ECON1101 Lecture 5: Chapter 5

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Chapter 5: government intervention: the cost of interfering with market forces: Any government intervention that prevents a market from reaching its equilibrium price must have a negative effect on total surplus. Price ceiling represents a maximum allowable price imposed by the government. The price ceiling forces the price down, creating excess demand. The buyers with the highest willingness to pay can acquire the good at a lower cost p(cid:396)i(cid:272)e, thus the su(cid:396)plus i(cid:374)(cid:272)(cid:396)eases to (cid:894)a(cid:396)ea a(cid:859)(cid:895) (cid:272)o(cid:373)pa(cid:396)ed to thei(cid:396) su(cid:396)plus (cid:271)efo(cid:396)e the price ceiling (area a). However, a certain group of consumers will be left unserved after the price ceiling is introduced since the reduction in price results in a decrease in the quantity supplied. The amount of surplus lost is area b (the pink area in the picture below). Furthermore, producers are also worse off as their initial supply (area c) is larger tha(cid:374) the fi(cid:374)al o(cid:374)e (cid:894)a(cid:396)ea c(cid:859)) (picture below).

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