Governments & marketsslide 1 Price Ceilings, Price Floors, and Excise Taxes.

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Governments & markets slide 1 Price Ceilings, Price Floors, and Excise Taxes

Transcript of Governments & marketsslide 1 Price Ceilings, Price Floors, and Excise Taxes.

Page 1: Governments & marketsslide 1 Price Ceilings, Price Floors, and Excise Taxes.

Governments & markets slide 1

Price Ceilings, Price Floors, and Excise Taxes

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Price ceiling:

A price above which it is illegal to charge.

Binding price ceiling:

A price ceiling set below the equilibrium price.

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A binding price ceiling

S

D

q

p

p(max)

Price can't rise above this level, so there's always excess demand.

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A binding price floor

S

D

q

p

p(min)

Price can't fall below this level so there's always a surplus.

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Binding price ceilings lead to shortages (excess demand).

Binding price floors lead to surpluses (excess supply).

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Additional examples:

Rent control

Minimum wage laws

Minimum agricultural prices

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AN IMPORTANT TAX PROBLEM

Suppose the market for cigarettes is in equilibrium.

Suppose the State of Michigan, in its wisdom, decides to impose a tax of $1 per pack on the sale of cigarettes.

How does the tax affect the market for cigarettes?

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This kind of tax can be analyzed as if it were an input price increase. The tax is similar to having to pay a higher price for some input (government services?).

The tax will raise the supply curve by the amount of the tax per unit.

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The tax raises the supply curve by the amount of the tax per unit

pE

QE

S

D

Q

price

S + tax

CIGARETTE MARKET

This distance is exactly $1.

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The reason the supply curve shifts up by exactly the amount of the tax is that price would have to rise by the full amount of the tax to induce cigarette suppliers to supply the amount they supplied before the tax.

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But price will rise by less than the amount of the tax, as the following diagram shows.

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The state’s tax revenue is $1 times the number of units sold.

pE’

QE

S

D

Q

PS + tax

QE’

CIGARETTE MARKET

total tax collections

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Tax Burden

The tax burden on consumers is the part of the tax paid by consumers in terms of higher prices.

The tax burden on sellers is the part of the tax paid by firms in terms of lower receipts.

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Who pays the tax on cigarettes?

S+Tax

D

S

P

Q

Tax per unit

Go to hidden slide

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Tax burden on each is determined by the elasticities of supply and demand.

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Given the demand curve, more elastic (flatter) supply means greater tax burden for consumers.

Given the supply curve, more elastic (flatter) demand means greater tax burden for sellers.

[Hint: Don't try to memorize these statements. Instead, make sure you can figure out each case.]

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Elasticity also determines the state's tax revenue.

For example:

1) The more inelastic is the demand curve, the greater will be the state’s tax revenue.

2) The more inelastic is the supply curve, the greater will be the state’s tax revenue.

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The next (hidden) slide shows these principles for different elasticities of demand.

When demand is more elastic:

Price rises less.

There's relatively more burden on sellers.

The state takes in less revenue.

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