1.8 The market mechanism, market failure, and government intervention in markets Flashcards
Market mechanism
the process through which changes in prices allocate resources
Price mechanism
changes in price in response to changes in demand and supply have the effect of making demand equal to supply
Functions of the price mechanism (4)
- allocative
- Rationing
- signalling
- incentive
allocative function of price
changing relative prices allocate scarce resources away from markets exhibiting excess supply and into markets in which there is excess demand
rationing function of prices
rising prices ration demand for a product
signalling function of price
Prices provide information to buyers and sellers
Incentive function of prices
Prices create incentives for people to alter their economic behaviour; for example, a higher price creates an incentive for firms to supply more of a good or service.
deadweight loss
the loss of welfare when the maximum attainable level of total welfare is not achieved. surplus has been lost from one party without being transferred to the other
allocative efficiency
occurs when the available economic resources are used to produce the combination of goods and services that best matches people’s tastes and preferences
market failure
occurs when the price mechanism fails to allocate scarce resources in a productively efficient way and when the operation of market forces leads to an allocatively inefficient outcome
Partial market failure
a market does function, but it delivers the ‘wrong’ quantity of a good or service, which results in resource misallocation
productive efficiency
The production of a good in the least costly way; occurs when production takes place at the output at which average total cost is a minimum
market
anywhere where buyers and sellers come together, a price is agreed and a transaction takes place
shortage
excess demand in a market which is in disequilibrium
surplus
excess supply in a market which is in disequilibrium
equilibrium price
price where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded; at this price there is no shortage or surplus
black market
anywhere where buyers and sellers come together, a price is agreed and an illegal transaction takes place
minimum price (price floor)
a legal limit on how low a price can be charged for a particular good, in a particular market
Effects on a minimum price below equilibrium
no effect on price or quantity sold
Effects of minimum price above equilibrium
price increases, excess supply
Maximum price (Price ceiling)
a legal limit on how high a price can be charged for a particular good, or in a particular market
Effects of Maximum price below equilibrium
price falls, excess demand
Effects of maximum price above equilibrium
no effect on price or quantity
Missing market
the absence of a market for a good or service, most commonly in the case of public goods and externalities