Chapter 6 Econ
A binding price ceiling creates
A shortage
Takes place when a tax is placed on a good? There is
An increase in the price buyers pay, a decrease in the price sellers receive and the quantity sold decreases
Example of a price floor
The minimum wage
Studies show that a 10 % increase in minimum wage
Decreases teen employment by about 1-3 %
T/F the shortage of housing caused by a binding rent control is likely to be more severe in the long run when compared to the short run
T
T/F the ultimate burden of a tax lands most heavily on the side of the market that is less elastic
T
What is true if the gov places a price ceiling on gas at 1.50$ per gallon and the equilibrium price is 1.00$ per gallon
A significant increase in the supply of gasoline could cause the price ceiling to become a binding constraint
For a price ceiling to be a binding constraint on the market, the gov must set it
Below the equilibrium price
The surplus caused by a binding price floor will be the greatest if
Both supply and demand are elastic
Within the supply and demand model, a tax collected from the buyers of a good shifts the
Demand curve downward by the size of the tax per unit
T/F a 10$ tax on baseball gloves will always raise the price that the buyers pay for baseball gloves by 10$
F
T/F a 10% increase in minimum wage causes a 10% reduction in teen employment
F
T/F a price floor in a market always creates a surplus in that market
F
T/F if the equilibrium price of gasoline is 1$ per gallon and the gov places a price ceiling on gasoline of 1.50$ per gallon the result will be shortage of gasoline
F
T/F the gov can choose to choose to place the burden of a tax on the buyers in a market by collecting the tax from the buyers rather than the sellers
F
T/F the minimum wage helps all teens bc they receive higher wages than they would otherwise
F
T/F when we use the model of supply and demand to analyze a tax collected from the buyers, we shift the demand curve upward by the size of the tax
F
A price floor
Sets a legal minimum on the price at which a good can be sold
Within the supply and demand model, a tax collected from the sellers of a good shifts the
Supply curve upward by the size of the tax per unit
T/F A price ceiling set below equilibrium price causes a surplus
T
T/F a price ceiling that is not a binding constraint today could cause a shortage in the future of demand were to increase and raise the equilibrium price above the fixed price ceiling
T
T/F a price floor set above the equilibrium price is a binding constraint
T
T/F a tax collected from buyers has an equivalent impact to a same size tax collected from sellers
T
T/F a tax creates a tax wedge between a buyer and seller. This causes the price paid by the buyer to rise, the price received by the seller to fall, and the quantity sold to fall
T
T/F if medicine is a necessity, the burden of a tax on meds will likely land more heavily on the buyers of medicine
T
Which side of the market is more likely to lobby gov for a price floor
The sellers
What is true about binding price ceiling
The shortage created by the price ceiling is greater in the long run than in the short run
When a tax is collected from the buyers in a market
The tax burden on the buyers and sellers is the same as an equivalent tax collected from the sellers