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Economic Examples 1. Cyclone Larry in Australia • Destroyed 80% of the banana crop. • Prices went from $1.00 to $2.00 per pound • Supply or Demand problem?? S2 Price Banana Market S1 $2.00 $1.00 DR Quantity Q2 Q 1 Sales of SUVs in the U.S. Average price fell 10% SUVs P Supply or Demand problem? S0 Increasing gas costs causes the demand curve to shift left Price for SUVs fell from P0 to P1 where Q demanded = Q supplied P0 P1 D0 D1 Q1 Q0 Q Coffee Beans • fell from $2.00/pound in 1997 to $.50 in 2002 Supply or Demand problem? New growing techniques and the entry of new growers shifted the supply Price curve. S2 Coffee Bean Market S1 $2.00 $0.50 Dc Q1 Q2 Quantity 2. Increase in the Demand for Loanable Funds Interest rate Lending • At the interest rate r the quantity of loanable funds demanded by borrowers into equals quantity supplied by lenders. • An increase in demand will move D1 to D2 the interest rises to r2 and increasing borrowing to Q2 • Higher interest rates encourage additional savings, making it possible to fund more borrowing. S r2 r1 Borrowing D1 Q1 Q2 D2 Quantity of loanable funds The Price of Foreign Currency • Foreign exchange market is where currency of one country is traded for another. • The exchange rate is measured as the dollar price of foreign currency. • Changes in exchange rates will alter the prices of internationally traded goods/services and assets • A lower dollar price of foreign currency will have two effects: • It will lower the price of foreign goods to U.S. residents and raise imports. • It will raise the price of U.S. goods to foreigners and lower exports. Examples of exchange rates Country currency In US$ Per US$ US$ vs. YTD change (%) Mexico peso 0.0738 13.5520 - 1.3 China yuan 0.1463 6.8348 0.2 United Kingdom pound 1.4828 0.6744 - 1.6 Poland zloty 0.3032 3.2982 11.1 Israel shekel 0.2400 4.1667 10.3 Kuwait dinar 3.4376 0.2909 5.3 Increase in the Demand for Foreign Exchange • Beginning equilibrium exchange rate: (10 cents = 1quetzal). • An increase in American demand for Guatemalan coffee will also increase the demand for quetzals • Equilibrium occurs where the new demand for quetzals D2 just equals the supply S – at $.20 per quetzal with Q2 > Q1 quetzals clearing the market. U.S. sales to Guatemala Exchange rate ($ per quetzal) S 0.20 0.10 D2 U.S. purchases from Guatemala D1 Q1 Q2 Quantity of quetzal exchange Government Intervention in the Market 1. Price Ceilings • Price ceiling is a legally established maximum price that sellers may charge. • It stops the price from rising to the equilibrium level. • Example: rent control • The direct effect of a price ceiling is a shortage: quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied. The Impact of a Price Ceiling Price (rent) • In the rental housing market the price (rent) P0 would bring the quantity of rental units demanded into balance with the quantity supplied. • A price ceiling like P1sets a price below equilibrium … quantity demanded QD … exceeds quantity supplied QS … resulting in a shortage. S Rental housing market P0 Price ceiling P1 Shortage D QS QD Quantity of housing units Effects of Rent Control • The future supply of housing will decline. • The quality of housing will deteriorate. • Non-price methods of rationing will increase in importance. • Long-term renters will benefit at the expense of newcomers. 2. Price Floors • Price floor is a legally established minimum price that buyers must pay. • It stops the price from dropping down to equilibrium level. • Example: minimum wage • The direct effect of a price floor above the equilibrium price is a surplus: quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded. The Impact of a Price Floor Price • A price floor like P1 sets a price above market equilibrium P1 causing quantity supplied QD … S Surplus Price floor to exceed quantity demanded QS P0 … resulting in a surplus. •Non-price factors will become more important than prices in determining where scarce goods go. D QD QS Quantity Minimum Wage Effects • Direct effect: • Reduces employment of low-skilled labor. • Indirect effects: • Reduction in non-wage component of compensation. • Less on-the-job training. • May encourage students to drop out of school • A higher minimum wage does little to help the poor. Employment and the Minimum Wage • If a price (wage) of $4.00 could bring equilibrium. Price (wage) Excess supply • A minimum wage (price floor) $ 5.15 of $5.15 would increase the earnings of those who stayed employed (E1), but would reduce the employment of others. $ 4.00 S Minimum wage level • Those who lose their job (E0 to E1) would be pushed into either unemployment or some other less preferred form of employment. D E1 E0 Quantity (employment) Excise Taxes • Government impacts markets through taxation • An excise tax is a tax that is levied on a specific good • A tariff is an excise tax on an imported good • The result of taxes and tariffs is an increase in equilibrium prices and reduce equilibrium quantities 5-16 The Effect of an Excise Tax P Government imposes a $10,000 luxury tax on the suppliers of boats Luxury Boats S1 S0 Tax = $10,000 $70,000 The supply curve shifts up by the amount of the tax $65,000 $60,000 D0 420 510 Q The price of boats rises by less than the tax to $70,000 Quantity Restrictions • Government regulates markets with licenses, which limit entry into a market • Many professions require licenses, such as doctors, financial planners, cosmetologists, electricians, or taxi cab drivers • The results of limited number of licenses in a market are increases in wages and an increases in the price of obtaining the license 5-18 The Effect of a Quantity Restriction NYC Taxi Drivers P(wage) Successful lobbying by taxi cab drivers in NYC resulted in quantity restrictions (medallions) QR D1 $1 5 D0 12,0 00 When the demand for taxi services increased, because the number of taxi licenses was limited, wages increased Q(of drivers) Application: The Effect of a Quantity Restriction NYC Taxis Medallions P QR The demand for taxi medallions also increased because wages were increasing. But because the number of taxi licenses was limited, the price of a medallion also increased $400,00 0 D1 Initial Fee D0 12,0 00 Q(of medallions) Third-Party-Payer Markets • In third-party-payer markets, the person who receives the good differs from the person paying for thea good • Under third-party-payer system, the person who chooses how much to purchase doesn’t pay the entire cost • Equilibrium quantity and total spending can be much higher in third-party-payer markets • Goods from a third-party-payer system will be rationed through social and political means 5-21 Third-Party-Payer Markets P With a co-payment of $5, consumers demand 18 units Health Care Sellers require $45 per unit for that quantity S0 $4 5 Total expenditures for 18 units of health care $2 5 $5 …are greater than when… D0 10 18 Q The consumer pays the entire cost