Subsidies - YouTube

Channel: Marginal Revolution University

[0]
♪ [music] ♪
[8]
- [Prof. Alex Tabarrok] Today we're going to start looking at subsidies.
[11]
We're going to move quite quickly
[13]
because if you've understood the material on taxes,
[15]
the material on subsidies should follow pretty easily.
[19]
However, if you haven't understood the material on taxes,
[22]
this is going to be even more mysterious.
[25]
So make sure you understand taxes
[27]
before we move on to subsidies.
[29]
Here we go.
[34]
Now a subsidy is really just a negative or a reverse tax.
[38]
Instead of taking money,
[40]
the government gives money to consumers or producers.
[44]
Now here are some economic truths about subsidy.
[47]
Who gets the subsidy does not depend
[50]
on who receives the check from the government.
[53]
Once again, the legal incidence of the subsidy --
[55]
who gets the check --
[57]
is not the same as the economic incidence.
[60]
That should always already be familiar
[63]
from our discussion of taxes.
[65]
Similarly, who benefits from the subsidy
[68]
does depend
[70]
on the relative elasticities of demand and supply --
[74]
again, just as with taxes.
[76]
Finally, subsidies must be paid for by taxpayers,
[80]
so instead of revenues,
[81]
there's a cost to a subsidy.
[83]
And they create an inefficient increase in trade,
[87]
also called a deadweight loss.
[89]
Let's take a look in more detail.
[91]
Okay, we have a lot to cover in this diagram
[93]
so put on your thinking hats.
[95]
We begin as usual at the Market -- free market equilibrium.
[98]
Let's say that's at price of two dollars and this quantity.
[102]
Now, I'm not going to go through the proof
[104]
that the legal incidence of who gets the subsidy
[108]
does not influence the economic incidence.
[111]
Instead, I'm going to jump right to the key point,
[115]
which is that a subsidy drives a wedge
[117]
between the price received by sellers and the price paid by the buyers.
[121]
The only difference from the tax
[123]
is that the price received by sellers with the subsidy
[127]
is going to be more than the price paid by the buyers.
[131]
So we can use the same wedge analysis that we used before
[135]
except we're going to drive the wedge
[137]
into the diagram from the right hand side.
[139]
So now consider the height of this wedge --
[141]
let's suppose that's a dollar --
[143]
and let's drive it in to the diagram until the top hits the supply curve
[147]
and the bottom hits the demand curve.
[149]
This is now going to tell us everything we need to know.
[152]
So at the top, at point B,
[154]
this tells us the price received by sellers --
[157]
suppose that's $2.40.
[158]
The bottom, at point D,
[161]
tells us the price paid by the buyers -- $1.40.
[164]
Notice that the price received by the sellers
[167]
has got to be $1 more
[170]
than the price paid by the buyers,
[172]
the $1 coming from the subsidy.
[175]
Notice also the key idea --
[178]
it doesn't matter whether the suppliers
[181]
receive the check from the government,
[184]
or whether the buyers receive the check from the government.
[188]
On net, when all is said and done,
[191]
the sellers will receive $2.40 per unit,
[194]
and the buyers will pay $1.40 per unit.
[198]
By comparing with the free market price,
[200]
we can see who is getting the relative gain from the subsidy.
[205]
In this case,
[206]
both the suppliers and demanders get some of the gain.
[210]
So the suppliers used to get $2 per unit --
[213]
now they're getting $2.40, so they get 40% of the gain.
[217]
The buyers used to pay $2 --
[220]
now they're paying $1.40, so they get 60% of the gain.
[224]
Who gets the gain
[226]
is going to depend upon
[227]
the relative elasticities of supply and demand
[230]
and you want to convince yourself of that
[232]
by drawing some more diagrams like this,
[234]
but draw them with a really inelastic supply curve.
[237]
See what happens.
[238]
Then draw it with a more elastic supply curve,
[241]
a supply curve which is more elastic than the demand curve.
[244]
See what happens -- so test out different things.
[248]
Next, a tax creates revenues for the government --
[252]
a subsidy creates costs to the government.
[255]
What is the cost?
[257]
Well, notice that the per unit subsidy is $1 --
[262]
that's given by the height of the wedge.
[265]
What's the quantity which is subsidized?
[267]
Well, it's this quantity right here.
[269]
So the total cost of the subsidy
[271]
is $1 times the quantity,
[274]
or the subsidy amount times the quantity,
[278]
so it's given by this blue area right here.
[282]
Finally -- got a lot to cover,
[284]
but it should all be fairly standard now --
[287]
notice that what the subsidy does, another effect of the subsidy,
[291]
not surprisingly,
[292]
is that it increases the quantity exchanged.
[294]
So it increases it from quantity -- no subsidy --
[297]
to the quantity with the subsidy.
[300]
Now, on these additional units exchanged,
[303]
notice what the supply and demand curve tells us.
[307]
It tells us that on those additional units,
[309]
the cost to the suppliers of supplying those units
[314]
exceeds the value to the demanders of those units.
[319]
So, this additional quantity is creating a waste.
[324]
The cost to the suppliers exceeds the value
[328]
of those units to the demanders.
[330]
So the subsidy creates a deadweight loss.
[334]
There's too much trade going on,
[336]
as opposed to the tax --
[338]
where the tax reduces beneficial trades,
[341]
the subsidy increases wasteful trades.
[345]
Okay, take a good look at this diagram.
[349]
Make sure you understand each part of the diagram,
[352]
and we're going to give some applications
[354]
and give a few more ways of looking at this diagram.
[357]
But this is really the key idea --
[358]
everything in this diagram right here.
[361]
Do you remember our intuition for who bears the burden of a tax?
[364]
It's that elasticity is like escape.
[368]
So the more elastic the demand curve,
[370]
the more the demanders are able to escape the tax.
[374]
The more elastic the supply curve relative to the demand curve,
[377]
the more able the suppliers are to escape the tax.
[381]
Here I want to give you a similar intuition
[383]
and way of reminding yourself about what happens with the subsidy.
[387]
And that is, when you have no elasticity
[391]
or when you have an inelastic curve,
[394]
then there's no entry.
[396]
No elasticity equals no entry.
[399]
And when there's no entry,
[400]
that's when you gain the benefits of the subsidy.
[404]
When no one can come in to take the subsidy,
[408]
you get the benefit.
[409]
So when there's no elasticity, no entry,
[412]
you get the benefit of the subsidy.
[414]
Let's take a look.
[416]
Let's redo our tax analysis.
[418]
So suppose we have a fairly elastic demand curve
[421]
and a fairly inelastic supply curve,
[424]
and here's our tax wedge.
[425]
We drive it in the diagram and what we see
[428]
is that the suppliers bear more of the burden of the tax.
[432]
That is, the price to them falls.
[435]
They're bearing the brunt of the tax
[437]
because the suppliers have nowhere else to go.
[440]
They can't take their resources used to produce this good
[443]
and use it to produce other goods in the economy.
[446]
The supply is relatively fixed,
[449]
the resources are most useful for producing this particular good,
[453]
so the suppliers cannot escape.
[457]
For the very same reasons,
[459]
the suppliers will get most of the gains of a subsidy.
[462]
So here's our subsidy wedge --
[464]
we drive it in to the diagram.
[466]
We could read off the diagram here that the price to the suppliers
[470]
is going to rise much more than the price to the buyer falls,
[475]
relative to the market price.
[477]
So what's going on?
[479]
Well, what's going on is that we have this subsidy,
[483]
but because the supply curve is inelastic,
[486]
we don't see a lot of resources
[488]
coming from elsewhere in the economy
[490]
to grab up that subsidy, to take that subsidy.
[495]
The resources in the rest of the economy
[497]
are not good at producing this type of good,
[500]
so it's only the resources which are already in this market,
[505]
the fixed resources --
[506]
they're the ones which are going to grab up the subsidy.
[509]
The price is going to go up
[511]
because we don't have a lot of resources
[513]
coming from other areas of the economy to produce this good.
[518]
Or we can think about this from the point of view
[520]
of the demanders.
[522]
When the demand is relatively elastic,
[525]
they can escape the tax.
[526]
But, similarly, when the demand is elastic,
[530]
the demanders from other parts of the economy
[533]
with the substitute goods,
[534]
they're going to come in and grab up that subsidy.
[537]
They're going to keep the price high
[539]
because demanders are going to stop consuming the substitute good,
[543]
and they're instead going to move into this market
[546]
to consume this good.
[547]
And because you get all of these demanders
[551]
from elsewhere in the economy coming in to buy this good,
[554]
the price doesn't fall very much.
[557]
Okay, once again, play around with this.
[561]
Draw some demand and supply curves,
[563]
put in a tax wedge, put in a subsidy wedge
[566]
until this all becomes intuitive.
[568]
And remember that, in the case of subsidies,
[570]
no elastic or less elastic means less entry,
[574]
less entry means more gains to the subsidy --
[579]
they get more of the benefits of the subsidy.
[581]
Let's do an application.
[583]
Farmers in California’s Central Valley
[586]
get a big water subsidy.
[588]
They typically pay $20 to $30 an acre-foot for water
[591]
that costs $200 to $500 an acre-foot to produce.
[595]
So who benefits the most from this subsidy?
[598]
Is it the California cotton suppliers,
[600]
or is it the buyers of California cotton?
[604]
Let's think about it this way.
[606]
The buyers of California cotton --
[608]
what kind of substitutes do they have?
[611]
Are they going to have an elastic demand
[612]
or an inelastic demand?
[615]
The buyers of California cotton
[617]
are going to have a very elastic demand, right?
[620]
Because they can substitute cotton grown in Georgia,
[623]
they can substitute cotton grown in Pakistan,
[626]
in India, in many other places in the world.
[629]
In fact, the price of cotton is basically set in a world market,
[633]
so if we have a subsidy for California-cotton suppliers,
[637]
that's not going to push the world price down very much at all.
[640]
It's simply going to induce some buyers
[643]
to buy more California cotton
[646]
and a little bit less of cotton from Pakistan or from India.
[651]
On the other hand, the California cotton suppliers --
[654]
they've got a pretty inelastic supply curve.
[656]
There's not that much land there to begin with,
[659]
and it's really pretty fixed for growing agricultural goods,
[662]
and probably fairly fixed for growing cotton.
[666]
So, the California cotton suppliers
[668]
are going to get most of the benefits
[671]
of this subsidy.
[673]
It's not going to lower the price of pants at the Gap.
[676]
Instead it's going to go into the pockets
[679]
of the California cotton suppliers, of the farmers.
[683]
Not surprisingly, it's the farmers in California
[686]
who lobby extensively for this subsidy,
[690]
and it's not the consumers of cotton.
[692]
So as we've just shown,
[693]
subsidies can often be wasteful.
[695]
And one of the reasons that we have subsidies is politics --
[698]
the power of Special Interest Groups in lobbying
[701]
and so forth.
[701]
We'll talk more about that another time.
[704]
However, subsidies can also be useful,
[706]
particularly if there's a reason why the demand for a good
[712]
understates the true value of that good.
[715]
We'll give lots of examples of this type of thing
[718]
when we come to talk about externalities,
[720]
but before we do that I want to give you one more example,
[724]
where this should be fairly intuitive
[725]
and that's wage subsidies.
[728]
So the next lecture,
[729]
we'll look at wage subsidies
[731]
for unskilled or lower-skilled workers
[734]
and we'll compare that with the minimum wage.
[736]
Thanks.
[738]
- [Narrator] If you want to test yourself,
[740]
click “Practice Questions.”
[742]
Or, if you're ready to move on, just click “Next Video.”
[746]
♪ [music] ♪