Subsidies
Disadvantages of subsidies are:
-Firms may become less efficient in production if they rely on subsidies -Opportunity cost to government of spending on the subsidy. Money could be spent on other things. -Some goods seen to have external benefits, e.g. wind power may be less reliable than fossil fuel
Advantages of subsidies are:
-They increase supply and reduce price, therefore, encouraging production/consumption -Lower production costs for firms -They 'internalise the externality'
Examples of subsidies are
Subsidies to wind farms Or to bus/train companies to increase the number of services, Biofuels, alternative power, banking industries
The main aims of government subsidies are to
To keep market prices down, To increase consumption of merit goods and services, To maintain or increase the revenues of producers, To protect industries from low cost international competition, To protect employment in unstable markets
Consumer subsidies are payments to consumers to
allow them to purchase more of a good or service. This affects the level of demand instead of supply.
Producer benefit when PED is
elastic
Consumers benefit when PED is
inelastic
The consumers receive the
lower price (Pc in the diagram)
Good example of a subsidy is the electric cars in Oslo, where the government has
put no taxes on electric cars and hat they can ride in bus lanes to increase consumption for them
Producer subsidies are payments to producers by the government which
reduces the costs of production and encourages suppliers to increase output. Shifting supply curve
A producer subsidy will affect the supply curve by
shifting it to the right (expand)
The effect of a subsidy is to move the
supply curve to the right from S1 to S2. This reduces price and increases output
With subsidies the producer receives the
top price (Pp in diagram)
The subsidy is the same as
unit tax - gap between supply