ECON101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Deadweight Loss, Economic Surplus, Demand Curve

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ECON101 Full Course Notes
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ECON101 Full Course Notes
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8: application: the costs of taxation: a tax on a good reduces the welfare of buyers and sellers of the good, and the reduction in consumer and producer surplus usually exceeds the revenue raised by the government. Because the elasticities of supply and demand measure how much market participants respond to market conditions, larger elasticities imply larger deadweight losses: as a tax grows larger, it distorts incentives more, and its deadweight loss grows larger. Because a tax reduces the size of a market, however, tax revenue does not continually increase. It first rises with the size of a tax, but if a tax gets large enough, tax revenue starts to fall. The fall in total surplus that results from a market distortion, such as a tax. Use the tools of welfare economics to measure the gains and losses from a tax on a good. To do this, we must take into account how the tax affects buyers/sellers and the government.

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