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Chapter 4 Extensions of Demand and Supply Analysis. Introduction. In recent years, shoppers have experienced a type of “sticker shock” when they find that prices of used cars are only slightly lower than prices of new models.
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Introduction In recent years, shoppers have experienced a type of “sticker shock” when they find that prices of used cars are only slightly lower than prices of new models. You can use the concept of simultaneous shifts in supply and demand to explain why we observe this outcome in the vehicle market. Chapter 4 will show you how to represent the effects of a simultaneous change in supply and demand.
Learning Objectives • Discuss the essential features of the price system • Evaluate the effects of changes in demand and supply on the market price and equilibrium quantity • Understand the rationing function of prices
Learning Objectives (cont'd) • Explain the effects of price ceilings • Explain the effects of price floors • Describe various types of government-imposed quantity restrictions on markets
Chapter Outline • The Price System and Markets • Changes in Demand and Supply • The Rationing Function of Prices • The Policy of Government-Imposed Price Controls • The Policy of Controlling Rents • Price Floors in Agriculture • Price Floors in the Labor Market • Quantity Restrictions
Did You Know That ... • A coffee shortage exists in Venezuela? • This country, with its traditionally high levels of coffee production and consumption, now faces a situation in which the quantity of coffee demanded exceeds the quantity supplied. • The shortage results from a price ceiling that prevents the price from rising to its equilibrium level.
The Price System and Markets • Price System or Market System • An economic system in which relative prices are constantly changing to reflect changes in supply and demand • The prices are signals as to what is relatively scarce and relatively abundant • Prices provide information to individuals and businesses
The Price System and Markets (cont'd) • Voluntary Exchange • An act of trading between individuals in the price system • Makes both parties to the trade subjectively better off
The Price System and Markets (cont'd) • Transaction Costs • All of the costs associated with exchange • Including: • The informational costs of finding out the price and quality, service record, and durability of a product • The cost of contracting and enforcing that contract
The Price System and Markets (cont'd) • The role of middlemen • Middlemen (intermediaries) or brokers reduce transaction costs by providing information to buyers and sellers • Examples • Real estate brokers • Stock brokers • Consignment shops • Car dealerships
Example: Linking Businesses to Customers on the Go via QR Apps • Many small businesses arrange for customers to order products through QR apps. • For example, you might be able to use your smartphone to order a cup of coffee before you even arrive at the local coffee shop. • The middlemen companies who provide these QR apps facilitate the process of linking firms with their customers.
Changes in Demand and Supply • Changes in supply and demand create a disequilibrium. • The market price and quantity adjust to a new equilibrium.
Figure 4-1 Shifts in Demand and in Supply: Determinate Results, Panel (a)
Figure 4-1 Shifts in Demand and in Supply: Determinate Results, Panel (b)
Figure 4-1 Shifts in Demand and in Supply: Determinate Results, Panel (c)
Figure 4-1 Shifts in Demand and in Supply: Determinate Results, Panel (d)
Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) • Summary • Increases in demand increase equilibrium price and quantity • Decreases in demand decrease equilibrium price and quantity
Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) • Summary • Increases in supply decrease equilibrium price and increase equilibrium quantity • Decreases in supply increase equilibrium price and decrease equilibrium quantity
Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) • When both demand and supply change • If both the supply and demand curves shift simultaneously, the outcome is indeterminate for either equilibrium price or equilibrium quantity • The resulting effect depends upon how much each curve shifts
Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) • When both demand & supply increase • Change in equilibrium price is indeterminate • Equilibrium quantity increases unambiguously • When both demand & supply decrease • Change in equilibrium price is indeterminate • Equilibrium quantity decreases unambiguously
Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) • When supply decreases & demand increases • Equilibrium price increases • The change in the equilibrium quantity is uncertain without more information • When supply increases & demand decreases • Equilibrium price decreases • The change in the equilibrium quantity is uncertain without more information
International Example: What Accounts for the Rising Price of Shipping Containers? • We can identify several reasons for the recent rise in prices of shipping containers. • One reason is that many containers purchased were originally purchased in 2001, and as they have now reached the end of their useful life, they must be replaced. • This is illustrated by the graph on the next slide.
Figure 4-2 The Effects of a Simultaneous Decrease in Shipping Container Supply and Increase in Shipping Container Demand
International Example: What Accounts for the Rising Price of Shipping Containers? (cont’d) • There have also been decreases in the supply of shipping containers. • Many shipping containers were lost in the tsunami of 2011. • The price of steel, an important input for the manufacture of shipping containers, has increased by 7 percent. • Taken together, these supply and demand shifts have caused a higher equilibrium price for shipping containers.
Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) Price Flexibility • Prices quite flexible in some markets can be less flexible in other market scenarios. • May take the form of subtle adjustments such as hidden payments, quality changes • May not reach equilibrium right away
Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) • Adjustment speed • Market characteristics influence adjustment speed • Markets may overshoot in the adjustment process • Markets are subject to energy shocks, labor strikes, severe weather
The Rationing Function of Prices • Synchronization of decisions of buyers and sellers that leads to equilibrium is called the rationing function of prices
The Rationing Function of Prices (cont'd) • Methods of non-price rationing • Rationing by queues (waiting in line) • Rationing by random assignment or coupons
Example: An Airline Boarding Lottery • Airline passengers have an incentive to take more carry-on bags, now that fees are charged for checked luggage. • Under the traditional boarding procedure, passengers at the rear of the plane board first, and many of them tend to place their carry-ons in compartments at the front of the aircraft cabin. • What problem has resulted from this boarding arrangement?
Example: An Airline Boarding Lottery (cont’d) • The difficulty is that passengers in the front of the plane often have to scramble to find a free luggage compartment. • American Airlines has circumvented this problem by assigning boarding-group numbers randomly, rather than by boarding the rear of the plane first. • This change has speeded up the boarding process by several minutes.
The Rationing Function of Prices (cont'd) • The essential role of rationing • Implied by the presence of scarcity • Price vs. non-price rationing mechanism: • Price rationing leads to the most efficient use of available resources • All gains from mutually beneficial trade are captured in a freely rationing price system
The Policy of Government-Imposed Price Controls • Price Controls • Government-mandated minimum or maximum prices • Price Ceiling • A legal maximum price • Price Floor • A legal minimum price
The Policy of Government-Imposed Price Controls (cont'd) • Price ceiling and black markets • A price ceiling may prevent the equilibrium price from being achieved if it is above the ceiling price • A price ceiling that is set below the market clearing price creates a shortage
The Policy of Government-Imposed Price Controls (cont'd) • Non-Price Rationing Devices • All methods used to ration scarce goods that are price-controlled • Black Market • A market in which price-controlled goods are sold at an illegally high price
International Policy Example: Multiple Price Ceilings Lead to Electricity Rationing in China • In China, two key sources of electricity are coal and diesel fuel used to power generators. • However, both of these items are subject to price ceilings. • There are also price ceilings imposed on electricity provided by power companies. • As a consequence, much of China experiences “brownouts” when the flow of electricity is reduced.
The Policy of Controlling Rents • The functions of rental prices • Promote the efficient maintenance and construction of housing • Allocate existing housing • Ration the use of housing
The Policy of Controlling Rents (cont'd) • Rent controls and construction • Controls discourage construction • With a 16% vacancy rate and no controls, Dallas recently built 11,000 new rental units • With a 1.6% vacancy rate and controls, San Francisco recently built 2,000 new rental units
The Policy of Controlling Rents (cont'd) • Effects on the existing supply of housing and current use of housing • Property owners cannot recover costs • Maintenance, repairs, capital improvements • Rations the current use of housing • Reduces mobility, e.g., New York’s “housing gridlock”
The Policy of Controlling Rents (cont'd) • Attempts to evade rent controls • Forcing tenants to leave • Tenants subletting apartments • Housing courts
The Policy of Controlling Rents (cont'd) • Who wins and who loses from rent controls? • Losers • Property owners • Low-income individuals • Winners • Upper-income professionals
Price Floors in Agriculture • Support Price • The government chooses a price floor for a product and then acts to ensure that the price of the product never falls below the support level • Associated with many agricultural products • A price floor that is set above the market clearing price results in a surplus.
Price Floors in Agriculture (cont'd) • Questions • How could the government keep the price from falling? • Who benefits from agricultural price supports?
What If . . . the government decides to “help dairy farmers” by imposing a price floor in the market for milk that is above the equilibrium price? • A price floor imposed above the equilibrium price would lead to an increase in the quantity of milk supplied and a decrease in the quantity demanded. • To maintain the price floor, the government would have to purchase the surplus of milk. • Indeed, dairy farmers would benefit, but consumers would end up paying higher prices for milk.
Price Floors in the Labor Market • Minimum Wage • A wage floor, legislated by government, setting the lowest hourly wage rate that firms may legally pay their workers
Policy Example: A Higher Minimum Wage Translates into Fewer Employed Teens • The federal minimum wage was increased in three steps from $5.15 to $7.25 per hour between 2007 and 2009. • This legislation had little effect in 18 states where market wages already exceeded $7.25 per hour. • In the other 32 states, however, the wage increases caused a drop of 114,000 in the total number of teenagers employed.
Quantity Restrictions • Governments can impose quantity restrictions, most obvious—banning ownership or trading of a good • Human organs • Drugs • Hospital beds • Gold from 1933 to 1973
Quantity Restrictions (cont'd) • Government Prohibitions and Licensing Requirements • Some commodities cannot be purchased at all legally; others require a license • Import Quota • Supply restriction that prohibits the importation of more than a specified quantity of a particular good