1.3.4
Deadweight Loss & Government Intervention
Inefficiency of Price Floors and Price Ceilings
Inefficiency of Price Floors and Price Ceilings
The imposition of a price floor or a price ceiling will prevent a market from adjusting to its equilibrium price and quantity, and thus will create an inefficient outcome.


Effects of price ceilings and floors
Effects of price ceilings and floors
- The imposition of a price floor or a price ceiling will prevent a market from adjusting to its equilibrium price and quantity, and thus will create an inefficient outcome.
- This is reflected in the existence of a 'deadweight loss', which is defined as the loss in social surplus that occurs when a market produces an inefficient quantity.
,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
Price ceiling example (2 of 3)
Price ceiling example (2 of 3)
- Imagine that several firms develop a promising but expensive new drug for treating back pain. If this therapy is left to the market, the equilibrium price will be $600 per month and 20,000 people will use the drug, as shown in this diagram.
- The original level of consumer surplus is T + U and producer surplus is V + W + X.
- However, the government decides to impose a price ceiling of $400 to make the drug more affordable. At this price ceiling, firms in the market now produce only 15,000.
,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
Price ceiling example (3 of 3)
Price ceiling example (3 of 3)
- This price ceiling causes an inefficient outcome.
- The loss in social surplus that occurs when the economy produces at an inefficient quantity is called deadweight loss. In a very real sense, it is like money thrown away that benefits no one.
- The deadweight loss is the area U + W. When deadweight loss exists, it is possible for both consumer and producer surplus to be higher, in this case because the price control is blocking some suppliers and demanders from transactions they would both be willing to make.
,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
Price floor example (1 of 2)
Price floor example (1 of 2)
- This shows a price floor example using a string of struggling movie theaters, all in the same city.
,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
,h_400,q_80,w_640.png)
Price floor example (2 of 2)
Price floor example (2 of 2)
- The current equilibrium is $8 per movie ticket, with 1,800 people attending movies. The original consumer surplus is G + H + J, and producer surplus is I + K.
- The city government is worried that movie theaters will go out of business, so it decides to impose a price floor of $12 per ticket. As a result, the quantity demanded of movie tickets falls to 1,400.
- The new consumer surplus is G, and the new producer surplus is H + I. In effect, the price floor causes the area H to be transferred from consumer to producer surplus, but also causes a deadweight loss of J + K.
1Microeconomics
1.1Competitive Markets: Demand & Suply
1.2Elasticity
1.3Government Intervention
1.4Market Failure
1.4.1Types of Market Failure
1.4.2Introduction to Externalities
1.4.3Negative Externalities
1.4.4Policy for Negative Externalities
1.4.5Positive Externalities
1.4.6The Deadweight Welfare Loss of Externalities
1.4.7Case Study - The Externalities of Education
1.4.8Public Goods & the Free-Rider Problem
1.4.9Asymmetric Information
1.4.10End of Topic Test - Market Failure
1.4.11Application Questions - Market Failure
1.5HL: Theory of the Firm & Market Structures
2Macroeconomics
2.1The Level of Overall Economic Activity
2.2Aggregate Demand & Aggregate Supply
2.2.1The Aggregate Demand Curve
2.2.2Components of Aggregate Demand
2.2.3Shape of the Aggregate Demand Curve
2.2.4Shifts in Aggregate Demand
2.2.5IB Multiple Choice - Aggregate Demand
2.2.6Short & Long-Run Aggregate Supply
2.2.7Alternative Models of LRAS
2.2.8Equilibrium in the AD-AS Model
2.2.9Output Gaps & the AD-AS Model
2.3Macroeconomic Objectives
2.3.1Introduction to Unemployment
2.3.2Limitations of Unemployment
2.3.3Types of Unemployment
2.3.4Causes & Impact of Unemployment
2.3.5Defining Inflation
2.3.6Measuring Inflation
2.3.7Use of Index Numbers
2.3.8The Consumer Price Index
2.3.9Consequences of Inflation
2.3.10Causes of Inflation
2.3.11Inflation & Unemployment Tradeoff
2.3.12The Short-Run Phillips Curve
2.3.13The Long-Run Phillips Curve
2.4Economic Growth, Poverty & Inequality
2.5Fiscal Policy
2.6Monetary Policy
2.7Supply-Side Policies
3The Global Economy
3.1International Trade
3.2Exchange Rates
3.3The Balance of Payments
3.4Economic Integration
3.5Terms of Trade
3.6Economic Development
3.7The Role of Domestic & International Factors
3.8The Role of International Trade
3.9The Role of Foreign Aid
Jump to other topics
1Microeconomics
1.1Competitive Markets: Demand & Suply
1.2Elasticity
1.3Government Intervention
1.4Market Failure
1.4.1Types of Market Failure
1.4.2Introduction to Externalities
1.4.3Negative Externalities
1.4.4Policy for Negative Externalities
1.4.5Positive Externalities
1.4.6The Deadweight Welfare Loss of Externalities
1.4.7Case Study - The Externalities of Education
1.4.8Public Goods & the Free-Rider Problem
1.4.9Asymmetric Information
1.4.10End of Topic Test - Market Failure
1.4.11Application Questions - Market Failure
1.5HL: Theory of the Firm & Market Structures
2Macroeconomics
2.1The Level of Overall Economic Activity
2.2Aggregate Demand & Aggregate Supply
2.2.1The Aggregate Demand Curve
2.2.2Components of Aggregate Demand
2.2.3Shape of the Aggregate Demand Curve
2.2.4Shifts in Aggregate Demand
2.2.5IB Multiple Choice - Aggregate Demand
2.2.6Short & Long-Run Aggregate Supply
2.2.7Alternative Models of LRAS
2.2.8Equilibrium in the AD-AS Model
2.2.9Output Gaps & the AD-AS Model
2.3Macroeconomic Objectives
2.3.1Introduction to Unemployment
2.3.2Limitations of Unemployment
2.3.3Types of Unemployment
2.3.4Causes & Impact of Unemployment
2.3.5Defining Inflation
2.3.6Measuring Inflation
2.3.7Use of Index Numbers
2.3.8The Consumer Price Index
2.3.9Consequences of Inflation
2.3.10Causes of Inflation
2.3.11Inflation & Unemployment Tradeoff
2.3.12The Short-Run Phillips Curve
2.3.13The Long-Run Phillips Curve
2.4Economic Growth, Poverty & Inequality
2.5Fiscal Policy
2.6Monetary Policy
2.7Supply-Side Policies
3The Global Economy
3.1International Trade
3.2Exchange Rates
3.3The Balance of Payments
3.4Economic Integration
3.5Terms of Trade
3.6Economic Development
3.7The Role of Domestic & International Factors
3.8The Role of International Trade
3.9The Role of Foreign Aid
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