Macroeconomics ECON 2301 Fall 2009 Marilyn Spencer, Ph.D. Professor of Economics Chapter 4 Out-of-Class Quiz #1 By 5 p.m., Monday, May 17: 1. Create an Islander email account. 2. Email me so that I will have your email address. Include your name and your course & section numbers. My email address is marilyn.spencer@tamucc.edu. 4 points Exam 1, May 19 Study Chapters 1 – 4. Come to the exam prepared to use one of the following choices: 1. Textbook & notes 2. 3”x5” card 3. Only your brains & a pencil Scantron sheet will be provided. Chapter 4: Extensions of Demand and Supply Analysis Learning Objectives 1. Discuss the essential features of the price system 2. Evaluate the effects of changes in demand and supply on the market price and equilibrium quantity 3. Understand the rationing function of prices 4. Explain the effects of price ceilings 5. Explain the effects of price floors 6. Describe various types of government-imposed quantity restrictions on markets Changes in Demand and Supply Changes in supply and demand create a disequilibrium. The market price and quantity adjust to a new equilibrium. Review of The D Side of the Mkt.: Variables That SHIFT Market Demand 1. Price of related goods Substitutes Goods and services that can be used for the same purpose. Complements Goods that are used together. 2. Income Normal good A good for which the demand increases as income rises and decreases as income falls. Inferior good A good for which the demand increases as income falls, and decreases as income rises. The Demand Side of the Market Variables That Shift Market Demand 3. Tastes 4. Population and demographics Demographics The characteristics of a population with respect to age, race, and gender. 5. Expectations When two goods, X and Y, are complements, which of the following occurs? a. An increase in the price of good X leads to an increase in the price of good Y. b. An increase in the price of good X leads to a decrease in the quantity demanded of good Y. c. An increase in the price of good X leads to a decrease in the quantity demanded of good Y. d. An increase in the price of good X leads to an increase in the quantity demanded of good Y. The Demand Side of the Market Variables That Shift Market Demand 3-1 Variables That Shift Market Demand Curves The Demand Side of the Market Variables That Shift Market Demand 3 - 1 (continued) Variables That Shift Market Demand Curves Refer to the graph below. Which of the following moves best describes what happens when a change in the price of printers affects the market demand for printers? a. b. c. d. A move from A to B. A move from A to C. Either move from A to B or A to C. None of the above. 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) Which of the following defines a supply curve? a. The quantity of a good or service that a firm is willing to supply at a given price. b. A table that shows the relationship between the price of a product and the quantity of the product supplied. c. A curve that shows the relationship between the price of a product and the quantity of the product supplied. d. None of the above. The Supply Side of the Market The Law of Supply Law of supply Holding everything else constant, increases in price cause increases in the quantity supplied, and decreases in price cause decreases in the quantity supplied. The Supply Side of the Market Variables That Shift Supply 1. Price of inputs 2. Technological change A positive or negative change in the ability of a firm to produce a given level of output with a given amount of inputs. 3. Prices of substitutes in production 4. Expected future prices 5. Number of firms in the market The Supply Side of the Market Variables That Shift Supply 3-2 Variables That Shift Market Supply Curves The Supply Side of the Market Variables That Shift Supply Variables That Shift Market 3 - 2 (continued) Supply Curves The Supply Side of the Market Variables That Shift Supply Refer to the graphs below. Each graph refers to the supply for printers. Which best describes the impact of an increase in productivity? a. The graph on the left. b. The graph on the right. c. Both graphs. d. Neither graph. 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) The Falling Price of Large Flat-Screen Televisions Corning’s breakthrough spurred the manufacture of LCD televisions in Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan, and an eventual decline in price. Changes in Demand and Supply Changes in supply and demand create a disequilibrium. The market price and quantity adjust to a new equilibrium. Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) Summary Increases in demand increase equilibrium price and quantity. Decreases in demand decrease equilibrium price and quantity. Increases in supply decrease equilibrium price and increase quantity. Decreases in supply increase equilibrium price and decrease quantity. When BOTH Demand & Supply Are Shifting: High Demand and Low Prices in the Lobster Market: Supply and demand for lobster both increase in summer, but the supply increase EXCEEDS the demand increase; therefore, equilibrium price falls. Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) When both demand and supply increase: Change in price is indeterminate Quantity will increase When both demand and supply decrease: Change in price is indeterminate Quantity will decrease Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) When supply decreases and demand increases: Price will increase Change in quantity is indeterminate When supply increases and demand decreases: Price will decrease Change in quantity is indeterminate Remember: A Change in a Good’s Price Does Not Cause the Demand or Supply Curve to Shift. Changes in Demand and Supply (cont'd) Price Flexibility and Adjustment Speed Prices quite flexible in unfettered markets can be less flexible in other market scenarios. May experience indirect 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. Example: Why Gasoline Prices Increased over the Past Year One factor: an increase in international demand, shown by a rightward shift in the demand curve Another factor: a reduction in supply, shown by a leftward shift in the supply curve As a result, the equilibrium price of gasoline increased. Prices are now falling. Why??? The Price System and Markets (cont'd) Transaction Costs: The costs associated with exchange Examples • Price shopping • Determining quality • Determining reliability • Service availability • Cost of contracting The Rationing Function of Prices Methods of non-price rationing include: Rationing by queues (waiting in line) Rationing by random assignment, and/or coupons First come, first served Political power Physical force Random assignment Coupons The Rationing Function of Prices (cont'd) The essential role of rationing (with scarcity rationing must occur) We must choose the rationing mechanism: price or non-price. • Price rationing leads to most efficient use of available resources; all gains from mutually beneficial trade are captured. The Rationing Function of Prices (cont'd) Question If price rationing is the most efficient is it the “best” way to ration? Answer Economists cannot say which system is “best.” They can say rationing via the price system leads to the most efficient use of available resources. One Type of Government Policy: Imposed Price Controls Price Controls: Government-mandated minimum or maximum prices Price Ceiling: A legal maximum price Price Floor: A legal minimum price Government-Imposed Price Controls (cont'd) Price ceiling and illegal (black) markets Price ceilings may prevent the equilibrium price from being achieved if it is above the ceiling price. Black Market: A market in which price- controlled goods are sold at an illegally high price Figure 4-3 Black Markets The Policy of Controlling Rents The functions of rental prices: 1. Promote the efficient maintenance and construction of housing 2. Allocate existing housing 3. 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 gains and who loses from rent controls? Losers • Property owners • Some low-income individuals Gainers • Upper-income professionals Price Floors in Agriculture Support Price: The governmentally established price floor • Usually associated with agricultural products • Later we’ll study the minimum wage with this same analysis Figure 4-4 Agricultural Price Supports Price Floors in Agriculture (cont'd) Questions How could the government keep the price from falling? Who benefits from agricultural price supports? Policy Example: King Cotton Receives Royal Government Subsidies Every year, the federal government gives a direct payment based on the average size of the farmer’s past planting. After the crop is planted, the farmer can borrow from the government, using the newly sown cotton as collateral. If the world price of cotton falls below a price floor of 65 cents per pound, the grower receives a payment from the government--compensating the farmer for surplus cotton the farmer has planted—equal to 13 cents per pound. If the world price of cotton falls below 52 cents per pound, farmers turn their cotton over to the government, which sells the cotton at the world price and absorbs loan losses. Thus the government usually provides about 80% of all revenues received by cotton farmers. What would happen to cotton farmers’ revenues if the price floor were raised? Lowered? 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 Figure 4-5 The Effect of Minimum Wages 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 Summary of Learning Objectives Essential features of the price system A price system (market system) allows prices to respond to changes in supply and demand for different commodities. The terms of exchange – prices - are communicated in markets, tending to minimize transactions costs. Summary of Learning Objectives (cont'd) How changes in demand and supply affect market price and equilibrium quantity Increases in demand increase equilibrium price and quantity; decreases in demand decrease equilibrium price and quantity. Increases in supply decrease market price and increase equilibrium quantity; decreases in supply increase market price and decrease equilibrium quantity. When both demand and supply shift at the same time, the result is indeterminate. Summary Discussion of Learning Objectives (cont'd) The rationing function of prices In a market system, prices ration scarce goods and services. Other ways of rationing include first come, first served; political power; physical force; random assignment; and coupons. Summary Discussion of Learning Objectives (cont'd) The effects of price ceilings A price ceiling set below the market (equilibrium) price results in a shortage. • The resulting shortage can lead to non-price rationing devices and black markets. The effects of price floors If the price floor is set above the market price, a surplus results. • A price floor can take the form of a governmentimposed price support or minimum wage. Summary Discussion of Learning Objectives (cont'd) The rationing function of prices In a market system, prices ration scarce goods and services. Other ways of rationing include first come, first served; political power; physical force; random assignment; and coupons. The effects of price ceilings A price ceiling set below the market (equilibrium) price results in a shortage. The resulting shortage can lead to non-price rationing devices and black markets. Summary Discussion of Learning Objectives (cont'd) The effects of price floors If the price floor is set above the market price, a surplus results. A price floor can take the form of a government-imposed price support or minimum wage. Government-imposed restrictions on market quantities Bans on sale or ownership Licensing restrictions Import quotas Assignments to be completed before class, May 19: Study for Exam 1! Pre-read Ch.6 & look over end-of-chapter questions: 14th ed: Problems 6-2, 6-4, 6-6, 6-10 & 6-12, pp. 156-158 15th ed: Problems 6-2, 6-4, 6-8, 6-12 & 6-14, pp. 156-158