Econ Ch. 4

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price ceiling

-a legally determined maximum price that sellers may charge -market price cannot go above (rent control)

price floor

-a legally determined minimum price that sellers may receive -market price cannot go below (minimum wage)

tax incidences - who pays the tax?

-amt of tax is Pd - Ps -consumers pay Pd - P* -producers pay P* - Ps -pay pays more depends on how sensitive they are to a price change (sellers often end up paying more)

welfare

-benefit to consumers and producers that we can measure. these benefits are called "surplus" (not surplus of quantity supplied over quantity demanded: consumer surplus, producer surplus, total surplus - all welfare measures that allow us to compare diff market events)

total surplus

-combination of consumer and producer surplus -need to know what consumers are willing to pay: demand and supply

allocative efficiency

-economically efficient: produce and purchase until marginal benefit is equal to marginal cost -everyone who benefits more/at least as much as it costs to produce the unit gets to purchase one -total surplus is maximized, MB=MC, CS+PS is maximized

depends on supply and demand curve but generally price floors benefit who? and price ceilings benefit who?

-floors - producers benefits -ceilings - consumers benefits

tax causes

-increase in cost of production which causes supply curve to shift to the left for a decrease in the supply -consumers and producers worse off -govt collects tax revenue equal to (Pd - Ps)Qm

if total surplus is not maximized then,

-not being allocatively eff -sold too many/too few units -total surplus decreased/not maxed -if we were allocatively eff DWL = 0

at Pf..

-producers want to sell Qs buyers want to buy Qd, that leaves the market with a surplus where Qs > Qd -too many products to sell at Pf (minimum wage, the surplus is unemployed workers - more workers than jobs)

2 notions of efficiency

-productive -allocative

Pc < P*

-shortage which causes other problems other than loss of Cs and Ps. (black market)

when govt imposes price floors or ceilings three important results occur

-some people win -some people lose -there is a loss of economic efficiency

consumer surplus

-the difference between the highest price a consumer is willing to pay for a good or service and the actual price a consumer pays -the area below the demand curve above the price for all units purchased (market price) -dollar benefit consumers receive from buying goods or services

producer surplus

-the difference between the lowest price a firm would be willing to accept for a good or service and the price it actually receives -area below market price and above the supply curve for all units sold -dollar benefit firms receive from selling goods or services in a particular market

deadweight loss

-the reduction in economic surplus resulting from a market not being in competitive equilibrium -loss of total surplus that results from not selling all units where MB is greater than or equal to MC

area of triangle

1/2 X base X height

at equilibrium P* is

MB = MC - is allocatively efficient -there is no unit not sold where MB greater than or equal to MC

amount tax paid by producers on graph is

P*- Ps

amount tax paid by consumers on graph is

Pd - P*

amount of tax is what on a graph is

Pd - Ps

Pf > P*

Pf needs to be above market equilibrium price

surplus govt would have to buy up:

Pf(Qs - Qd) -very expensive

black market

a market in which buying and selling take place at prices that violate government price regulations

economic efficiency

a market outcome in which the marginal benefit to consumers of the last unit produced is equal to its marginal cost of production and in which the sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus is at a maximum

a competitive market is

a market with many buyers and sellers

if the price of a product was zero the consumer surplus in the market would be....

all of the area below the demand curve (when the price is not zero, it is the area below the demand curve and above the market price

if the producer could produce could supply a good or service at zero cost, the surplus would be..

all the area below the market price (when cost is not zero, the producer surplus is the area below the market price and above the supply curve)

the winners with rent control are the people who

are paying less for rent becuase they live in rent controlled apartments or the landlords who illegal rents their places for higher

tax causes a reduction in both

consumer and producers surplus

price ceilings - who benefits

consumers

the willingness to supply a product depends on the

cost of producing it

marginal benefit curve is which curve?

demand

cant compare surpluses across

different markets

equilibrium in a competitive market results in the greatest amount of...

economic surplus, or total net benefit to society from the production of a good or service

equilibrium in a competitive market results in the economically...

efficient level of output, at which marginal benefit equals marginal cost

economic surplus is at a maximum when the market is in

equilibrium

rent control reduces economic efficiency because

fewer apts are rented than would be in a competitve market

farm program

government intervention in agriculture -(often results in large surpluses)

subsidies

government pays farmers cash payments

who pays more of the tax depends on

how sensitive they are to a price change

a tax is efficient if it

imposes a small excess burden relative to the tax revenue it raises

whenever the government taxes a good or service..

less of that good or service will be consumed

market price

minimum price required to sell

producer surplus measures the _____ benefit received by producers from participating in a market

net

consumer surplus measure the _____ benefit to consumers from participating in a market rather than the ______ benefit

net total

federal insurance contributions act is sometimes referred to as the

payroll tax

rent control is an example of

price ceiling

minimum wage is an example of

price floor

in markets for farm products such as milk, the govt has been setting ________ above equilibrium market price since the 1930s

price floors

price floors - who benefits

producers

productive efficiency

producing at lowest cost

when the government imposes a price ceiling or a price floor, the amount of economic surplus in a market is..

reduced (price ceillings and price floors reduce the total benefit to consumers and firms from buying and selling in the market

tax causes an increase in the cost of production which causes the supply curve to

shift to the left for a decrease in supply

marginal cost curve is which curve?

supply

tax incidence

the actual division of the burden of a tax between buyers and sellers in a market [rectangle of area with height P2-P* (consumer) and P*-P3(supplier, price pt on S1) and base Q2]

marginal benefit

the additional benefit to a consumer from consuming one more unit of a good or service

marginal cost

the additional cost to a firm or producing one more unit of a good or service

willingness to pay is the measure of

the benefit in money terms that the consumer receives by consuming that unit

the incidence of a tax does not depend on whether

the govt collects a tax from the buyers of a good or from a seller

losers from rent control are

the landlords of the rent controlled apts who abide by the law and renters who are unable to find apartments to rent at the controlled price

economic surplus

the sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus

with a shortage the market does not guarantee that buyers who

value the goods the most are able to buy them (because once cheaper, others will buy them even they dont need them)

positive analysis

what is

normative analysis

what should be

the burden of the FICA falls almost entirely on the

workers


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