Tax Burden & Elasticity DSP(4) – Market Intervention The Relationship Between.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 6: Elasticity.
Advertisements

Subsidy Benefit & Elasticity DSP(4) – Market Intervention The Relationship Between.
Trade protectionism1 2 What is Protectionism? Trade protectionism is the policy that restricts the volume of ______ and, in particular, the volume of.
Homework #11 Government Finance. Some suggest that states are addicted to their vice taxes. This certainly might be true with a unit excise tax on cigarettes.
Supply, Demand and Government Policies Chapter 6 Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. Requests for permission to make copies of any.
Taxes & Market Equilibrium
CHAPTER 3 Market Equilibrium. CHAPTER 3 Market Equilibrium.
Percentage Change Demand increases from 80 to 100. % increase = = 0.25 = 25% Demand decreases from 100 to 80. % decrease = = 0.20.
How Markets Work Supply. If firm supplies a good or a service, the firm: 1.Has the resources and technology to produce it, 2.Can make profit from producing.
Application: The Costs of Taxation
The imposition of a per-unit tax on Supply Exhibit the effect of the tax on: Pre-tax Price and Quantity Pre-tax Total expenditure on the good Pre-tax Producer.
Application: The Costs of Taxation
Economics Winter 14 February 5 th, 2014 Lecture 11 Ch. 4 Ch. 6 (up to p. 138)
TAXES! Why do I tax all the time?. How Taxes Affect Market Outcomes Market not efficient – Total surplus not maximized When a good is taxed, the quantity.
Copyright © 2006 Thomson Learning 5 Elasticity and Its Applications.
Drill 9/17 Determine if the following products are elastic or inelastic: 1. A goods changes its price from $4.50 to $5.85 and the demand for the good goes.
Answering the question... By How Much?. What we know We all remember the law of demand that says: We all remember the law of demand that says: But is.
Chapter 6-4 Price Elasticity of Supply. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 6 | 2 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights.
The Incidence of Taxation. The incidence of taxation Indirect taxes.
Chapter 5 Section 2.  Every time the supply of a good changes, the supply curve for that good “shifts” ◦ Meaning it moves either to the right or to the.
Period 5 Daily Writing Prompt What is the income effect?
Elasticity. Elasticity measures how sensitive one variable is to a change in another variable. –Measured in terms of percentage changes, elasticity tells.
Excise Tax And Allocative Efficiency. Effect of a $.15 Excise Tax QuantitySupply Price Before Tax Supply Price After Tax.
Government in the Market
What happens to price and quantity for a firm when it is faced with a lump – sum tax/subsidy? Explain. Question 1.
Supply Chapter 5. An Introduction to Supply  Supply – schedule of quantities that are offered for sale at each and every price  What suppliers will.
MARKET EQUILIBRIUM  Market equilibrium exists when quantity demanded (Qd) equals quantity supplied (Qs).
APPLICATIONS OF WELFARE ECONOMICS: THE COST OF TAXATION
¦ imposed by government on the sales of goods and services Ad valoremper-unit Goods are taxed at a pre-set percentage of its value e.g. sales tax of 60%
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 5 Elasticity and Its Applications.
Price Elasticity of Demand and Supply ©2006 South-Western College Publishing.
Supply Notes: Ch 5, Section 1 Monday, 3/24 Supply is the amount of goods _______________ –Production & Number of Companies Quantity supplied describes.
Tax Incidence & Elasticity
Topic 3 Elasticity Topic 3 Elasticity. Elasticity a Fancy Term  Elasticity is a fancy term for a simple concept  Whenever you see the word elasticity,
Chapter 6 Combining Supply and Demand. Equilibrium- where the supply and demand curves cross. Equilibrium determines the price and the quantity to be.
SUPPLY CHAPTER 5. LAW OF SUPPLY SUPPLY: AMOUNT OF GOODS AVAILABLE SUPPLY: AMOUNT OF GOODS AVAILABLE PRICE INCREASES: SUPPLY INCREASES PRICE INCREASES:
$2.50 $2.00 Price Frozen pizzas per week $3.00 $3.50 MB 4 MB 3 MB 2 MB 1
UNIT II Markets and Prices. Law of Demand Consumers buy more of a good when its price decreases and less when its price increases.
S + ad valorem tax S P Q O Effect of a tax on the supply curve.
Effect of a tax on price and quantity S + tax S O P1P1 Q1Q1 D P Q.
Deadweight Loss Retained CS Tax Rev From CS Tax Rev From CS Retained PS.
Chapter 5.1/5.3/5.4 Supply. Intro to Supply Supply – the amount of a product offered for sale at all possible prices Law of Supply – as P goes up, Qs.
Per-unit Subsidy DSP(4) – Market Intervention. Price ($) Q D S1S1S1S1 P1P1 Q1Q1 The price is $6 and the quantity.
©2001Claudia Garcia-Szekely1 The Effect of a Tax Levied on the Producer.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 6 Supply, Demand, and Government Policies.
Demand Demand is a schedule or curve that shows the various amounts of a product that consumers will buy at each of a series of possible prices during.
Chapter 5, Section 1 What is Supply?. Amount of a product offered for sale at all possible prices in the market. Amount of a product offered for sale.
$100 $400 $300 $200 $400 $200 $100$100 $400 $200$200 $500$500 $300 $200 $500 $100 $300 $100 $300 $500 $300 $400$400 $500.
SUPPLY and DEMAND EQUILIBRIUM. Demand Demand is the desire, ability, and willingness to buy a product.
Incidence of a tax. The Incidence of a sales tax The incidence of a sales tax describes who actually bears the burden of the tax. – What portion of the.
Sharing of the Tax Burden
Microeconomics: Supply and Demand
Sharing of the Tax Burden
Chapter 5, Section 1 What is Supply?.
The Demand and Supply Model
Application: The Costs of Taxation
Chapter 5.1/5.3/5.4 Supply.
Basic Economic Concepts
Microeconomics.
Supply Supply is relationship that shows the various quantities of a good that sellers are willing and able to sell at different prices.
Basic Economic Concepts
Chapter 4 and 5 Review.
Elasticity & Deadweight Loss
What is supply?.
$100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500.
Application: The Costs of Taxation
SUPPLY Chapter 5.
An Introduction to Supply
Supply, Demand, and Government Policies
Unit One: Supply and Demand.
Presentation transcript:

Tax Burden & Elasticity DSP(4) – Market Intervention The Relationship Between

P per-unittax S2S2S2S2 S1S1S1S1 Q0 P1P1 Q1Q1 P2P2 Q2Q2 D Consumers’ tax burden Sellers’ is smaller than

per-unittax P Q0 S1S1S1S1 S2S2S2S2

P1P1 Q1Q1 P2P2 Q2Q2 Consumers’ tax burden Sellers’ is larger than per-unittax P Q0 S1S1S1S1 S2S2S2S2 D

P1P1 Q1Q1 P2P2 Q2Q2 per-unittax P Q0 S1S1S1S1 S2S2S2S2D

P per-unittax S2S2S2S2 S1S1S1S1 Q0 P1P1 Q1Q1 P2P2 Q2Q2 D

when the demand is elastic. This condition is NOT clear enough ! Consumers’ tax burden Sellers’ is smaller than 1. when the demand is more elastic than the supply. OR when the elasticity of demand is larger than the elasticity of supply. the elasticity of supply. P per-unittax S2S2S2S2 S1S1S1S1 Q0 P1P1 Q1Q1 P2P2 Q2Q2 D

Consumers’ tax burden Sellers’ is larger than 2. when the demand is less elastic than the supply. OR when the elasticity of demand is smaller than the elasticity of supply. the elasticity of supply. P1P1 Q1Q1 P2P2 Q2Q2 per-unittax P Q0 S1S1S1S1 S2S2S2S2D

“The larger the elasticity, the smaller the tax burden, and vice versa.” P1P1 Q1Q1 P2P2 Q2Q2 per-unittax P Q0 S1S1S1S1 S2S2S2S2D P per-unittax S2S2S2S2 S1S1S1S1 Q0 P1P1 Q1Q1 P2P2 Q2Q2 D Under what condition both consumers and sellers would bear the SAME amount of tax burden? Under what condition both consumers and sellers would bear the SAME amount of tax burden?

Sellers’ tax burden per-unittax S2S2S2S2 S1S1S1S1 P1P1 Q1Q1 P 2 = Q2Q2 PQ0 D 3. If the demand is perfectly elastic Per-unit tax  S decreases (S curve shifts up)  P remains unchanged and Q decreases Tax revenue Sellers will bear the whole tax burden while consumers will bear nothing.

P2P2Consumers’ tax burden Q1Q1 = Q 2PQ0 4. If the demand is perfectly inelastic Per-unit tax  S decreases (S curve shifts up)  P increases and Q remains unchanged Tax revenue Consumers will bear the whole tax burden while sellers will bear nothing. P1P1 per-unittax S2S2S2S2 S1S1S1S1 D

Consumers’ tax burden Q1Q1 Q2Q2PQ0 5. If the supply is perfectly elastic Per-unit tax  S decreases (S curve shifts up)  P increases and Q decreases Tax revenue Consumers will bear the whole tax burden while sellers will bear nothing. P1P1 S1S1S1S1 D per-unittax S2S2S2S2 P2P2

Sellers’ tax burden Q1Q1PQ0 6. If the supply is perfectly inelastic Per-unit tax  S decreases (S curve shifts up)  both P and Q remain unchanged Tax revenue P1P1 S1S1S1S1D per-unittax = S 2 Sellers will bear the whole tax burden while consumers will bear nothing. P 2 = = Q 2

IS IT DIFFICULT? The government may provide subsidy to sellers in order to encourage them to produce more. When the government imposes sales tax on sellers, generally the price will rise and the quantity will fall; both consumers and sellers will bear different amount of tax burdens.