PROBLEM SET 1 Pugel 12 “Questions and Problems,” pp. 31-32: 1*,2, 3♣, 4, 5♣, 6, 7♣ ♣ Answers in back of textbook ADDITIONAL PROBLEMS 1. Suppose that the domestic markets for tulips in the nations of Roseland and Chrysanthemum can be depicted by the demand and supply diagrams below: Price of Tulips per Dozen Roseland's Tulip Market $35 $30 S $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 D $0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Dozens of Tulips (Q) Chrysanthemum's Tulip Market Price per Dozen $30 S $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 D $0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Dozens of Tulips (Q) a. Assuming that the two countries decide to allow free international trade in tulips, derive the international demand curve and supply curve for tulips using the diagram below: 2 INTERNATIONAL TULIP MARKET Price per Dozen $20 $15 $10 $5 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Dozens of Tulips b. Which country imports tulips and which country exports tulips? How many tulips will be traded and what will be the price of tulips internationally? 3 2. If free trade is allowed, U.S. lumber companies make 52 billion board-feet of lumber each year, of which 42 billion board-feet are sold in the United States. The average price is $.30 per boardfoot. If lumber exports are banned by law, production (for the domestic market only) is 48 billion board-feet, and the price drops to $.25 per board-foot. This is illustrated in the graph below: Price ($ per board-foot) S Price with export ban $.30 a b c $.25 D 42 48 52 Quantity (bil. of boardfeet) a. Assuming trade is allowed, calculate the amount of exports and label in the appropriate place on the diagram above. b. Calculate the loss in producer surplus from the export ban. c. Calculate the gain in consumer surplus from the export ban. d. Does the U.S. experience a net gain or net loss if it bans exports of lumber? 4 3. Consider the graphs of the domestic markets for bread in the hypothetical countries of Leinster and Saxony: Price of bread (per loaf) Price of bread (per loaf) S $.60 a b c S $.25 D $.25 $.20 d e f D 20 50 LEINSTER 100 Q 10 60 SAXONY 90 Q a. If there is no trade allowed between the two countries, what will be the price of a loaf of bread in each country? How much will domestic residents consume and produce in each country? b. Suppose that trade is allowed and that the international price of bread settles at $.25 per loaf. Which country will export bread and which country will import bread? How can you tell? Calculate and label the exports and imports in the graphs as appropriate. c. Consider Leinster: As a result of trade (compared with no trade), is there a gain or a loss in consumer surplus? Calculate the dollar-value of the gain or loss in consumer surplus. Is there a gain or a loss in producer surplus? Calculate the dollar-value of the gain or loss in producer surplus. Is there a net gain or a net loss as a result of trade? d. Consider Saxony: As a result of trade (compared with no trade), is there a gain or a loss in consumer surplus? Calculate the dollar-value of the gain or loss in consumer surplus. Is there a gain or a loss in producer surplus? Calculate the dollar-value of the gain or loss in producer surplus. Is there a net gain or a net loss as a result of trade? 5 4. In the mid-1990’s, the United States imported about 3 billion barrels of oil per year. Perhaps it would be better for the United States if it could end the billions of dollars of payments to foreigners by not importing this oil. After all, the United States can produce its own oil (or other energy products that substitute for oil). If the United States stopped all oil imports suddenly, it would be very disruptive. But perhaps the United States could gain if it gradually restricted and then ended oil imports in an orderly transition. If we allow time for adjustments by U.S. consumers and producers of oil, then the following graph shows domestic demand and supply conditions in the United States. PRICE ($) US OIL MARKET 42 36 30 24 S 18 12 6 0 D 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 QUANTITY (bil. of barrels per year) a. With free trade and an international price of $18 per barrel, how much oil does the United States produce domestically? How much does it consume? Indicate on the graph the quantity of U.S. imports of oil. b. If the United States stopped all imports of oil (in a way that allowed enough time for orderly adjustments), how much oil would be produced in the United States? How much would be consumed? What would be the (approximate) price of oil in the United States? Show all of this on the graph. c. If the United States stopped all oil imports, which group(s) in the United States would gain? Which group(s) would lose? As appropriate, refer to your graph in your answer. 6 SELECTED ANSWERS Pugel 12, pp. 31-32 (Answers to odd-numbered problems are in the back of the textbook): 2. Producer surplus is the net gain to producers from being able to sell a product through a market. It is the difference between the lowest price at which some producer is willing to supply each unit of the product and the actual market price that is paid, summed over all units that are produced and sold. The lowest price at which someone is willing to supply the unit just covers the extra (marginal) cost of producing that unit. To measure producer surplus for a product using real world data, three major pieces of information are needed: i. The market price. ii. The quantity supplied. iii. Some information about the slope (or shape) of the supply curve. That is, how would quantity supplied change if the market price decreased? Or, what are the extra costs of producing each unit up to the actual quantity suppled? Producer surplus could then be measured as the area below the market price line. 4. The country’s demand for imports is the amount by which the country’s domestic quantity demanded exceeds the country’s domestic quantity supplied. The demand-for-imports curve is derived by finding the difference between domestic quantity demanded and domestic quantity supplied, for each possible market price for which quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied. The demand-for-imports curve shows the quantity that the country would want to import for each possible international market price. 7 6. If there were no exports of scrap iron and steel, the domestic market would clear at the price at which domestic quantity demanded equals domestic quantity supplied. This is at P1 in the diagram below. Price SUS Exports (With trade) P2 (No trade) P1 DUS Quantity of scrap iron and steel But the United States does export scrap iron and steel. The extra demand from foreign buyers increases the market price of scrap iron and steel. See P2 in the above diagram. Domestic users (consumers) of scrap iron and steel pay a higher price than they would if there were no exports. Thus, some users support a prohibition of these exports, in order to lower the market price of the scrap that they buy. 8 ADDITIONAL PROBLEMS: 1. a. 16 S (C's exports) 14 12 Price 10 8 6 D (Roseland's imports) 4 2 0 0 2 7 Exports and Imports b. Roseland imports tulips and Chrysanthemum exports tulips. This is because without trade the equilibrium price of tulips in Roseland ($15) is higher than that in Chrysanthemum (5). Thus, it would be profitable to ship tulips from Chrysanthemum to Roseland. The international price of tulips is $10 and 2 dozen are traded. 9 2. a. b. c. d. 3. Exports = 10 billion board feet at international price of $.30. Areas a + b + c = ($.05 x 42) + (½ x $.05 x 6) + (½ x 10 x $.05) = $2.1 + $.15 + $.25 = $2.5 billion. Areas a + b = = $2.1 + $.15 = $2.25 billion. Net loss because loss of producer surplus > gain in consumer surplus. a. Leinster: P = $.60, consumption and production = 50 loaves. Saxony: P = $.20, consumption and production = 60 loaves. b. Leinster will import bread because, at the international price of $.25, consumption exceeds production by 80 loaves indicating that imports must be 80 loaves. Saxony will export bread because, at the international price of $.25, production exceeds consumption by 80 loaves indicating that exports must be 80 loaves. c. Gain in consumer surplus = areas a + b + c = (a + b) + c = ($.35 x 50) + (1/2 x $.35 x 50) = $17.5 + $8.75 = $26.25 Loss in producer surplus = area a = areas (a + b) – b = $17.5 – (1/2 x 30 x $.35) = $12.25 Net gain because gain in consumer surplus ($26.25) exceeds loss in producer surplus ($12.25). d. Loss in consumer surplus = areas d + e = ($.05 x 10) + (1/2 x $.05 x 50) = $.50 + $1.25 = $1.75. Gain in producer surplus = areas (d + e) + f = $1.75 + (1/2 x 80 x $.05) = $2.00 Net gain because gain in producer surplus ($2.00) exceeds loss in consumer surplus ($1.75). 4. a. Produce 3 billion barrels per year. Consume 6 billion barrels per year. Import 3 billion barrels per year. b. The U.S. would produce and consume 4 billion barrels per year at a price of a bit over $24 per barrel. c. U.S. producers would gain from eliminating oil imports because they would produce more (4 billion barrels a year without trade compared with 3 billion with free trade) and charge a higher price (a bit more than $24 without trade compared with $18 with trade). U.S. consumers would lose because they would pay a higher price (a bit more than $24 without trade compared with $18 with trade) and consume fewer barrels of oil (4 billion barrels a year without trade compared with 6 billion with free trade).