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Applications of Tools of Demand and Supply Price Control

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Topics

  • Price Control
  • Price Ceiling (Maximum Price)
  • Price Floor (Minimum Price)
  • Implications of Price Ceiling Policy
  • Effects of Minimum Price (Price Floor)
  • Key Points: Applications of Tools of Demand and Supply Price Control
CISCE: Class 12

Price Control

Price controls are government-imposed limits on prices of goods or services in a market. Common types:

  • Price Ceiling: Maximum limit (for essentials, affordability)
  • Price Floor: Minimum limit (to support farmers/producers)
CISCE: Class 12

Price Ceiling (Maximum Price)

Meaning:
A price ceiling is a limit set by the government, below which sellers cannot charge for a good or service. E.g., rent caps in cities, government set caps on food essentials (rice, wheat, kerosene).

Purpose:
To make goods more affordable, especially for low-income groups during shortages.

Diagram:

Real Example:
During onion shortage, government fixes a price ceiling. More buyers, fewer sellers; queues form or sellers favor regular customers. Some people pay extra in black markets.

CISCE: Class 12

Price Floor (Minimum Price)

Definition:
A price floor is the lowest price sellers can charge, often above market rates. Eg: Minimum Support Price (MSP) for farm goods, minimum wage laws.

Purpose:
To ensure producers (like farmers) get fair income.

Diagram:

Real Example:
MSP for wheat lets farmers sell at a guaranteed price—even if more is produced than buyers need, the government buys the surplus for buffer stocks.

CISCE: Class 12

Implications of Price Ceiling Policy

A] Effect on Price and Quantity

1) If the price ceiling is set above the equilibrium price:

  • No effect. The market still operates at the equilibrium price and quantity (OP, OQ₀).

2) If the ceiling is below equilibrium:

  • Sellers cannot legally sell above this lower price (OP₂).

3) Result:

  • Quantity demanded is high (OQ₂).
  • Quantity supplied is low (OQ₁).
  • Shortage = OQ₂ - OQ₁ (not enough goods for everyone).

B] Allocation of Available Supply

1) Problem: Not enough goods for all buyers.

2) Methods of Allocation:

  • First-come, First-served:
    Those arriving first get the scarce goods. Leads to long queues and wasted time.
  • Sellers’ Preference:
    Shopkeepers might sell only to regular or favored customers.
  • Rationing:
    Government issues ration cards/coupons to divide the limited supply equally (common for essentials like wheat, rice).

C] Emergence of Black Marketing

  • With goods in shortage, some buyers pay more in illegal markets to get extra supply.
  • Sellers are tempted to sell beyond the price ceiling for higher profit.

Black Market:

  • Goods sold at prices above the legal ceiling—in secret, without official records.
  • Weakens the goal of affordable prices for the needy, and causes loss of government tax revenue.​
CISCE: Class 12

Effects of Minimum Price (Price Floor)

1. Surplus in the Market

  • When the government sets a minimum price (price floor) above the equilibrium, producers increase production because they are assured of higher prices.
  • Consumers, however, buy less since prices are higher.

Result:

  • Surplus: Quantity supplied (OQ₂) is more than quantity demanded (OQ₁).
  • Extra goods remain unsold in the market.

2. Disposal of Surplus

  • Some producers cannot sell all their goods at the minimum price.
  • They may try to sell below the legal price (illegally) or incur losses if unsold stock is wasted.

Government Intervention:

  • To uphold the minimum price, the government usually purchases the surplus stock (buffer stock schemes in India for wheat, rice, sugarcane, etc.).

3. Other Effects

  • Guaranteed Income for Producers:
    Farmers get a minimum assured return even when demand is low.
  • Higher Cost for Consumers:
    Consumers must pay higher prices than in a free market.
  • Pressure on Government Resources:
    Government must spend money to buy and store excess goods (buffer stock), which can be costly.
  • Potential Black Market:
    Some sellers may illegally sell below the floor price to clear stock.
  • Reduced Quantity Traded:
    Fewer transactions than at equilibrium because of lower demand at the higher price.​
CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Applications of Tools of Demand and Supply Price Control

  • Price ceiling helps buyers (causes shortage).
  • Price floor helps sellers (causes surplus).
  • Both disrupt market equilibrium.
  • Rationing and black markets often follow government controls.

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