Microeconomics Ch.8
A tax levied on the buyers of a good shifts the
demand curve downward (or to the left).
The imposition of the tax causes the price received by sellers to
Decrease by $2
Deadweight loss measures the loss
In a market to buyers and sellers that is not offset by an increase in government revenue
The imposition of the tax causes the price paid by buyers to
Increase by $3
A tax on a good
Raises the price that buyers effectively pay and lowers the price that sellers effectively receive
The Laffer curve relates
The tax rate to tax revenue raised by the tax.
The per-unit burden of the tax on sellers is
$2
The loss of producer surplus as a result of the tax is
$3
The loss of consumer surplus as a result of the tax is
$4.50
the amount of deadweight loss as a result of the tax is
$2.50
The amount of tax revenue received by the government is
$5
The amount of the tax on each unit of the good is
$5
Consumer surplus without the tax is
$6, and consumer surplus with the tax is $1.50
Taxes cause deadweight losses because taxes
All of the above are correct -reduce the sum of producer and consumer surpluses by more than the amount of tax revenue -prevent buyers and sellers from realizing some of the gains from trade -cause marginal buyers and marginal sellers to leave the market, causing the quantity sold to fall
The decrease in total surplus that results from a market distortion, such as a tax, is called a
Deadweight loss
The imposition of the tax causes the quantity sold to
Decrease by 1 unit
When a tax is levied on a good, the buyers and sellers of the good share the burden,
Regardless of how the tax is levied.
A tax on a good
gives sellers an incentive to produce less of the good than they otherwise would produce.
The per-unit burden of the tax on buyers is
$3
What happens to the total surplus in a market when the government imposes a tax?
Total surplus decreases