Price support
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In economics, a price support may be either a subsidy or a price control, both with the intended effect of keeping the market price of a good higher than the competitive equilibrium level.
In the case of a price control, a price support is the minimum legal price a seller may charge, typically placed above equilibrium. It is the support of certain price levels at or above market values by the government.
A price support scheme can also be an agreement set in order by the government, where the government agrees to purchase the surplus of at a minimum price. For example, if a price floor were set in place for agricultural wheat commodities, the government would be forced to purchase the resulting surplus from the wheat farmers (thereby subsidizing the farmers) and store or otherwise dispose of it.
[edit] Short Term Effects of Price Supports
[edit] Example
Consider a hypothetical market in which supply and demand are such that the equilibrium price and quantity are $5 and 500 units, respectively. The government then institutes a price support at $6 per unit.
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The benefit to producers of the price support is equal to the gain in producer surplus (represented in blue).
- 1,800 - 1,250 = $550
The cost to consumers of the price support is equal to the loss in consumer surplus (represented in red).
- 1,250 - 800 = $450
The cost to the government of the price support is equal to the cost of the surplus in the market (represented in gray).
- 6 * 200 = $1,200
However, since the consumers ultimately pay taxes for the government to purchase the surplus, the total cost to consumers (in the short run) of the price support is the sum of the loss in consumer surplus and the cost of the government purchasing the surplus off the market.
- 450 + 1,200 = $1,650
In other words, consumers are paying $1,650 in order to benefit producers $550. For this reason, price supports are considered inefficient.