5. A price ceiling, a maximum market price below the equilibrium price, benefits successful buyers but creates
Question:
5. A price ceiling, a maximum market price below the equilibrium price, benefits successful buyers but creates persistent shortages. Because the price is maintained below the equilibrium price, the quantity demanded is increased and the quantity supplied is decreased compared to the equilibrium quantity. This leads to predictable problems: inefficiencies in the form of deadweight loss from inefficiently low quantity, inefficient allocation to consumers, wasted resources, and inefficiently low quality.
It also encourages illegal activity as people turn to black markets to get the good. Because of these problems, price ceilings have generally lost favor as an economic policy tool. But some governments continue to impose them either because they don’t understand the effects or because the price ceilings benefit some influential group.
Step by Step Answer:
Essentials Of Economics
ISBN: 9781429218290
2nd Edition
Authors: Paul Krugman, Robin Wells, Kathryn Graddy