ECON 101 Chapter Notes - Chapter 6: Price Ceiling, Price Floor, Economic Equilibrium

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15 Feb 2018
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Government imposes a legal maximum on the price at which a product can be sold. Price ceiling - price is not allowed to rise above this level, legislated maximum. Government imposes a legal minimum on the price. Price floor - price cannot fall below this level, legislated minimum. Above the price ceiling, the ceiling is a binding constraint on the market. Forces of supply and demand tend to move the price toward the equilibrium brice, but when the market price hits the ceiling, it cannot rise any further. When the government imposes a binding price ceiling on a competitive market, a shortage of a good arises, and sellers must ration the scarce goods among the large number of potential buyers. Rationing mechanics in free, competitive market is both efficient and impersonal. Price floors are an attempt by the government to maintain prices at other than equilibrium levels.

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