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5
Economic Efficiency, Government
Price Setting, and Taxes
Chapter Summary
Although rent controls no longer in Australia, many governments around the world, such as Malaysia and the
U.S., have placed ceilings on the maximum rent some landlords can charge for some apartments and houses.
Governments also impose taxes in some markets. To understand the economic impact of government in
markets it is necessary to understand consumer surplus and producer surplus.
Consumer surplus is the dollar benefit consumers receive from buying goods and services at market prices less
than the maximum prices they would be willing to pay. Producer surplus is the dollar benefit producers
receive from selling goods and services at prices greater than the minimum prices they would be willing to
accept. In a competitive market with no externalities the equilibrium price for a good or service occurs where
the marginal cost of the last unit produced and sold is equal to the marginal benefit consumers receive from the
last unit bought. At this same level of output, economic surplus, the sum of consumer and producer surplus, is
maximized.
Although price controls on rent no longer exist in Australia, there are many other examples of the government
setting prices, such as the minimum wage in labour markets (a “floor price”). Compared to the competitive
equilibrium, price ceilings and price floors reduce economic efficiency.
A tax on the sale of a good or service also reduces economic efficiency. The burden of a tax (or tax incidence)
is the degree to which consumers or producers actually pay the tax. The incidence of a tax depends on how
responsive producers and consumers are to the price change caused by the tax.
Learning Objectives
When you fin
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