EC120 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Price Ceiling, Economic Equilibrium, Black Market

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5 May 2016
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EC120 Full Course Notes
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A price ceiling is a maximum price that can be charged in a market. Many examples of price ceilings: rent controls a maximum rent that landlords can charge, rules against raising prices during disasters, gas prices in the 1970"s, price controls during world war ii. If both are elastic, effects will be larger. There is generally a reason for these laws. Significant drop between quantities (reduce the amount their willing to supply) Price ceilings can create an underground economy bribery. Fewer examples of price floors: minimum wage laws, alcohol pricing in canadian provinces, supply management in agriculture. Price floors are not always binding: e. g. minimum wages. Demand for labour is completely inelastic, the number of people working doesn"t change at all. The effects of minimum wages are generally disputed. Result depends critically on elasticity of labour demand. This is surprisingly hard to measure: not likely to be the same in different situations.

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