help.


SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
Taxes
   The Government levies taxes on many goods &
    services to raise revenue to pay for national
    defense, public schools, etc.
   The Government can make buyers or sellers pay
    the tax.
   The tax can be a % of a good’s price, or a specific
    amount for each unit sold.
      – For simplicity, we will analyze per-unit taxes only.


SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
EXAMPLE 3: The Market for Pizza


Equilibrium                          P
                                                S1
without tax
                            $10.00



                                                 D1

                                                      Q
                                          500

SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
A Tax on Buyers
A tax on
buyers shifts                              Effects of a $1.50 per
the D curve                                  unit tax on buyers
down by the                           P
amount of the                                                 S1
                      PB = $11.00
tax.                                                  Tax
                            $10.00
The price               PS = $9.50
buyers pay
rises, the price                                                 D1
sellers receive                                             D2
falls,                                                                Q
                                                 430 500
equilibrium Q
falls.
 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
The Incidence of a Tax:
 How the burden of a tax is shared among market
 participants
                                      P
 As a result of                                       S1
                      PB = $11.00
 the tax,                                     Tax
 buyers pay                 $10.00
 $1.00 more,            PS = $9.50
 and sellers
 receive                                                  D1
 $0.50 less.                                         D2
                                                               Q
                                           430 500

 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
A Tax on Sellers
A tax on                                  Effects of a $1.50 per
sellers shifts                              unit tax on sellers
the S curve up                       P                 S2
by the amount                                                S1
of the tax.          PB = $11.00
                                                     Tax
                           $10.00
                       PS = $9.50
The price buyers
pay rises, the
price sellers                                                 D1
receive falls,
equilibrium Q                                                      Q
                                                430 500
falls.

SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
The Outcome Is the Same in Both Cases!
The effects on P and Q, and the tax incidence are the
same whether the tax is imposed on buyers or sellers!
                                P
What                                            S1
matters is        PB = $11.00
                                        Tax
this:                  $10.00
A tax drives       PS = $9.50

a wedge                                          D1
between the
price buyers                                          Q
pay and the                         430 500
price sellers
receive. AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
SUPPLY, DEMAND,
Effects of a Tax                           The market for
                             P
                            140             hotel rooms
 Suppose the                                                S
                            130
 Government                 120
 imposes a tax              110
 on buyers of
                            100
 $30 per room.
                             90
 Find new
 Q, PB, PS,                  80                             D
 and incidence of            70
 tax.                        60
                             50
                             40
                               0                           Q
                                50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130
 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 2:
                                            The market for
Answers                      P
                            140              hotel rooms
                                                             S
                            130
PB = $110
                            120
Q = 80                PB = 110
                           100
                                           Tax
PS = $80                     90
                       PS = 80                               D
                             70
 Incidence
                             60
  Buyers: $10
                             50
  Sellers: $20               40
                               0                           Q
                                50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130
 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
Elasticity and Tax Incidence
CASE 1: Supply is more elastic than demand
                            P                     It is easier for
                                                  sellers than buyers
                     PB                       S   to leave the
Buyers’ share
                                                  market.
of tax burden
                                Tax               Therefore, buyers
    Price if no tax                               bear most of the
 Sellers’ share                                   burden of the tax.
                       PS
 of tax burden
                                          D
                                                  Q

SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
Elasticity and Tax Incidence
CASE 2: Demand is more elastic than supply
                                                      It is easier for
                            P                         buyers than
                                          S
                                                      sellers to leave
Buyers’ share
                     PB                               the market.
of tax burden
                                                      Sellers bear
    Price if no tax
                                Tax                   most of the
Sellers’ share                                        burden of
of tax burden                                         the tax.
                       PS
                                              D

                                                  Q

SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
CASE STUDY: Who Pays the Luxury Tax?
 1990: Congress adopted a luxury tax on
  yachts, private airplanes, furs, expensive cars,
  etc.
 Goal of the tax: to raise revenue from those
  who could most easily afford to pay –
  wealthy consumers.
 But who really pays this tax?



 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
CASE STUDY: Who Pays the Luxury Tax?
               The market for yachts               Demand is
                                                   price-elastic.
                             P
                                           S
                                               In the short run,
 Buyers’ share
 of tax burden        PB                       supply is inelastic.

                                 Tax                   Hence,
                                                       companies
 Sellers’ share
                                                       that build
 of tax burden          PS
                                               D       yachts pay
                                                       most of
                                                   Q   the tax.

 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
CONCLUSION: Government Policies
    and the Allocation of Resources
 Each of the policies in this chapter affects the
  allocation of society’s resources.
    – Example 1: A tax on pizza reduces equilibrium Q.
      With less production of pizza, resources (workers, ovens,
      cheese) will become available to other industries.
    – Example 2: A binding minimum wage causes a surplus of
      workers, and a waste of resources.
 It is important for policymakers to apply such policies
  very carefully.

SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
CHAPTER SUMMARY
   A price ceiling is a legal maximum on the price of
    a good. An example is rent control. If the price
    ceiling is below the equilibrium price, it is binding
    and causes a shortage.
   A price floor is a legal minimum on the price of a
    good. An example is the minimum wage. If the
    price floor is above the equilibrium price, it is
    binding and causes a surplus. The labor surplus
    caused by the minimum wage is unemployment.



SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
CHAPTER SUMMARY
 A tax on a good places a wedge between the price
  buyers pay and the price sellers receive, and causes
  the equilibrium quantity to fall, whether the tax is
  imposed on buyers or sellers.
 The incidence of a tax is the division of the burden of
  the tax between buyers and sellers, and does not
  depend on whether the tax is imposed on buyers or
  sellers.
 The incidence of the tax depends on the price
  elasticities of supply and demand.

SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES

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Chapter 6

  • 1. Chapter 6  What are price ceilings and price floors? What are some examples of each?  How do price ceilings and price floors affect market outcomes?  How do taxes affect market outcomes? How does the outcome depend on whether the tax is imposed on buyers or sellers?  What is the incidence (rate/range of influence/occurrence) of a tax? What determines the incidence? SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 2. Government Policies That Alter the Private Market Outcome  Price Controls – Price Ceiling: a legal maximum on the price of a good or service. Example: rent control. – Price Floor: a legal minimum on the price of a good or service. Example: minimum wage.  Taxes – The Government can make buyers or sellers pay a specific amount on each unit bought/sold. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 3. EXAMPLE 1: The Market for Apartments Rental P S price of apartments $800 Equilibrium without price D Q controls 300 Quantity of apartments SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 4. How Price Ceilings Affect Market Outcomes P S Price $1000 A price ceiling Ceiling $800 above the equilibrium price is not binding – has no effect D Q on the market 300 outcome. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 5. How Price Ceilings Affect Market Outcomes P The equilibrium S price ($800) is above the ceiling and $800 therefore illegal. Price The ceiling $500 Ceiling is a binding Shortage constraint D on the price, Q 250 400 causes a shortage. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 6. How Price Ceilings Affect Market Outcomes P S In the long run, supply and demand $800 are more price-elastic. $500 Price Therefore, the Ceiling Shortage shortage D will be larger. Q 150 450 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 7. Shortages and Rationing  With a shortage, sellers must ration the goods among buyers.  Some rationing mechanisms: (1) long lines (2) discrimination according to sellers’ biases  These mechanisms are often unfair, and inefficient: the goods do not necessarily go to the buyers who value them most highly.  In contrast, when prices are not controlled, the rationing mechanism is efficient (the goods go to the buyers that value them most highly) and impersonal (and thus fair). SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 8. EXAMPLE 2: The Market for Unskilled Labor Wage W S paid to unskilled workers $4 Equilibrium without D price L controls 500 Quantity of unskilled workers SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 9. How Price Floors Affect Market Outcomes W S A price floor below the equilibrium price is $4 not binding – Price $3 has no effect floor on the market D outcome. L 500 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 10. How Price Floors Affect Market Outcomes Labor The equilibrium W Surplus S wage ($4) is below Price $5 the floor and Floor therefore illegal. $4 The floor is a binding constraint on the wage, causes a surplus D (i.e.,unemployment). L 400 550 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 11. The Minimum Wage Unemployment W S Minimum Minimum wage $5 Wage laws do not affect highly skilled $4 workers. Often, they affect teen workers. D L 400 550 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 12. Price Floors & Ceilings The market for P 140 hotel rooms Determine S 130 effects of: 120 A. $90 price 110 ceiling 100 B. $90 price floor 90 80 D C. $120 price floor 70 60 50 40 0 Q 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 13. A. $90 Price Ceiling The market for P 140 hotel rooms S The price 130 falls to $90. 120 110 Buyers 100 demand Price ceiling 90 120 rooms, 80 D sellers supply shortage = 30 70 90, leaving a 60 shortage. 50 40 0 Q 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 14. B. $90 Price Floor The market for P 140 hotel rooms S 130 Equilibrium price is above 120 the floor, so the 110 floor is not 100 binding. 90 Price floor P = $100, 80 D Q = 100 rooms. 70 60 50 40 0 Q 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 15. C. $120 price floor The market for P 140 hotel rooms surplus = 60 S 130 The price 120 rises to $120. Price floor 110 Buyers 100 demand 60 rooms, 90 sellers supply 80 D 120, causing a 70 surplus. 60 50 40 0 Q 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 16. Evaluating Price Controls  Recall one of the Ten Principles of Economics: Markets are usually a good way to organize economic activity.  Prices are the signals that guide the allocation of society’s resources. This allocation is altered when policymakers restrict prices.  Price controls often intended to help the poor, but often hurt more than help. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 17. Taxes  The Government levies taxes on many goods & services to raise revenue to pay for national defense, public schools, etc.  The Government can make buyers or sellers pay the tax.  The tax can be a % of a good’s price, or a specific amount for each unit sold. – For simplicity, we will analyze per-unit taxes only. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 18. EXAMPLE 3: The Market for Pizza Equilibrium P S1 without tax $10.00 D1 Q 500 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 19. A Tax on Buyers A tax on buyers shifts Effects of a $1.50 per the D curve unit tax on buyers down by the P amount of the S1 PB = $11.00 tax. Tax $10.00 The price PS = $9.50 buyers pay rises, the price D1 sellers receive D2 falls, Q 430 500 equilibrium Q falls. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 20. The Incidence of a Tax: How the burden of a tax is shared among market participants P As a result of S1 PB = $11.00 the tax, Tax buyers pay $10.00 $1.00 more, PS = $9.50 and sellers receive D1 $0.50 less. D2 Q 430 500 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 21. A Tax on Sellers A tax on Effects of a $1.50 per sellers shifts unit tax on sellers the S curve up P S2 by the amount S1 of the tax. PB = $11.00 Tax $10.00 PS = $9.50 The price buyers pay rises, the price sellers D1 receive falls, equilibrium Q Q 430 500 falls. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 22. The Outcome Is the Same in Both Cases! The effects on P and Q, and the tax incidence are the same whether the tax is imposed on buyers or sellers! P What S1 matters is PB = $11.00 Tax this: $10.00 A tax drives PS = $9.50 a wedge D1 between the price buyers Q pay and the 430 500 price sellers receive. AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES SUPPLY, DEMAND,
  • 23. Effects of a Tax The market for P 140 hotel rooms Suppose the S 130 Government 120 imposes a tax 110 on buyers of 100 $30 per room. 90 Find new Q, PB, PS, 80 D and incidence of 70 tax. 60 50 40 0 Q 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 24. A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 2: The market for Answers P 140 hotel rooms S 130 PB = $110 120 Q = 80 PB = 110 100 Tax PS = $80 90 PS = 80 D 70 Incidence 60 Buyers: $10 50 Sellers: $20 40 0 Q 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 25. Elasticity and Tax Incidence CASE 1: Supply is more elastic than demand P It is easier for sellers than buyers PB S to leave the Buyers’ share market. of tax burden Tax Therefore, buyers Price if no tax bear most of the Sellers’ share burden of the tax. PS of tax burden D Q SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 26. Elasticity and Tax Incidence CASE 2: Demand is more elastic than supply It is easier for P buyers than S sellers to leave Buyers’ share PB the market. of tax burden Sellers bear Price if no tax Tax most of the Sellers’ share burden of of tax burden the tax. PS D Q SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 27. CASE STUDY: Who Pays the Luxury Tax?  1990: Congress adopted a luxury tax on yachts, private airplanes, furs, expensive cars, etc.  Goal of the tax: to raise revenue from those who could most easily afford to pay – wealthy consumers.  But who really pays this tax? SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 28. CASE STUDY: Who Pays the Luxury Tax? The market for yachts Demand is price-elastic. P S In the short run, Buyers’ share of tax burden PB supply is inelastic. Tax Hence, companies Sellers’ share that build of tax burden PS D yachts pay most of Q the tax. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 29. CONCLUSION: Government Policies and the Allocation of Resources  Each of the policies in this chapter affects the allocation of society’s resources. – Example 1: A tax on pizza reduces equilibrium Q. With less production of pizza, resources (workers, ovens, cheese) will become available to other industries. – Example 2: A binding minimum wage causes a surplus of workers, and a waste of resources.  It is important for policymakers to apply such policies very carefully. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 30. CHAPTER SUMMARY  A price ceiling is a legal maximum on the price of a good. An example is rent control. If the price ceiling is below the equilibrium price, it is binding and causes a shortage.  A price floor is a legal minimum on the price of a good. An example is the minimum wage. If the price floor is above the equilibrium price, it is binding and causes a surplus. The labor surplus caused by the minimum wage is unemployment. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES
  • 31. CHAPTER SUMMARY  A tax on a good places a wedge between the price buyers pay and the price sellers receive, and causes the equilibrium quantity to fall, whether the tax is imposed on buyers or sellers.  The incidence of a tax is the division of the burden of the tax between buyers and sellers, and does not depend on whether the tax is imposed on buyers or sellers.  The incidence of the tax depends on the price elasticities of supply and demand. SUPPLY, DEMAND, AND GOVERNMENT POLICIES