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Price Floors: Surpluses and Lost Gains from Trade

Price Floors

  • Sometimes the government intervenes by keeping the price above market levels

    • Ex: minimum wage

  • Price floor: minimum price allowed by law

    • Prices can’t legally go below the floor

  • Debate on minimum wage:

    • An increase in the minimum wage will lift many individuals out of poverty and have little impact on unemployment

    • An increase in the minimum wage will result in lots of unemployment and have little impact on poverty

  • Create 4 important effects:

    1. Surpluses

    2. Lost gains from trade (deadweight loss)

    3. Wasteful increases in quality

    4. A misallocation of resources

Surpluses

  • Surplus: the quantity of something supplied exceeds the quantity demanded

  • Minimum wage creates unemployment because at a high enough wage, none of us would be worth employing

    • It will decrease employment among low-skilled workers

      • The more employers have to pay for low skilled workers, the fewer low-skilled workers they will hire

      • Ex: young people are more likely to be made unemployed by minimum wage because they lack substantial skills

Lost Gains From Trade (Deadweight Loss)

  • If employers and workers could bargain freely, the wage would fall and the quantity of labor would traded would increase to the level of market employment

  • There are substitutes for minimum wage workers

    • Higher minimum wages increase incentive to move production to other places where wages are lower

    • Many minimum wage jobs are service jobs that can’t be moved abroad but firms can substitute capital (in form of machines) for labor

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Price Floors: Surpluses and Lost Gains from Trade

Price Floors

  • Sometimes the government intervenes by keeping the price above market levels

    • Ex: minimum wage

  • Price floor: minimum price allowed by law

    • Prices can’t legally go below the floor

  • Debate on minimum wage:

    • An increase in the minimum wage will lift many individuals out of poverty and have little impact on unemployment

    • An increase in the minimum wage will result in lots of unemployment and have little impact on poverty

  • Create 4 important effects:

    1. Surpluses

    2. Lost gains from trade (deadweight loss)

    3. Wasteful increases in quality

    4. A misallocation of resources

Surpluses

  • Surplus: the quantity of something supplied exceeds the quantity demanded

  • Minimum wage creates unemployment because at a high enough wage, none of us would be worth employing

    • It will decrease employment among low-skilled workers

      • The more employers have to pay for low skilled workers, the fewer low-skilled workers they will hire

      • Ex: young people are more likely to be made unemployed by minimum wage because they lack substantial skills

Lost Gains From Trade (Deadweight Loss)

  • If employers and workers could bargain freely, the wage would fall and the quantity of labor would traded would increase to the level of market employment

  • There are substitutes for minimum wage workers

    • Higher minimum wages increase incentive to move production to other places where wages are lower

    • Many minimum wage jobs are service jobs that can’t be moved abroad but firms can substitute capital (in form of machines) for labor