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Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions
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Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Mar 30, 2015

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Page 1: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Micro Chapter 4

Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions

Page 2: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

5 Learning Goals

1) Describe the relationship between resource and product markets

2) Analyze the impact of government policies for price controls in markets

3) Determine the effects of a tax in a market

4) Explore the relationship between tax rates and revenues

5) Identify the effects of a subsidy

Page 3: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

The Link Between Resource and Product

Markets

Page 4: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

What’s the relationship between product markets and resource (input) markets?

An increase (decrease) in demand for a product will increase (decrease) demand for resources that make that product

When the product price rises, the resource price will eventually rise

Page 5: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Graphs:

Watch content video: product and resource markets

Page 6: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.1 (MA) An increase in the number of students attending college would tend to

1. decrease the demand for college professors.

2. increase the demand for college professors.

3. decrease the number of college professors employed.

4. increase the number of college professors employed.

5. increase wages of college professors.

6. decrease wages of college professors.

Page 7: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

The Economics of Price Controls

Page 8: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

2 Kinds of Price Controls:

(1) Price ceiling – puts an upper limit on price; generates a shortage and a deadweight loss(2) Price floor – puts a lower limit on price; generates a surplus and a deadweight lossDeadweight loss (DWL) = loss of gains from trade; loss of CS and PS

Page 9: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Price Ceiling Graph:

Watch content video: price ceiling graph

Page 10: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Watch video: Jingle All The Way- Effects of a shortage

Page 11: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Dead People Help You Get Gasoline. The African nation of Zimbabwe is currently an economic mess, with, among other things, price ceilings on gasoline leading to shortages and long lines at the gas stations. The government has set up priorities for obtaining gasoline, with hearses being priority recipients. Two mortuary workers were arrested for leasing out bodies to motorists, who would take the body to a gas station, claim the hearse’s priority to obtain the gasoline, then return the body to the mortuary to be leased out again. The motorist would then siphon out the purchased gasoline for use in his own private vehicle. This is a natural response of the market to circumventing the shortages. The government created the shortage- and the opportunity for someone to profit from it- and the market responded.Q: Siphoning gasoline is dangerous- poisoning or explosions are possible. Why would anyone accept these risks? Why engage in this method or circumventing the price ceiling?

Page 12: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Watch video: Stossel-rent control

Page 13: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.2 What would happen in a market where a price ceiling was set above equilibrium price?

1. A surplus would occur

2. The shortage would become larger

3. Equilibrium price would become the market price

Page 14: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.3 When a shortage of a good is present due to a price ceiling,

1. the amount supplied will be greater than the amount demanded.

2. the quality of the good will generally improve.

3. non-price factors, such as discrimination or waiting in line, will play a greater role in the allocation of the good.

4. the demand for the product will increase and, thereby, eliminate the shortage.

Page 15: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Price Floor Graph:

Watch content video: Price floor graph

Page 16: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

As a price floor, a minimum wage restricts the amount of goods, or inputs, that demanders are willing to buy. But what happens if the demand curve shifts to the left? If there were no floor, the price of the good or service would drop as the market moves down along the supply curve, and a new equilibrium price would be established. But with the floor, the price cannot drop- all that can happen is that the leftward shift in the demand curve must lead to a drop in the quantity employed. This is exactly what happens, according to a study of the labor market in Portugal. Among companies with a higher fraction of employees paid at the minimum wage, when demand for the product goes down, these companies are more likely to close down. The floor on wages imposed by the minimum prevents the companies from cutting costs, and the drop in product demand drives them out of business when they can no longer supply at a competitive price.Q: This describes the response of companies that cannot afford to remain in business. What will happen to employment at those companies that stay in business?

Page 17: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Watch video: Stossel-Unintended consequences of minimum wage

Page 18: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.4 If the government imposes a price floor on the market for milk, which of the following will most likely happen?

1. The quantity of milk demanded will increase.

2. The quantity of milk supplied will decrease.

3. There will be a surplus of milk.

4. There will be a shortage of milk.

Page 19: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.5 Both price floors and price ceilings lead to

1. shortages.

2. surpluses.

3. reductions in quality.

4. a reduction in the quantity traded.

Page 20: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Watch video: Stossel-pharmaceutical price controls (optional)

Page 21: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

The Impact of a Tax

Page 22: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

It’s not often that the incidence of a tax is obviously split between producers and consumers, as the textbooks would suggest is the case. But on the day when the U.S. government reimposed a 10 percent tax on airline tickets, some of the airlines tried to increase fares by 10 percent. Others did not go along, however, and later in the day the companies dropped their fares to 4 percent above where they had been the day before (before the tax was reimposed). The fare increase settled at 4 percent. The consumer paid 40 percent of the new tax, and the producers paid 60 percent- even though the tax was imposed initially on the companies.Q: Why would the airlines be willing to pay 60% of the tax?

Page 23: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Incidence(1) Statutory incidence- who is legally responsible to pay the tax

This is the tax burden- it hinders exchange

This is an administrative detail that is mostly irrelevant

(2) Actual incidence- who really pays the tax

This is the more important issue

The burden is shared between firms and consumers

Page 24: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Ways to analyze:

If the tax is legally imposed on sellers, shift the supply curve

If the tax is legally imposed on buyers, shift the demand curve

You’ll reach the same conclusion either way

Page 25: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Graph of tax imposed on sellers:

See handouts “Impact of a tax 1.pdf”

Page 26: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Graph of tax imposed on buyers:

See handouts “Impact of a tax 1.pdf”

Page 27: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Scenario: The price of a textbook is $100. Then a $10 sales tax is imposed.

What usually happens?

The price (with tax) of the textbook will be somewhere between $100 and $110.

If $106, consumers pay $6 tax and firms pay $4 tax.

Page 28: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Watch video: Snooki tanning tax (optional, just for fun)

Page 29: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

What determines how the burden is shared?

The size of the deadweight loss and the actual burden depend on supply & demand elasticities

Page 30: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Four scenarios:

See handouts “Impact of a tax 2.pdf” and “Impact of a tax 3.pdf”

Summary: The more inelastic group has the biggest share of the burden

Page 31: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.6 If a $5,000 tax is placed legally (statutorily) on the sellers of new automobiles and as a result the price of automobiles to consumers rises by $4,000, then the actual burden of the tax

1. falls completely on automobile buyers.

2. falls completely on automobile sellers.

3. is $4,000 on automobile buyers and $1,000 on sellers.

4. is $1,000 on automobile buyers and $4,000 on sellers.

Page 32: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.7 The burden of a tax will fall primarily on sellers when the

1. demand for the product is highly inelastic and the supply is relatively elastic.

2. demand for the product is highly elastic and the supply is relatively inelastic.

3. tax is legally (statutorily) imposed on the seller of the product.

4. tax is legally (statutorily) imposed on the buyer of the product.

Page 33: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Several years ago, the state of Texas surprised the public by creating a tax holiday the weekend before school started. School supplies and related items were temporarily exempted from the 8% state sales tax. Who really benefited from the tax holiday? What was the tax incidence? That depended on how the supply and demand for these items responded to the tax cut and the resulting drop in the net price. It’s hard to believe that demand responded much because by that weekend many people had already bought the back-to-school items. If not, they had to buy them then- an inelastic demand. That would have led to a big drop in the net price: Consumers reaped most of the benefit from the tax holiday. Since then, the state has been offering this holiday annually. People are adjusting their spending patterns accordingly so that now there is a more elastic demand on that weekend. Retail stores, too, can plan around this date all year long and be sure that they reap part of the gains from the temporary tax holiday. Buyers and sellers now share the incidence of the tax cut.Q: What if, instead of a tax holiday, the stores were required to pay the sales tax instead of the consumers. Which net price would be lower, the tax holiday or the store paying the tax? When would purchases be higher, with the tax holiday or with the store paying the tax?

Page 34: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Helpful Study Tool

See handout “Tax Impact Process Examples.pdf”

Page 35: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Tax Rates, Tax Revenues, and the

Laffer Curve

Page 36: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

2 definitions you need to know:

(1) Tax rate– (a) Value (most common); a percent is

applied to the sales priceExample: 7.5% sales tax

– (b) Per Unit; an amount is applied to each unit sale

Example: $1 for every unit soldGas taxes

(2) Tax Revenue = rate X sales

Page 37: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.8 When the government increases the tax rate, what happens to tax revenue?

1. Revenues will increase

2. Revenues will decrease

3. It depends

Page 38: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

The Laffer Curve

Graphical representation of the relationship between the tax rate and revenue

Graph:

Watch content video: Laffer curve

Page 39: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

So what?

Starting at high tax rates, an increase in the tax rate may actually lower revenue

Starting at high tax rates, larger revenue may be generated by lowering tax rates

Page 40: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.9 According to the Laffer curve,

1. an increase in tax rates will always cause tax revenues to increase.

2. when marginal tax rates are high, an increase in tax rates is likely to cause tax revenues to increase.

3. when marginal taxes are low, an increase in tax rates will probably cause tax revenues to decline.

4. when marginal tax rates are high, a reduction in tax rates may increase tax revenue.

Page 41: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

The facts:

See article “historical top marginal tax rates.pdf”Using 2008 Internal Revenue Service statistics, the 2001 tax cuts shifted the income tax burden up the economic ladder.In 2000, the top 1% paid 37.4% of all income taxes vs. 39.4% in 2005. The top 2% went from 56.5% to 60%The top 10% from 67.3% to 70.3%The top 25% from 84% to 86%The top 50% from 96% to 97%.

Page 42: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

The Impact of a Subsidy

Page 43: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Watch video: Stossel- farm subsidies

Page 44: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Analysis of Ethanol subsidies

Ethanol- biofuel made from corn to supplement traditional gasoline (most gas now contains up to 10% ethanol)

Graph of ethanol:

Watch content video: ethanol

Page 45: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Analysis of Ethanol subsidies

Secondary effects: 1) increase demand for corn (maybe not an

equal increase in supply of corn) results in an increase in the price of corn

2) Increase in prices for feed for livestock plus any consumer good made from cornSo, lower prices for ethanol but higher prices for milk, soda, and everything else made with corn

Page 46: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Watch video: Stossel-Unintended consequences of ethanol subsidies (optional)

Page 47: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.10 The actual benefit of a government subsidy is determined primarily by

1. the elasticities of demand and supply.

2. the legal (or statutory) assignment of the subsidy

3. the number of exchanges that are made possible as a result of the subsidy.

4. whether the subsidy is paid by cash or check.

Page 48: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Q4.11 If a $50 subsidy is legally (statutorily) granted to the sellers of exercise equipment and as a result the price of exercise equipment to consumers falls by $30, the actual benefit of the subsidy

1. goes completely to buyers of exercise equipment.

2. goes completely to sellers of exercise equipment.

3. is $30 to buyers and $20 to sellers.

4. is $20 to buyers and $30 to sellers.

Page 49: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Who receives the biggest benefit from subsidies?

Ignoring secondary effects, the group with the smallest elasticity receives the biggest benefit.

If supply is relatively inelastic and demand is relatively elastic, then suppliers receive most (but not all) of the benefit.

If supply is relatively elastic and demand is relatively inelastic, then consumers receive most (but not all) of the benefit.

Page 50: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Watch video: Stossel-subsidized flood insurance

Page 51: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Conclusions:

Taxes and subsidies distort incentives and create secondary effects which are sometimes undesirable

Page 52: Micro Chapter 4 Supply and Demand: Applications and Extensions.

Question Answers:

4.1 = 2, 4 & 5

4.2 = 3

4.3 = 3

4.4 = 3

4.5 = 4

4.6 = 3

4.7 = 2

4.8 = 3

4.9 = 4

4.10 = 1

4.11 = 3