WEBVTT 00:00:00.531 --> 00:00:03.180 ♪ [music] ♪ 00:00:09.288 --> 00:00:10.459 - [Tyler] In the next two videos, 00:00:10.459 --> 00:00:13.698 we'll turn our attention to price floors and their effects. 00:00:13.698 --> 00:00:16.100 In this video, we'll look at the first two effects 00:00:16.100 --> 00:00:18.777 and cover one of the most well-known price floors: 00:00:18.777 --> 00:00:20.119 the minimum wage. 00:00:20.119 --> 00:00:22.529 Let's get started. 00:00:25.500 --> 00:00:29.219 A price floor is a minimum price allowed by law. 00:00:29.219 --> 00:00:32.478 That is, it is a price below which it is illegal 00:00:32.478 --> 00:00:34.110 to buy or sell -- 00:00:34.110 --> 00:00:39.201 called a price floor because you cannot go below the floor. 00:00:39.526 --> 00:00:41.309 We're going to show that price floors create 00:00:41.309 --> 00:00:42.637 four significant effects: 00:00:42.637 --> 00:00:49.636 surpluses, lost gains from trade, wasteful increases in quality, 00:00:49.636 --> 00:00:51.697 and a misallocation of resources. 00:00:51.697 --> 00:00:53.168 We're going to go through these each in turn. 00:00:53.168 --> 00:00:57.093 Before we do so, however, it's worthwhile asking this question: 00:00:57.093 --> 00:01:01.071 price floors are less common than price ceilings -- 00:01:01.071 --> 00:01:02.430 why is this? 00:01:02.430 --> 00:01:05.940 That is it's more common to see a price being held 00:01:05.940 --> 00:01:09.339 below the market price, 00:01:09.339 --> 00:01:15.269 than it is to see a price being held above the market price. 00:01:15.269 --> 00:01:17.039 Why? 00:01:17.308 --> 00:01:19.479 One reason may be political. 00:01:19.479 --> 00:01:23.940 That is, there are typically more buyers of goods 00:01:23.940 --> 00:01:27.062 than there are sellers of goods. 00:01:27.062 --> 00:01:30.768 So when you hold a price below the market price, 00:01:30.768 --> 00:01:33.789 you may benefit, or at least appear to benefit, 00:01:33.789 --> 00:01:37.681 more buyers, more people, more voters 00:01:37.681 --> 00:01:42.219 than when you hold a price above the market price, 00:01:42.219 --> 00:01:45.352 which would appear to harm buyers. 00:01:45.352 --> 00:01:47.999 Now interestingly, the paradigmatic, 00:01:47.999 --> 00:01:50.438 the classic case of a price floor 00:01:50.438 --> 00:01:53.359 is the exception which proves the rule. 00:01:53.359 --> 00:01:56.968 Because the classic case of a price floor is a good 00:01:56.968 --> 00:02:01.879 for which there are more sellers than there are buyers. 00:02:01.879 --> 00:02:06.620 So here's the case where the price is kept above the market price, 00:02:06.620 --> 00:02:10.460 and it make sense politically because there are lots of sellers 00:02:10.460 --> 00:02:12.218 compared to buyers. 00:02:12.218 --> 00:02:16.468 So, what is this good, for which price floor is common, 00:02:16.468 --> 00:02:19.379 and for which sellers exceed buyers? 00:02:19.379 --> 00:02:21.469 We'll get to that in just a moment. 00:02:21.469 --> 00:02:22.800 Think about it. 00:02:22.800 --> 00:02:24.688 So one of the things which a price floor does 00:02:24.688 --> 00:02:26.708 is it creates surpluses. 00:02:26.708 --> 00:02:28.199 Okay. Now, have you thought of the good 00:02:28.199 --> 00:02:30.549 which a price floor is common, 00:02:30.549 --> 00:02:32.829 and it's a good for which the number of suppliers 00:02:32.829 --> 00:02:35.831 exceeds the number of buyers? 00:02:35.831 --> 00:02:39.129 Well, the minimum wage is a price floor. 00:02:39.129 --> 00:02:44.401 The minimum wage is a price below which you cannot sell labor, 00:02:44.401 --> 00:02:48.079 and the suppliers of labor exceed the buyers of labor. 00:02:48.079 --> 00:02:50.430 So it's not surprising that a minimum wage 00:02:50.430 --> 00:02:52.998 is often politically successful. 00:02:52.998 --> 00:02:55.170 Now, who will the minimum wage affect? 00:02:55.170 --> 00:02:57.980 Workers with very high productivity who are already earning 00:02:57.980 --> 00:02:59.070 more than the minimum wage – 00:02:59.070 --> 00:03:02.183 they are not going to be affected by the minimum wage perhaps at all. 00:03:02.183 --> 00:03:04.573 Instead, it will affect the least experienced, 00:03:04.573 --> 00:03:07.490 least educated, least trained workers. 00:03:07.490 --> 00:03:11.291 Low-skilled teenagers, for example, are most likely to be affected 00:03:11.291 --> 00:03:13.089 by the minimum wage. 00:03:13.089 --> 00:03:16.682 Now, I said that a price floor creates surpluses. 00:03:16.682 --> 00:03:18.542 The minimum wage is a price floor, 00:03:18.542 --> 00:03:20.351 so it's going to create a surplus. 00:03:20.351 --> 00:03:23.464 A surplus of labor we call what? 00:03:23.464 --> 00:03:25.054 We say a gaggle of geese? 00:03:25.054 --> 00:03:26.731 Say pride of lions? 00:03:26.731 --> 00:03:30.632 A surplus of labor is called unemployment. 00:03:30.632 --> 00:03:32.425 So let's look with our model 00:03:32.425 --> 00:03:36.300 to understand how a minimum wage can create unemployment, 00:03:36.300 --> 00:03:39.654 particularly among the least skilled workers. 00:03:39.654 --> 00:03:41.325 Okay. Here's our standard diagram, 00:03:41.325 --> 00:03:43.201 except we're going to put the quantity of labor, 00:03:43.201 --> 00:03:46.201 especially unskilled labor, on the horizontal axis. 00:03:46.201 --> 00:03:49.130 The wage or the price of labor on the vertical axis -- 00:03:49.130 --> 00:03:50.471 there's our supply curve. 00:03:50.471 --> 00:03:52.668 There's our demand curve with the market wage 00:03:52.668 --> 00:03:55.321 and the market employment level. 00:03:55.321 --> 00:03:56.957 Now we're going to add the minimum wage. 00:03:56.957 --> 00:03:58.241 This is a price floor 00:03:58.241 --> 00:04:03.541 below which it is illegal to buy or sell this good: labor. 00:04:03.541 --> 00:04:07.350 Now, we just read the consequences of the price floor of the diagram. 00:04:07.350 --> 00:04:08.658 So we read, for example, 00:04:08.658 --> 00:04:13.511 that at the minimum wage, the quantity of labor demanded 00:04:13.511 --> 00:04:15.259 is read off the demand curve. 00:04:15.259 --> 00:04:17.521 Remember, this is the demand for labor. 00:04:17.521 --> 00:04:20.237 So, this is the quantity of labor demanded, 00:04:20.237 --> 00:04:23.541 and at the minimum wage, the quantity of labor supplied 00:04:23.541 --> 00:04:24.773 is read off the supply curve. 00:04:25.798 --> 00:04:28.750 Let's put that point on, that's "Qs." 00:04:28.750 --> 00:04:32.020 So we have Qs units of labor supplied, 00:04:32.020 --> 00:04:34.859 "Qd" units of labor demanded. 00:04:34.859 --> 00:04:37.141 Qs is bigger than Qd, 00:04:37.141 --> 00:04:41.940 so, the difference between them is a surplus of labor, 00:04:41.940 --> 00:04:46.029 also known as unemployment. 00:04:47.089 --> 00:04:49.082 Now the minimum wage is a controversial 00:04:49.082 --> 00:04:51.472 and hotly debated issue. 00:04:51.472 --> 00:04:53.581 Some academic results indicate 00:04:53.581 --> 00:04:56.320 that the unemployment effect of a modest increase 00:04:56.320 --> 00:04:57.494 in the minimum wage 00:04:57.494 --> 00:04:59.832 would not be substantial. 00:04:59.832 --> 00:05:02.652 At the same time, however, we also have to recognize 00:05:02.652 --> 00:05:05.082 that a modest increase in the minimum wage 00:05:05.082 --> 00:05:07.544 would not have big benefits either. 00:05:07.544 --> 00:05:09.500 First, only a small percentage of workers 00:05:09.500 --> 00:05:11.624 are going to be affected by the minimum wage. 00:05:11.624 --> 00:05:14.963 97% or so of workers already earn more than the minimum wage. 00:05:14.963 --> 00:05:19.341 In fact, even among young workers, 00:05:19.341 --> 00:05:22.722 94% or so less than 25 years of age, 00:05:22.722 --> 00:05:25.272 they already earn more than the minimum wage. 00:05:25.272 --> 00:05:28.262 At best, the minimum wage will raise the wages 00:05:28.262 --> 00:05:30.382 of some low-skilled and young workers, 00:05:30.382 --> 00:05:33.582 most of whose wages would have increased anyway 00:05:33.582 --> 00:05:36.142 as they became more skilled. 00:05:36.142 --> 00:05:37.531 At worst, the minimum wage 00:05:37.531 --> 00:05:39.440 will increase the price of a hamburger, 00:05:39.440 --> 00:05:41.722 create some unemployment, 00:05:41.722 --> 00:05:45.612 and/or keep some teenagers in school for a bit longer -- 00:05:45.612 --> 00:05:48.882 mot all necessarily bad things. 00:05:48.882 --> 00:05:49.792 What, however, 00:05:49.792 --> 00:05:53.302 about a larger increase in the minimum wage? 00:05:53.613 --> 00:05:54.603 Few economists doubt 00:05:54.603 --> 00:05:56.552 that a large increase in the minimum wage 00:05:56.552 --> 00:05:59.494 would cause serious unemployment. 00:05:59.494 --> 00:06:03.342 After all, we could not create prosperity 00:06:03.342 --> 00:06:05.892 by raising the minimum wage higher and higher. 00:06:05.892 --> 00:06:08.564 If a minimum wage of $10 an hour is a good idea, 00:06:08.564 --> 00:06:09.782 what about 15? 00:06:09.782 --> 00:06:12.092 What about 20, 25, $100? 00:06:12.092 --> 00:06:13.953 $500 an hour? 00:06:13.953 --> 00:06:15.863 Would we all be rich at that point? 00:06:15.863 --> 00:06:19.061 Would we all be receiving wages of $500 an hour? 00:06:19.061 --> 00:06:20.124 Of course not. 00:06:20.124 --> 00:06:22.761 Most of us would be unemployed. 00:06:22.761 --> 00:06:24.961 So a large increase in the minimum wage 00:06:24.961 --> 00:06:26.415 is going to cause serious unemployment, 00:06:26.415 --> 00:06:30.043 and the good example of this is Puerto Rico in 1938. 00:06:30.043 --> 00:06:33.033 Congress actually set the first minimum wage at this time 00:06:33.033 --> 00:06:35.384 at 25 cents an hour. 00:06:35.384 --> 00:06:37.185 Now, that may seem low, but that's at a time 00:06:37.185 --> 00:06:39.574 when the average wage in the United States 00:06:39.574 --> 00:06:41.593 was still less than a dollar an hour, 00:06:41.593 --> 00:06:44.403 was 62 and a half cents an hour. 00:06:44.403 --> 00:06:47.683 Congress, however, forgot to exempt Puerto Rico. 00:06:47.683 --> 00:06:50.483 When the average wages in Puerto Rico at that time 00:06:50.483 --> 00:06:53.826 were much lower than in the rest of the United States, 00:06:53.826 --> 00:06:56.324 only three cents to four cents an hour. 00:06:56.324 --> 00:06:59.634 So this modest increase in the minimum wage 00:06:59.634 --> 00:07:02.133 for the continental United States 00:07:02.133 --> 00:07:05.686 was a huge increase in the minimum wage for Puerto Rico. 00:07:05.686 --> 00:07:08.666 And lots of Puerto Rican firms went bankrupt, 00:07:08.666 --> 00:07:10.851 it created devastating unemployment. 00:07:10.851 --> 00:07:14.425 In fact, Puerto Rican politicians came to Washington 00:07:14.425 --> 00:07:19.044 to beg for an exemption to get them out of the minimum wage. 00:07:19.044 --> 00:07:21.263 So, a large increase in the minimum wage 00:07:21.263 --> 00:07:26.043 would certainly cause substantial and serious unemployment. 00:07:26.043 --> 00:07:28.493 We do see higher minimum wages in other countries. 00:07:28.493 --> 00:07:31.413 The minimum wage in France is higher than the U.S., 00:07:31.413 --> 00:07:34.404 relative to average wages in those two countries. 00:07:34.404 --> 00:07:36.344 In addition, labor laws in France 00:07:36.344 --> 00:07:38.734 make it very difficult to fire workers 00:07:38.734 --> 00:07:40.755 once they have been hired. 00:07:40.755 --> 00:07:42.336 As a result, firms in France 00:07:42.336 --> 00:07:45.955 are very reluctant to hire new workers. 00:07:45.955 --> 00:07:48.306 Younger workers are especially affected 00:07:48.306 --> 00:07:50.165 because they are less productive, 00:07:50.165 --> 00:07:52.924 and also they are less known commodities. 00:07:52.924 --> 00:07:55.715 So, the risk of hiring them is greater. 00:07:55.715 --> 00:07:59.007 As a result, unemployment among young workers 00:07:59.007 --> 00:08:00.566 is very high in France. 00:08:00.566 --> 00:08:03.726 It was 23% in 2005, 00:08:03.726 --> 00:08:06.755 and that was long before the economic crisis, 00:08:06.755 --> 00:08:09.783 the financial crisis affecting the entire world. 00:08:09.783 --> 00:08:11.566 So even during good times, 00:08:11.566 --> 00:08:15.817 unemployment in France among young workers is very high, 00:08:15.817 --> 00:08:17.433 because the minimum wage is high, 00:08:17.433 --> 00:08:19.918 and because firms don't want to hire, 00:08:19.918 --> 00:08:23.418 given how difficult it is to fire workers. 00:08:23.418 --> 00:08:25.417 Okay. Let's also show that the minimum wage 00:08:25.417 --> 00:08:27.197 creates lost gains from trade -- 00:08:27.197 --> 00:08:29.509 this ought to be fairly familiar by now. 00:08:29.509 --> 00:08:32.227 At the minimum wage, the quantity of labor demanded 00:08:32.227 --> 00:08:34.347 is given by Qd. 00:08:34.347 --> 00:08:38.256 That is less than the quantity of labor which would be traded 00:08:38.256 --> 00:08:41.768 given the market wage, this market employment. 00:08:41.768 --> 00:08:46.928 Key point is that there are buyers of labor 00:08:46.928 --> 00:08:51.467 who are willing to buy labor at a price below the minimum wage, 00:08:51.467 --> 00:08:53.810 and there are suppliers of labor, 00:08:53.810 --> 00:08:57.834 workers who are willing to work below the minimum wage. 00:08:57.834 --> 00:09:00.918 These deals would be mutually profitable, 00:09:00.918 --> 00:09:03.100 but they are illegal. 00:09:03.100 --> 00:09:05.840 So, there are buyers of labor 00:09:05.840 --> 00:09:07.878 who are willing to buy below the minimum wage, 00:09:07.878 --> 00:09:09.648 there are sellers willing to sell. 00:09:09.648 --> 00:09:12.040 These deals would be mutually profitable, 00:09:12.040 --> 00:09:13.970 but they are illegal, they are not made. 00:09:13.970 --> 00:09:16.659 Because of that, there are lost gains from trade 00:09:16.659 --> 00:09:18.851 or a deadweight loss. 00:09:18.851 --> 00:09:21.880 Okay. So, we have covered the first two effects of price floors, 00:09:21.880 --> 00:09:25.169 namely surpluses and lost grains from trade. 00:09:25.169 --> 00:09:27.989 In the next lecture, we will use a slightly different example 00:09:27.989 --> 00:09:30.370 to look at wasteful increases in quality 00:09:30.370 --> 00:09:33.560 and a misallocation of resources. 00:09:33.560 --> 00:09:35.140 - [Narrator] If you want to test yourself, 00:09:35.140 --> 00:09:36.786 click "Practice Questions." 00:09:36.786 --> 00:09:40.960 Or, if you're ready to move on, just click "Next Video." 00:09:40.960 --> 00:09:42.924 ♪ [music] ♪