Title: Microeconomics and Policy Analysis PUAF 640
1Microeconomics and Policy Analysis PUAF 640
- Professor Randi Hjalmarsson
- Fall 2009
- Lecture 2
2Class Outline Supply and Demand 2- Chapter
3.3, 11.2, 11.3
- Concept Review Lecture 1
- Mathematical Representation of Supply and Demand
- Consumer and Producer Surplus measures of
welfare - Elasticity measures of sensitivity
- Excise tax
3Brief Review of Concepts
- Why are there Braille dots on keypad buttons of
drive up cash machines? (EN) - Most people who use the drive up machines are not
blind. - Apply cost-benefit principle.
- Need to compare the costs of producing two types
of machines to the benefits. (More expensive to
make two types of machines and not much benefit
to users). - Producers, in general, have no incentive to add a
product feature unless it enhances the products
value to consumers by more than enough to cover
its costs.
4Similar questions for you to think about
- Why can laptops, but not most other appliances,
operate on any countrys electrical standard?
(EN) - Why do 24-hour convenience stores have locks on
their doors? (EN) - Why are newspapers but not soft drinks sold in
vending machines that allow customers to take
more units out than they pay for? (EN)
5Supply/Demand Review
- Why do bars often charge patrons for water but
give peanuts for free? (EN) - Primary bar product is alcohol. What are
relationships between alcohol and peanuts and
water? - Alcohol and peanuts are complements. Get people
to consume more peanuts and their demand for
alcohol will shift out. - Alcohol and water are substitutes. If people
consume water, then demand for alcohol will shift
in. - Give customers an incentive to consume peanuts
and disincentive to consume water.
6Mathematical Representation of Supply and Demand
- Typically (problem sets), you will see S/D
equations in two forms. - Quantity as a function of price.
- Price as a function of quantity.
- You should be able to work with both forms!
- Graph the curves.
- Solve for equilibrium price and quantity.
7- Quantity as a function of price
- Price as a function of quantity
8Solving for the equilibrium
- Set both equations equal to each other.
- Let QDQS and solve. Report Q and P.
- QDQS
- 3500 1750 P 1400 250P
- 2100 1750P 250P (Substract 1400 from both
sides) - 2100 2000P (Add 1750P to both sides)
- P 2100/2000 1.05
- QS 1400 250P 1400 250(1.05)
- Q 1662.5 (Plug P into original S or D
equation.)
9Graphing the same problem
P
S
2.00
1.05
D
Q
3500
1400
1662.5
10In-Class Exercise
- Given
- Solve for inverse supply and demand.
- Solve for the market clearing equilibrium.
11Consumer Surplus (CS)
- Total amount a consumer is willing to pay minus
the actual price the consumer does pay for the
good. - CS Pw - Pmarket (at each unit of Q)
- Intuition Basically the difference between
willingness to pay and what you did pay. - Consumer surplus is therefore a measure of
consumer satisfaction! - How well off is the consumer?
12Graphical Representation of CS
- Demand curve indicates your willingness to pay
- CS Area under demand curve but above the market
price. - What happens to consumer surplus if price changes?
P
S
CS
P
D
Q
Q
13Lets consider a quota at QQ
- Consumers willing to pay P at Q.
- How much will consumers pay for QQ?
- PQ
- Quota like vertical supply.
- So price ?, quantity ?.
- What happens to CS?
- Decreases.
- Where did lost CS go?
- Rectangle to producer for each unit that he
previous sold for P, he now gets PQ. - Dead weight loss pure waste in CS induced by an
increase in price above efficient level. Nobody
gets welfare from units between QQand Q
CS2
P
S
CS1
PQ
To the producer
P
Deadweight loss
D
QQ
Q
Q
14Producer Surplus
- Total price determined by the market less what
the producer would have been willing to sell the
product at. - Intuition Difference between the price the
supplier gets and the price he would have been
willing to sell at. - Again, a measure of satisfaction.
- PS Area above supply curve but below market
price.
P
S
CS
P
D
PS
Q
Q
15Elasticity
- How responsive is demand to changes in price?
- Use concept of price elasticity of demand.
- X and P are the starting values (a specific point
on the demand curve) - Elasticity tells us the percentage change in the
quantity demanded of X due to a percentage change
in the price of X. - This is own price elasticity of demand.
16Elasticity Example
- What is elasticity of demand?
- How do you interpret this?
- A 1 decrease in price yields a .8 increase in
the quantity demanded. - Elasticity does not equal slope!
- Slope (8-10)/(29-25)-.5
- Initial Point x1 25, P1 10
- Suppose P decreases to 8 and x increases to 29.
P
10
8
D
25
29
x
17What if starting point were different?
- Let P8,X29 be starting point or P1, X1.
- What is the elasticity?
- Elasticity is not constant along a demand curve!
- What sign will elasticity have?
- Always (by definition).
P
10
8
D
25
29
x
18Elasticity Along a Linear Demand Curve
- Elasticity is not constant along a demand curve,
even a linear demand curve. - Elasticity at C?
- 0
- Elasticity at A?
- Infinity
- Elasticity at B (some point)?
- 1
- Location of this point depends on slope of the
demand curve.
P
A
Elasticity gt1
B
Elasticity lt1
C
x
19Also Use Elasticity to Characterize Demand Curve
- Inelastic Demand E lt 1 along majority of demand
curve - Quantity demanded is not very sensitive to change
in price. - A 1 increase in price yields a less than 1
decrease in quantity demanded. - Large change in price yields small change in
quantity. - Steep demand curve!
P
D
x
20Characterizing Demand Curves
- Elastic Demand E gt 1 along majority of demand
curve - Quantity demanded is relatively sensitive to
change in price. - A 1 increase in price yields a more than 1
decrease in quantity demanded. - Small change in price yields large change in X.
- Relatively flat demand curves!
P
D
x
21Special Cases
- Perfectly Inelastic E 0
- There is no change in quantity demanded for a 1
change in price. - Vertical demand curve.
- Perfectly Elastic E ? 8
- If price increases just a little, quantity
demanded falls to zero. - Horizontal demand curve.
- Example - 10 banknote. Nobody wants to pay
10.01 for it.
22What determines how responsive quantity is to
price (elasticity)?
- Substitutes
- Presence of close substitutes ? more elastic.
- Example Describe demand for Hondas.
- Increase in price of Hondas may result in
consumers defecting to Toyotas (close
substitute). So, expect a large change in
quantity demanded of Hondas. - Relatively elastic/horizontal demand curve.
- Example Describe demand for insulin.
- Has no close substitutes.
- Increase in price results in little change in
quantity demanded since there is no choice. - Relatively inelastic/vertical demand curve.
23What determines elasticity?
- Commoditys share in consumers budget.
- In general, the smaller the fraction of income
absorbed by a commodity, the less elastic (more
vertical) the demand curve, all else equal. - Example metro tickets.
- Expect fairly inelastic demand, since ticket
price is very small share of budget. - Example cars.
- Expect more elastic demand, since cost of car is
larger share of budget.
24What determines elasticity?
- Time frame of the analysis.
- Consider commuter rail prices.
- In the short run
- People have little alternative. So, demand is
relatively inelastic. - In the long run
- People can move, find a car pool, buy a car,
change jobs, etc. They have time to adjust. So,
demand is more elastic. - As time frame widens, demand tends to be more
elastic.
25Other types of elasticity
- Own price elasticity of demand
- Cross price elasticity of demand
- change in quantity demanded of X due to 1
increase in price of Y. - Measures relationship between goods.
- Substitutes
- gt0
- Complements
- lt0
- Unrelated
- 0
- There is no (-) sign we care about the sign!
26Other types of elasticity
- Income elasticity of demand
- change in quantity demanded of X due to 1
increase in income. - Sign matters!
- Normal good
- if gt0.
- Inferior good
- if lt0.
- Luxury good
- if gt1.
- Examples
- Furs, diamonds, (the obvious)
- Restaurant meals
- Taxis
27Taxes in the S/D Framework
- Excise taxes per unit tax legally levied on
either consumers (sales tax) or producers
(production tax). - Tax incidence
- Statutory incidence who is legally liable for
the tax. - Economic incidence who actually bears the
burden. - For instance, if a tax is placed on a producer,
does he pass on the entire burden to the consumer?
28Per Unit Consumer Tax
- Acts like per unit sales tax.
- Shifts demand curve down by the amount of the
tax. - Why?
- Initially willing to pay P0 (in total) for Q0.
- With a tax of t, now willing to pay P0-t to
producer (and t to government). - Still P0 in total.
- Can make same type of statement for each point on
demand curve. - For any consumer to be willing to buy what she
did before, the market price of the good must be
lower by the amount of the tax.
P
S0
P0
t
P0-t
D0
D1
Q0
Q
29Per Unit Consumer Tax (contd)
- Tax creates a wedge between the price that
producers receive, P1, and the price that
consumers pay, P1 t. - P1 is the new market price.
- But consumer must pay t on top of that.
- How does equilibrium change with the tax?
- Q1 lt Q0.
- Price suppliers get P1 lt P0.
- Price consumers pay P1t gt P0.
- So economic incidence is shared by consumers and
producers!
P
S
P1t
P0
P1
D1
D0
Q0
Q1
Q
30The effect on consumer and producer surplus
- CS1 is area under initial demand and above total
price paid - Equivalent to area under new demand and above new
market price. - CS decreases.
- PS1 is area above supply and below new market
price, P1. - PS decreases.
- Where do lost CS/PS go?
P
CS1
S
CS0
P1t
P0
PS0
P1
PS1
D1
D0
Q0
Q1
Q
31Effect of tax on CS/PS (contd)
- Some of lost CS/PS goes to the government
- Tax Revenue tQ1
- Remaining triangle is deadweight loss.
- Nobody (consumer, producer, or government) gets
welfare from the units between Q0 and Q1. - Total surplus decreases.
- TS0 CS0PS0
- TS1 CS1PS1Govt Rev
- TS0 TS1 DW
P
S
CS1
Govt Revenue
P1t
DW Loss
P0
P1
PS1
D1
D0
Q0
Q1
Q
32Tax burden depends on elasticity
- Who bears the burden when there is perfectly
elastic supply? - Producer gets same price before and after tax.
- Entire burden is born by the consumer.
- PS 0 before and after.
- Lost CS goes to govt and DW loss
CS0 - orange
CS1 orange striped
P
Tax revenue orange dots
P1t
t
S
P0
P1
D1
D0
Q
Q0
Q1
33Who bears the burden with perfectly inelastic
supply?
- Consumer faces same pre and post price. CS does
not change. - PS decreases.
- All of lost PS goes to government. (See remaining
solid shaded rectangle) - No deadweight loss.
- Economic incidence is completely on the producer
even though statutory incidence is on consumer.
P
S
P0
P1t
t
P1
D0
Q
Q0
PS0 grey rectangle
PS1 striped rectangle
34Elasticity and Economic Incidence
- In general, the party (consumer or producer) with
the less elastic curve will bear the greater the
burden of the tax.
35A production tax
- Works pretty much the same way.
- Think of tax like extra cost of production.
- Shifts supply curve up.
- Since firm pays t to the government, would only
produce Q0 if receive P0t from consumer. - What is new equilibrium?
S1
P
S0
t
P0t
P0
D0
Q0
Q
36Production tax (contd)
- As with consumer tax, equilibrium quantity
decreases. - P1 market price paid by consumer to producer.
- Consumer faces higher P.
- P1 t total price received by producer
(receives P1 and gives t to government) - Rectangle is tax revenue.
S1
P
S0
t
P1
P0
P1-t
D0
Q0
Q1
Q
37Sin Tax Example old midterm example
- A couple of years ago, Congress proposed to
finance the additional cost of expanding SCHIP
(child health insurance program) by increasing
the federal excise tax on cigarettes by 61 cents,
to 1 per pack. - Sin taxes such as these are commonly used by the
government to - ? consumption of the so-called sinful good
- ? government revenue.
- Will a sin tax of this sort accomplish its two
aims? Why or why not? Does your answer depend on
the segment of the population that you are
considering? Discuss.
38- Tax effectiveness depends on elasticity of
demand. - Very inelastic demand ? consumption not very
sensitive to a tax - Elastic demand ? consumption very sensitive to
the tax
39- Complete answer would discuss determinants of
elasticities (and how they might differ across
different segments of the population). - Chain smoker perfectly inelastic? No change in
consumption, substantial govt revenue - Addict relatively inelastic Small decrease in
consumption, substantial govt revenue - Teen smokers relatively elastic not yet
addicted and cigarettes make up large part of
budget, large decrease in consumption but raise
less revenue
40- Another example see alcopops article