ECON 101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Price Ceiling, Economic Equilibrium, Demand Curve

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A price ceiling is a maximum price mandated by the government over which legal trades can not be carried out. Suppose the government mandates, for example, that the maximum price at which good x can be bought and sold is . It follows that is a limit on costs. As shown in exhibit 19, if is below the equilibrium price of good x, any or all of the following effects can occur. Shortages: the quantity demanded for good x (150) is equal to the quantity supplied (150) at the equilibrium price in exhibit 19. There is a shortage on the price ceiling. The required quantity (190) is greater than the supplied quantity (100) When there is a shortage, there is a tendency to rise to equilibrium by price and production. But when there is a price limit this tendency can not be realized because trading at the equilibrium level is unlawful.

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