Market equilibrium: The point where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded, setting the natural market price and quantity.
Price control: Government regulation setting legal maximum or minimum prices in a market.
Price ceiling: A maximum price set below equilibrium, often causing shortages.
Price floor: A minimum price set above equilibrium, potentially leading to surpluses.
Tax incidence: The distribution of the tax burden between buyers and sellers, influenced by elasticities.
Deadweight loss: The welfare loss due to market inefficiencies caused by interventions like taxes or price controls.
Subsidy: A government payment that reduces costs or increases income for producers or consumers, distorting market outcomes.
Elasticity: The degree of responsiveness of quantity demanded or supplied to price changes.
Tax system principles:
Tax Revenue:
Deadweight Loss of Tax:
Tax Incidence:
Distribution depends on the elasticities of demand and supply; less elastic side bears more burden.
Laffer Curve:
Graph illustrating how increasing tax rates initially raise revenue, but beyond a point decrease due to diminished economic activity.
| Aspect | Price Ceiling | Price Floor | Tax Effect | Subsidy Effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Market outcome | Shortage | Surplus | Reduced or increased activity | Potential overproduction |
| Welfare impact | Deadweight loss | Deadweight loss | Efficiency loss | Fiscal cost & distortion |
| Usually set | Below equilibrium | Above equilibrium | Shift curves | Downward or outward curve shift |
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Metti alla prova le tue conoscenze su Market Policies and Taxation Fundamentals con 9 domande a scelta multipla con correzioni dettagliate.
1. According to the principles of tax fairness, which of the following best describes vertical equity?
2. What happens when the government sets a price ceiling below the market equilibrium?
Memorizza i concetti chiave di Market Policies and Taxation Fundamentals con 10 flashcard interattive.
What is market equilibrium?
Market equilibrium is the point where the quantity of goods supplied equals the quantity demanded, resulting in a stable price and quantity in the market.
Market equilibrium — definition?
Supply equals demand, sets market price.
What are price ceilings and their typical effects?
Price ceilings are maximum prices set by the government, usually below the equilibrium price, which can lead to shortages as demand exceeds supply.
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