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Chapter 11 APPLIED COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS. Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University CONTENTS Economic Efficiency and Welfare Analysis Price.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 11 APPLIED COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS. Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University CONTENTS Economic Efficiency and Welfare Analysis Price."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 11 APPLIED COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS

2 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University CONTENTS Economic Efficiency and Welfare Analysis Price Controls and Shortages Tax Incidence analysis Gains from International Trade

3 Economic Efficiency and Welfare Analysis

4 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Economic Efficiency and Welfare Analysis The area between the demand and the supply curve represents the sum of consumer and producer surplus measures the total additional value obtained by market participants by being able to make market transactions This area is maximized at the competitive market equilibrium

5 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Economic Efficiency and Welfare Analysis Quantity Price P *P * Q *Q * S D Consumer surplus is the area above price and below demand Producer surplus is the area below price and above supply

6 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University At output Q 1, total surplus will be smaller Economic Efficiency and Welfare Analysis Quantity Price P *P * Q *Q * S D Q1Q1 At outputs between Q 1 and Q*, demanders would value an additional unit more than it would cost suppliers to produce

7 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Economic Efficiency and Welfare Analysis Mathematically, we wish to maximize consumer surplus + producer surplus = Maximizing total surplus with respect to Q yields U’(Q) = P(Q) = AC = MC maximization occurs where the marginal value of Q to the representative consumer is equal to market price : the market equilibrium

8 Price Controls and Shortages

9 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Price Controls and Shortages Quantity Price SS D LS P1P1 Q1Q1 Initially, the market is in long-run equilibrium at P 1, Q 1 Demand increases to D’ D’D’

10 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Price Controls and Shortages Quantity Price SS D LS P1P1 Q1Q1 D’D’ Firms would begin to enter the industry In the short run, price rises to P 2 P2P2 In the long run, The price would end up at P 3 P3P3

11 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Price Controls and Shortages Quantity Price SS D LS P1P1 Q1Q1 D’D’ P3P3 There will be a shortage equal to Q 2 - Q 1 Q2Q2 Suppose that the government imposes a price ceiling at P 1

12 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University This gain in consumer surplus is the shaded rectangle Price Controls and Shortages Quantity Price SS D LS P1P1 Q1Q1 D’D’ P3P3 Q2Q2 Some buyers will gain because they can purchase the good for a lower price

13 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University The shaded rectangle therefore represents a pure transfer from producers to consumers Price Controls and Shortages Quantity Price D P1P1 Q1Q1 D’D’ SS LS P3P3 Q2Q2 The gain to consumers is also a loss to producers who now receive a lower price No welfare loss there

14 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University This shaded triangle represents the value of additional consumer surplus that would have been attained without the price control Price Controls and Shortages Quantity Price SS D LS P1P1 Q1Q1 D’D’ P3P3 Q2Q2

15 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University This shaded triangle represents the value of additional producer surplus that would have been attained without the price control Price Controls and Shortages Quantity Price SS D LS P1P1 Q1Q1 D’D’ P3P3 Q2Q2

16 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University This shaded area represents the total value of mutually beneficial transactions that are prevented by the government Price Controls and Shortages Quantity Price SS D LS P1P1 Q1Q1 D’D’ P3P3 Q2Q2 This is a measure of the pure welfare costs of this policy

17 Tax Incidence analysis

18 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Tax Incidence To discuss the effects of a per-unit tax (t), we need to make a distinction between the price paid by buyers (P D ) and the price received by sellers (P S ) P D - P S = t In terms of small price changes, we wish to examine dP D - dP S = dt

19 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Tax Incidence Maintenance of equilibrium in the market requires dQ D = dQ S or D P dP D = S P dP S Substituting, we get D P dP D = S P dP S = S P (dP D - dt)

20 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Tax Incidence We can now solve for the effect of the tax on P D : Similarly,

21 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Tax Incidence Because e D  0 and e S  0, dP D /dt  0 and dP S /dt  0 If demand is perfectly inelastic (e D = 0), the per-unit tax is completely paid by demanders If demand is perfectly elastic (e D =  ), the per-unit tax is completely paid by suppliers

22 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Tax Incidence In general, the actor with the less elastic responses (in absolute value) will experience most of the price change caused by the tax

23 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Tax Incidence Quantity Price S D P*P* Q*Q* PDPD PSPS A per-unit tax creates a wedge between the price that buyers pay (P D ) and the price that sellers receive (P S ) t Q**

24 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Buyers incur a welfare loss equal to the shaded area Tax Incidence Quantity Price S D P*P* Q*Q* PDPD PSPS Q** But some of this loss goes to the government in the form of tax revenue

25 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Sellers also incur a welfare loss equal to the shaded area Tax Incidence Quantity Price S D P*P* Q*Q* PDPD PSPS Q** But some of this loss goes to the government in the form of tax revenue

26 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Therefore, this is the dead- weight loss from the tax Tax Incidence Quantity Price S D P*P* Q*Q* PDPD PSPS Q**

27 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Deadweight Loss and Elasticity All nonlump-sum taxes involve deadweight losses the size of the losses will depend on the elasticities of supply and demand A linear approximation to the deadweight loss accompanying a small tax, dt, is given by DW = -0.5(dt)(dQ)

28 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Deadweight Loss and Elasticity From the definition of elasticity, we know that dQ = e D dP D  Q 0 /P 0 This implies that dQ = e D [e S /(e S - e D )] dt Q 0 /P 0 Substituting, we get

29 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Transactions Costs Transactions costs can also create a wedge between the price the buyer pays and the price the seller receives (explicit and implicit) real estate agent fees;broker fees for the sale of stocks Working on purchasing used car Effects on the attributes of transactions Different tax base ( quantity, quality, information ), different way to cut transaction cost

30 Gains from International Trade

31 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Gains from International Trade Quantity Price S D Q*Q* P*P* In the absence of international trade, the domestic equilibrium price would be P* and the domestic equilibrium quantity would be Q*

32 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Gains from International Trade Quantity Price Q*Q* P*P* S D Quantity demanded will rise to Q 1 and quantity supplied will fall to Q 2 Q1Q1 Q2Q2 If the world price (P W ) is less than the domestic price, the price will fall to P W PWPW Imports = Q 1 - Q 2 imports

33 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Consumer surplus rises Producer surplus falls There is an unambiguous welfare gain Gains from International Trade Quantity Price Q*Q* P*P* S D Q2Q2 Q1Q1 PWPW

34 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Effects of a Tariff Quantity Price S D Q1Q1 Q2Q2 PWPW Quantity demanded falls to Q 3 and quantity supplied rises to Q 4 Q4Q4 Q3Q3 Suppose that the government creates a tariff that raises the price to P R PRPR Imports are now Q 3 - Q 4 imports

35 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Consumer surplus falls Producer surplus rises These two triangles represent deadweight loss The government gets tariff revenue Effects of a Tariff Quantity Price S D Q1Q1 Q2Q2 PWPW Q4Q4 Q3Q3 PRPR

36 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Quantitative Estimates of Deadweight Losses Estimates of the sizes of the welfare loss triangle can be calculated Because P R = (1+t)P W, the proportional change in quantity demanded is

37 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University The areas of these two triangles are Quantitative Estimates of Deadweight Losses Quantity Price S D Q1Q1 Q2Q2 PWPW Q4Q4 Q3Q3 PRPR

38 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Other Trade Restrictions A quota that limits imports to Q 3 - Q 4 would have effects that are similar to those for the tariff same decline in consumer surplus same increase in producer surplus One big difference is that the quota does not give the government any tariff revenue Captured by owners of import licenses

39 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University CONTENTS Economic Efficiency and Welfare Analysis Price Controls and Shortages Tax Incidence analysis Gains from International Trade

40 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Important Points to Note: The concepts of consumer and producer surplus provide useful ways of analyzing the effects of economic changes on the welfare of market participants changes in consumer surplus represent changes in the overall utility consumers receive from consuming a particular good changes in long-run producer surplus represent changes in the returns product inputs receive

41 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Important Points to Note: Price controls involve both transfers between producers and consumers and losses of transactions that could benefit both consumers and producers

42 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Important Points to Note: Tax incidence analysis concerns the determination of which economic actor ultimately bears the burden of a tax this incidence will fall mainly on the actors who exhibit inelastic responses to price changes taxes also involve deadweight losses that constitute an excess burden in addition to the burden imposed by the actual tax revenues collected

43 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Important Points to Note: Transaction costs can sometimes be modeled as taxes both taxes and transaction costs may affect the attributes of transactions depending on the basis on which the costs are incurred

44 Lee, Junqing Department of Economics, Nankai University Important Points to Note: Trade restrictions such as tariffs or quotas create transfers between consumers and producers and deadweight losses of economic welfare the effects of many types of trade restrictions can be modeled as being equivalent to a per- unit tariff

45 Chapter 11 APPLIED COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS END


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