Unit 6 - : More On Markets in Action
Unit 6 - : More On Markets in Action
Unit 6 - : More On Markets in Action
MARKETS IN ACTION
The time spent looking for someone with whom to do business is called search
activity. We spend some time in search activity almost every time we buy
something. You want the latest hot CD, and you know four stores that stock it. But
which store has the best deal? You need to spend a few minutes on the telephone
finding out. In some markets, we spend a lot of time searching.
An example is the housing market in which we spend a lot of time checking the
alternatives available before making a choice.
But when a price is regulated and there is a shortage, search activity increases. In
the case of a rent-controlled housing market, frustrated would be renters scan the
newspapers, not only for housing ads but also for death notices! Any information
about newly available housing is useful.
And they race to be first on the scene when news of a possible supplier breaks.
2. BLACK MARKETS
A black market is an illegal parallel market in which the price exceeds the legally
imposed price ceiling. It occurs in rent-controlled housing, and often in ticket sales
for big sporting events and rock concerts. When rent ceilings are in force,
frustrated renters and landlords constantly seek ways of increasing rents. One
common way is for a new tenant to pay a high price for worthless fittings, such as
charging R2 000 for threadbare curtains. Another is for the tenant to pay an
exorbitant price for new locks and keys.
The level of a black market rent depends on how tightly the rent ceiling is enforced.
With loose enforcement, the black market rent is close to the unregulated rent. But
with strict enforcement, the black market rent is equal to the maximum price that
renters are willing to pay.
INEFFICIENCY OF RENT CEILINGS
In an unregulated market, the market determines the rent at which the quantity
demanded equals the quantity supplied. In this situation, scarce resources are
allocated efficiently. Marginal social benefit equals marginal social cost (market
demand equals market supply).
Figure 5.9 shows the inefficiency of a rent ceiling. If the rent is fixed at R1 600 per
month, 100 000 units are supplied. Marginal benefit is R2 400 a month. The light
blue triangle above the supply curve below the rent ceiling line shows producer
surplus. Because the quantity of housing is less than the competitive quantity, there
is a deadweight loss, shown by the dark grey triangle. This loss is borne by the
consumers who can’t find housing and by producers who can’t supply housing at
the new lower price. Consumers who do find housing at the controlled rent gain. If
no one incurs search costs, consumer surplus is shown by the sum of the light grey
triangle and the blue rectangle. But search costs might eat up part of the consumer
surplus, possibly as much as the amount shown by the blue rectangle.
Inefficiency of Rent Ceilings
6.2. The Labour Market and the Minimum Wage
In the short run, there are a given number of people who have a given skill, training, and
experience. The short-run supply of labour describes how the number of hours of labour
supplied by this given number of people changes as the wage rate changes. To get them
to work more hours, they must be offered a higher wage rate. In the long run, people can
acquire new skills and find new types of jobs. The number of people in the low-skilled
labour market depends on the wage rate in this market compared with other opportunities.
If the wage rate of low-skilled labour is high enough, people will enter this market. If the
wage rate is too low, people will leave it. Some will seek training to enter higher-skilled
labour markets, and others will stop working. The long-run supply of labour is the
relationship between the quantity of labour supplied and the wage rate after enough time
has passed for people to enter or leave the low-skilled labour market. If people can freely
enter and leave the low-skilled labour market, the long-run supply of labour is perfectly
elastic.
Figure 5.11 shows the minimum wage as the horizontal blue line labelled
“Minimum wage.” A wage below this level is illegal, in the grey-shaded illegal
region. At the minimum wage rate, 20 million hours of labour are demanded
(point A) and 22 million hours of labour are supplied (point B), so 2 million hours
of available labour are unemployed.
With only 20 million hours demanded, some workers are willing to supply that 20
millionth hour for R6. Frustrated unemployed workers spend time and other
resources searching for hard-to-find jobs.
Inefficiency of Minimum Wage
Almost everything you earn and most things you buy are
taxed.
Tax Incidence
Tax incidence is the division of the burden of a tax between
the buyer and the seller.
A Tax On Sellers
When the government imposes a tax on the sale of a good,
the price paid by the buyer might rise by the full amount of the
tax, by a lesser amount, or not at all.
A Tax On Buyers
A tax is like a wedge between the buying price and the selling
price.
It is the size of the wedge, not the side of the market on which
the tax is imposed by the government, that determines the
effects of the tax.
Can We Share the Burden Equally?
Value Added Tax
Tax Division and Elasticity of Demand
Harvest Fluctuations
A subsidy is a payment made by the government to a
producer.
A subsidy is like a negative tax.
Since a tax is equivalent to an increase in cost, a subsidy is
equivalent to a decrease in cost.
A subsidy brings an increase in supply.
Poor Harvest
Bumper Harvest
Elasticity of Demand
Avoiding a Fallacy of Composition
Subsidies
Production Quotas
Penalties on Sellers
Penalties on Buyers
Penalties on Both Sellers
and Buyers
Legalising and Taxing Drugs