Market Interventions: Ceilings & Floors
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Transcript of Market Interventions: Ceilings & Floors
Market Interventions: Ceilings & Floors
AP EconomicsUniversity High2012-2013
Overview In a competitive market, price will
adjust until quantity supplied equals quantity demanded.
However, sometimes government feels the need to intervene in the market and prevent equilibrium from being reached Usually done with good
intentions in mind However, interventions result in
undesired secondary effects Interventions usually in the form
of price floors or price ceilings
Marginal Buyers & Sellers Marginal buyers: Individuals on
demand curve that are not willing/able to pay market price
Marginal suppliers: Firms on supply curve not willing/able to supply at market price
Pareto Optimum
“Pareto Optimum” Optimal level of tradeoff Not going to get more surplus Maximizing Efficiency What happens when you disturb pareto
optimum?
Price Ceilings Price Ceiling: A legal maximum on the
price at which the good can be sold Below the equilibrium price if binding▪ Significant effect
Above the equilibrium price if non-binding ▪ No measurable effect
Which side appears happier?
Raise the Roof!
1973 Oil Crisis
1973 Oil Crisis
1973 Oil Crisis
1973 Oil Crisis
1973 Oil Crisis
1973 Oil Crisis
1973 Oil Crisis
1973 Oil Crisis
Some other form of rationing mechanism has to step in when price is unable to regulate market The true price of gasoline, which included both the cash
paid and the time spent waiting in line, was often higher than it would have been if the price had not been controlled.
In 1979 the United States fixed the price of gasoline at about $1.00 per gallon.
If the market price had been $1.20, a driver who bought ten gallons would apparently have saved $.20 per gallon, or $2.00.
But if the driver had to wait in line for thirty minutes to buy gasoline, and if her time was worth $8.00 per hour, the real cost to her was $10.00 for the gas and $4.00 for the time, an overall cost of $1.40 per gallon.
Rent Control
Rent Control
Price Floors Sets a legal minimum price for a good or service
Binding if ______the equilibrium Implemented to help ________ Provides suppliers with a price _______than the
original market equilibrium
Price floors, set above the equilibrium price, result in a ____ in the market Surplus – Quantity supplied exceeds quantity
demanded
Price Floors
Price Floors Decision to intervene in the market is a normative decision
Why? Because policy makers are making decisions based on value
judgments▪ Is the benefit to those receiving a higher wage greater than
the added cost to society?▪ Is the benefit of having excess food production greater than
the additional costs that are incurred due to the market intervention?
Price Floors A common price floor is the implementation of a minimum wage Labor market
Firms demand labor Workers supply labor
If market equilibrium set above equilibrium price for labor, some of those not able to work at original equilibrium price are now willing to supply labor at higher wage Increase in quantity of labor supplied Firms must pay more for labor and thus reduce the quantity of
labor demanded The result is a surplus of labor at new price (minimum
wage rate) Price is no longer the rationing mechanism in market Individuals willing and able to work at or below the minimum
wage rate might not be able to get a job