ECON 1000 Chapter Notes - Chapter 8: Black Market, Laffer Curve, Deadweight Loss

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Deadweight loss- the fall in total surplus that results from a market distortion, such as a tax. A tax on a good reduced the welfare of buyers and sellers of the good, and the reduction in consumer and producer surplus usually exceeds the revenue raised by the government. The fall in total surplus, the sum, of consumer surplus, is called the deadweight loss of the tax. Taxes have deadweight losses because they cause buyers to consume less and sellers to produce less and this change in behavior shrinks the size of the market below the level that maximises total surplus. Because the elasticity"s of supply and demand measure how much the market participants respond to market conditions, larger elasticity"s imply larger deadweight losses. As a tax grows larger, it distorts incentives more, and its deadweight loss grows larger. Tax revenue first rises with the size of a tax.

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