1.2.9 + 1.2.10 Flashcards
What is an indirect tax?
tax imposed by the government that increases the supply costs faced by producers
how is tax shown on a diagram?
amount of the tax is always shown by the vertical distance between the two supply curves.
what does the impact of the tax on demand depend on?
depends on the price elasticity of demand,
- demand curve does not shift!
who will indirect tax be passed onto depending on elasticity of demand
- indirect tax on suppliers will have no effect on market price if demand is perfectly elastic
- An indirect tax on suppliers will be passed onto consumers in full if demand is perfectly price inelastic
- An indirect tax on suppliers will be passed onto suppliers in full if supply is perfectly elastic
specific tax
is a set tax per unit e.g. a £5 tax per unit– this causes a parallel shift in the supply curve
- tax is same fixed amount at all prices
Eg, fuel duty and beer duty
ad valorem tax
a percentage tax e.g. 20% on the unit price – this causes a pivot shift in the
supply curve
eg. VAT, import tariffs
If co-efficient of price elasticity of demand >1
elastic
most of an indirect tax will be absorbed by the supplier
I.e lower incidence of tax on consumers
If co-efficient of price elasticity of demand <1
inelastic
most of an indirect tax can be passed on to the consumer
I.e higher incidence of tax on consumers
Perfectly inelastic demand
All of the tax is paid by the consumer
Perfectly elastic supply
All of the tax is paid by the producer
What is a subsidy?
subsidy is any form of government support
- cause outward shift in supply curve (as they reduce costs of production), and lower market price and expansion of quantity demanded
Economic and social justifications for a subsidy
- Helping poorer families with food, child-care costs
- Encourage output and investment in fledgling sectors such as renewable energy.
- Protect jobs in loss-making industries hit by recession such as steel and farming
- Make key health care treatments affordable to families on lower incomes.
subsidy effect on inelastic demand
- smaller relative change in output following subsidy
- but large change in price so consumers gain more welfare
- cheaper for government as output increases by less, so they pay subsidies for less goods
subsidy effect on elastic demand
- large output change following subsidy
- small change in piece, so producers gain most of welfare
why may an agent act in an irrational way?
- bounded rationality
- influenced by others (herd mentality, peer pressure)
- emotion overtakes logic
- desire for instant rewards (hyperbolic discounting)
- habitual behaviour/ consumer inertia