ECON10011 Chapter 4.3: Week 5 - Government Price Setting - Microeconomics 10011 Notes

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4 Oct 2017
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Chapter 4: economic efficiency, government price setting and taxes (continued) While economic surplus (the net benefit to society) is greatest at competitive equilibrium, any individual producer would rather receive a higher price, and any consumer would rather buy at a lower price. Producers or consumers dissatisfied with the competitive equilibrium can lobby the government to legally require that a different price be charged. Price floor example: government policy in agricultural markets. Case: great depression, farmers could only sell their products at very low prices, they asked the government to intervene, the federal government set price floors for many agricultural products, like wheat and corn. Without price floor: price without government intervention (equilibrium price) . 50, quantity demanded = quantity supplied = 2 billion wheat bushels. With price floor (of . 00): minimum legal price becomes . 00, quantity demanded = 1. 8 billion bushels/year, quantity supplied = 2. 2 billion bushels/year. *surplus of supply of 0. 4 billion bushels of wheat (quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded)

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