[4.2.3] Arguments for and against regulation Flashcards
1
Q
Define regulation
A
the creation of rules and sanctions within an industry in order to modify the economic behaviour of firms
2
Q
Why should a market be regulated? (Give 5 reasons)
A
- Reduce exploitation of consumers/ increase consumer surplus
- improve inequality in society (funding in schools/minimum wage)
- Reduce collusion/anti-competitive behaviour
- Increase AD via subsidies
- Maintain competition/ reduce monopolistic power
- Prevent over supply of a good
- Reduce demand for de-merit goods (eg tobacco products)
- Improve contest ability in the market
3
Q
Methods of Regulation in a market
A
- Competition banning policy/banning anti-competitive behaviour
- Taxation
- Fines
- Legislations (Health&Safety, Min. Wage, Anti-discrimination laws, standardised cigarette packaging)
- CMA intervention
- Price caps
- Minimum/ Maximum Pricing
- Re-nationalisation
Quotas - Subsidies (support smaller firms within an industry to become competitive/ensuring large firms don’t gain an unfair competitive advantage)
- Self-regulation?
4
Q
Benefits of Regulation (Name 3 Benefits)
A
- Protects consumers agains the abuse of monopoly power (high prices) **
- Creates an environment that will encourage firms to strive for productive efficiency through reduced costs (via price capping) in order to increase profits **
- Helps to ensure quality and choice are maintained in a monopolistic market **
- Increases consumer surplus by reducing prices of goods and services **
- Provides a fair playing field so that all firms in the industry have to follow the same rules and regulation **
- Ensures productive and allocative efficiency by removing any distortions in the market
5
Q
Costs of Regulation
A
- increases the costs to firms (e.g legal requirements) **
- can lead to productive inefficiencies **
- causing delays to be implemented
- waste of resources **
- regulations can be inefficient and misguided
- regulating what goods/services can be produced might lead to allocative inefficiency **
- profits of firms will be impacted –> less investment into capacity as well as R&D **
- might lead to less dynamic efficiency (productive efficiency of a firm overtime)
6
Q
Benefits of regulation to the consumer
A
- reduced exploitation **
- increased protection (from exploitation) **
- lower prices (increased consumer surplus) **
- increased quality/choice **
- better quality public goods due to taxation of firms
7
Q
Drawbacks of regulation to the consumer
A
- allocative inefficiency can lead to higher prices (over regulation)
- minimum pricing can lead to higher prices
- consumers MIGHT have to pay more tax to fund subsidies
- quotas can restrict supply (although in the long run this is seen to be sustainable eg: fishing)
- x-inefficiencies means quality will decrease
8
Q
Advantages of regulation to a business
A
- competitors will benefit from decreased power from dominant firms**
- can lead to increased innovation/productive efficiency/ increased EoS **
- subsidies can increase supernormal profits **
- minimum pricing can protect smaller firms (from larger firms implementing predatory/limit pricing) **
- improved reputation due to new industry wide standard
- provides a fair and open playing field for all firms
9
Q
Disadvantages of regulation to a business
A
- reduced monopoly power **
- increased costs to implement regulation
- reduced capital investment due to lower profits **
- reduced allocative efficiency **
- takes time to implement and causes delays
- might have to settle for lower profits **
- can’t collude/raise prices to maximise profits **
- re-nationalisation might mean that assets are undersold?