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Price Floors: The Minimum Wage

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    - [Tyler] In the next two videos,
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    we'll turn our attention
    to price floors
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    and their effects.
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    In this video, we'll look at
    the first two effects
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    and cover one of the most
    well-known price floors:
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    the minimum wage.
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    Let's get started.
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    A price floor is a minimum price
    allowed by law.
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    That is, it is a price
    below which it is illegal
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    to buy or sell,
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    called a price floor
    because you cannot go below the floor.
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    We're going to show
    that price floors create
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    four significant effects:
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    surpluses, lost gains from trade,
    wasteful increases in quality,
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    and a misallocation of resources.
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    We're going to go through
    these each in turn.
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    Before we do so, however,
    it is worthwhile asking this question:
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    price floors are less common
    than price ceilings –
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    why is this?
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    That is it's more common
    to see a price being held
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    below the market price,
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    than it is to see a price
    being held above the market price.
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    Why? One reason may be political.
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    That is, there are typically
    more buyers of goods
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    than there are sellers of goods.
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    So when you hold a price
    below the market price,
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    you may benefit, or at least
    appear to benefit, more buyers,
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    more people, more voters
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    than when you hold a price
    above the market price,
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    which would appear to harm buyers.
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    Now interestingly, the paradigmatic,
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    the classic case of a price floor
    is the exception which proves the rule.
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    Because the classic case
    of a price floor is a good
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    for which there are more sellers
    than there are buyers.
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    So here's the case where the price
    is kept above the market price,
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    and it make sense politically
    because there are lots of sellers
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    compared to buyers.
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    So, what is this good,
    for which price floor is common,
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    and for which sellers exceed buyers?
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    We'll get to that in just a moment.
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    Think about it.
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    So one of the things
    which a price floor does
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    is it creates surpluses.
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    Okay. Now, have you thought of the good
    which a price floor is common,
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    and it's a good for which
    the number of suppliers
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    exceeds the number of buyers?
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    Well, the minimum wage
    is a price floor.
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    The minimum wage is a price
    below which you cannot sell labor,
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    and the suppliers of labor
    exceed the buyers of labor.
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    So, it's not surprisingly
    that a minimum wage
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    is often politically successful.
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    Now, who will the minimum wage affect?
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    Workers with very high productivity
    who already earning
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    more than the minimum wage –
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    they are not going to be affected
    by the minimum wage perhaps at all.
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    Instead, it will affect
    the least experienced,
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    least educated, least trained workers.
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    Low-skilled teenagers, for example,
    are most likely to be affected by the minimum wage.
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    Now, I said that a price floor creates surpluses.
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    The minimum wage is a price floor,
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    so it's going to create a surplus.
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    A surplus of labor we call what?
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    We say a gaggle of geese?
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    Say pride of lions?
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    A surplus of labor is called unemployment.
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    So let's look with our model to understand
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    how a minimum wage can create unemployment,
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    particularly among the least skilled workers.
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    Okay. Here's our standard diagram,
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    except we're going to put
    the quantity of labor,
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    especially unskilled labor,
    on the horizontal axis.
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    The wage or the price of labor
    on the vertical axis.
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    That's our supply curve.
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    That's our demand curve with the market wage
    and the market employment level.
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    Now we're going to add the minimum wage.
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    This is a price floor below which
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    it is illegal to buy
    or sell this good, labor.
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    Now, we just read the consequences
    of the price floor of the diagram.
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    So we read, for example,
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    that at the minimum wage,
    the quantity of labor demanded
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    is read off the demand curve.
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    Remember, this is the demand for labor.
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    So, this is the quantity of labor demanded,
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    and at the minimum wage,
    the quantity of labor supplied
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    is read off the supply curve.
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    Let's put that point on, that's Qs.
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    So we have Qs units of labor supplied,
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    Qd units of labor demanded.
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    Qs is bigger than Qd,
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    so, the difference between them
    is a surplus of labor,
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    also known as unemployment.
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    Now the minimum wage is a controversy
    and hotly debated issue.
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    Some academic results indicate
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    that the unemployment effect
    of a modest increase in the minimum wage
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    would not be substantial.
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    At the same time, however,
    we also have to recognize
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    that a modest increase in the minimum wage
    would not have big benefits either.
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    First, only a small percentage of workers
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    are going to be affected by the minimum wage.
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    97% or so of workers already earn
    more than the minimum wage.
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    In fact, even among young workers,
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    94% or so less than 25 years of age,
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    they already earn more than the minimum wage.
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    At best, the minimum wage
    will raise the wages
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    of some low-skilled and young workers,
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    most of whose wages
    would have increased anyway
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    as they became more skilled.
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    At worst, the minimum wage will increase
    the price of a hamburger,
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    create some unemployment
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    and/or keep some teenagers
    in school for a bit longer.
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    Not all necessarily bad things.
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    What, however, about a larger increase
    in the minimum wage?
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    Few economists doubt
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    that a large increase in the minimum wage
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    would cause serious unemployment.
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    After all, we could not create prosperity
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    by raising the minimum wage
    higher and higher.
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    If a minimum wage of 10 dollars
    an hour is a good idea, what about 15?
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    What about 20? 25?
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    A hundred dollars?
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    500 dollars an hour?
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    Would we all be rich at that point?
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    Would we all be receiving wages
    of 500 dollars an hour?
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    Of course not.
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    Most of us would be unemployed.
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    So a large increase in the minimum wage
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    is going to cause serious Unemployment,
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    and the good example of this
    is Puerto Rico in 1938.
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    Congress actually set
    the first minimum wage at this time
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    at 25 cents an hour.
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    Now, that may seem Low,
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    but that's at the time when the average wage
    in the United States
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    was still less than a dollar an hour,
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    was 62 and a half cents an hour.
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    Congress, however, forgot to exempt Puerto Rico.
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    When the average wages
    in Puerto Rico at that time
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    were much lower than in the rest
    of the United States,
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    only three cents to four cents an hour.
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    So this modest increase
    in the minimum wage
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    for the continental United States
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    was a huge increase in the minimum wage for Puerto Rico.
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    And lots of Puerto Rican firms went Bankrupt,
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    it created devastating unemployment.
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    In fact, Puerto Rican politicians
    came to Washington
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    to beg for an exemption
    to get them out of the minimum wage.
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    So, a large increase in the minimum wage
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    would certainly cause substantial
    and serious unemployment.
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    We do see higher minimum wages
    in other countries.
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    The minimum wage in France
    is higher than the U.S.
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    relative to average wages
    in those two countries.
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    In addition, labor laws in France
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    make it very difficult to fire workers
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    once they have been hired.
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    As a result, firms in France
    are very reluctant to hire new workers.
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    Younger workers are especially affected
    because they are less productive
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    and also they are less known commodities.
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    So, the risk of hiring them is greater.
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    As a result, unemployment among young workers
    is very high in France.
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    It was 23% in 2005, and that was long before
    at the economic crisis,
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    the financial crisis
    affecting the entire world.
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    So even during good times,

    unemployment in France
    among young workers is very high
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    because the minimum wage is high,
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    and because firms don't want to hire,
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    given how difficult it is
    to fire workers.
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    Okay. Let's also show that the minimum wage
    creates lost gains from trade –
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    this ought to be fairly familiar by now.
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    At the minimum wage,
    the quantity of labor demanded
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    is given by Qd.
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    That is less than the quantity
    of labor which would be traded
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    given the market wage,
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    this market employment.
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    Key point is that
    there are buyers of labor
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    who are willing to buy labor
    at a price below the minimum wage,
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    and there are suppliers of labor,
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    workers who are willing
    to work below the minimum wage.
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    These deals would be mutually profitable,
    but they are illegal.
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    So, there are buyers of labor
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    who are willing to buy below
    the minimum wage,
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    there are sellers willing to sell.
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    These deals would be mutually profitable,
    but they are illegal, they are not made.
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    Because of that, there are lost
    gains from trade or a deadweight loss.
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    Okay. So, we have covered
    the first two effects of price floors,
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    namely surpluses
    and lost grains from trade.
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    In the next lecture, we will use
    a slightly different example
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    to look at wasteful increases in quality
    and a misallocation of resources.
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    - [Announcer] If you want to test yourself,
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    click Practice Questions.
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    Or, if you're ready to move on,
    just click Next Video.
Title:
Price Floors: The Minimum Wage
Description:

Price floors, when prices are kept artificially high, lead to several consequences that hurt the consumer. In this video, we take a look at the minimum wage as an example of a price floor. Using the supply and demand curve and real world examples, we show how price floors create surpluses (such as a surplus in labor, or unemployment) as well as deadweight loss.

Microeconomics Course: http://mruniversity.com/courses/principles-economics-microeconomics

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Next video: http://mruniversity.com/courses/principles-economics-microeconomics/price-floor-effect-on-quality-airline-deregulation

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Marginal Revolution University
Project:
Micro
Duration:
09:46

English subtitles

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