Regulated Prices, Rent-Seeking, and Consumer Surplus.

Price controls lead to misallocation of goods and encourage rent-seeking. The misallocation effect alone ensures that a price control always reduces consumer surplus in an otherwise-competitive market with convex demand if supply is more elastic than demand; or with log-convex demand (e.g., constant...

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Detaylı Bibliyografya
Asıl Yazarlar: Bulow, J, Klemperer, P
Materyal Türü: Working paper
Dil:English
Baskı/Yayın Bilgisi: Nuffield College (University of Oxford) 2012
Diğer Bilgiler
Özet:Price controls lead to misallocation of goods and encourage rent-seeking. The misallocation effect alone ensures that a price control always reduces consumer surplus in an otherwise-competitive market with convex demand if supply is more elastic than demand; or with log-convex demand (e.g., constantelasticity) even if supply is inelastic. The same results apply whether rationed goods are allocated by costless lottery, or whether costly rent-seeking and/or partial decontrol mitigates the inefficiency. Our analysis exploits the observation that in any market, consumer surplus equals the area between the demand curve and the industry marginal revenue curve.