24.12.2014 Views

Daniel l. Rubinfeld

Daniel l. Rubinfeld

Daniel l. Rubinfeld

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

290 Part 2 Producers, Consumers, and Competitive Markets<br />

9 The Analysis of Competitive Markets 291<br />

Price<br />

Deadweight Loss<br />

I<br />

5<br />

pay, tha~ is lost because of th~ reduction in output from Qo to Q/ The net<br />

change 111 consumer surplus IS therefore A B. In Figure 9.2, because rectangle<br />

A is larger than triangle B, we know that the net chanae in consumer<br />

. . . b<br />

surplus IS posItive.<br />

Z. Change in Producer Surplus: With price controls, some producers (those<br />

with relatively lower costs) 'will stay in the market but will receive a lower<br />

price for their output, while other producers vvillieave the market. Both<br />

groupS will lose producer surplus. Those producers who remain in the market<br />

and produce quanti~ Ql are now receiving a lower price. They have lost<br />

the producer surplus gIven by rectangle A. However, total production has<br />

also dropped. The purple-shaded triangle C measures the additional loss of<br />

producer surplus for those producers who have left the market and those<br />

who have stayed in the market but are producing less. Therefore, the total<br />

change in producer surplus is - A - C. Producers clearly lose as a result of<br />

price controls. -<br />

Price<br />

o<br />

The price of a good has been regulated to be no higher than P max' which is below<br />

market-clearing price Po. TI1e gain to consumers is the difference between<br />

A and triangle B. The loss to producers is the sum of rectangle A and trian<br />

Triangles B and C together measure the deadweight loss from price controls.<br />

5<br />

of Chapter 2. The govermnent makes it illegal for producers to charge more than<br />

a ceiling price set below the market-clearing level. Recall that by decreasing pm·<br />

duction and increasing the quantity demanded, such a price ceiling creates a<br />

shortage (excess demand).<br />

Figure 9.2 replicates Figure 2.22, except that it also shows the changes in consumer<br />

and producer surplus that result from the government price-control policy<br />

Let's go through these changes step by step.<br />

1. Change in Consumer Surplus: Some consumers are worse off as a result of<br />

the policy, and others are better off. The ones who are vwrse off are those<br />

who have been rationed out of the market because of the reduction in<br />

duction and sales from Qo to Ql' Other consumers, however, can still<br />

chase the good (perhaps because they are in the right place at the right<br />

or are willing to wait in line). These consumers are better off because<br />

can buy the good at a lower price (P max rather than Po)·<br />

How lI111clz better off or worse off is each group The consumers who<br />

still buy the good enjoy an increase in consumer surplus, which is given<br />

the blue-shaded rectangle A. This rectangle measures the reduction of<br />

in each unit times the number of units consumers are able to buy at<br />

lower price. On the other hand, those consumers who can no longer buy the<br />

good lose surplus; their loss is given by the green-shaded triangle B. This<br />

angle m.easures the value to consumers, net of what they would have had to<br />

Por------------+-------=~<br />

demand is sufficiently inelastic, triangle B can be larger than rectangle A. In this<br />

Lease, consumers suffer a net loss from price controls.<br />

1Il()sthi(7~I~sl~~1ing h:re that those consumers who are able to buy the good are the ones that value it<br />

anal B" .' r thiS \\ ere not the case, the amount of lost consumer surplus \\'ould be laraer than trioe<br />

. 0

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!