3. The demand and supply for wine are given by Q-20-P and Q-3P, respectively. P is...
Suppose the demand for video games is q=40-2p and the supply is q=3p, and there is a quantity tax, $5 per unit of the video game. 1. Compute the equilibrium quantity and price before the tax; 2. Compute the equilibrium quantity and prices for both buyers and sellers after the tax; 3. Compute the total tax revenue raised by the government and the fraction of tax the buyers need to paytax paid by buyers/total tax revenue). 4. Compute the dead...
3. Suppose the market for widgets can be described by the following equations: Demand: P= 10 - Q Supply: P=Q-4 where P is the price in dollars per unit and Q is the quantity in thousands of units. a. What is the equilibrium price and quantity? (2 points) b. Suppose the government imposes a tax of $1 per unit to reduce widget consumption and raise government revenues. What will the new equilibrium quantity be? What price will the buyer pay?...
Given the following inverse demand and supply equations: P = 24 - 6 Q P = 4 Q 1. What is the before tax equilibrium quantity 2. What is the before tax equilibrium price 3. If the government imposes a per unit tax on each item, assuming the producers pay the tax, what is the new equilibrium quantity if the per unit tax is 3? 4. Given the change in part 3, what is the new equilibrium price 5. What...
Suppose the market for widgets can be described by the following equations: Demand: P = 20 - 1.000 Supply: P = 1.000 -6, where P is the price in dollars per unit and Q is the quantity in thousands of units. What is the equilibrium price and quantity? The equilibrium quantity is thousand units and the equilibrium price is $(Enter your responses rounded to two decimal places.) Suppose the government imposes a tax of $1 per unit to reduce widget...
The demand and supply curves are given by q=130−3p and q=2p−60, respectively; the equilibrium price is $38 and the equilibrium quantity is 16 units. A sales tax of 2% is imposed on the consumer. (a) Find the equation of the new demand and supply curves. b) Find the new equilibrium price and quantity. (c) How much is paid in taxes on each unit? How much of this is paid by the consumer and how much by the producer? (d) How...
Question 3: Suppose that the demand equation: P- 10-Q and supply equation: P Q a. Calculate the equilibrium price and quantity b. Calculate the consumer surplus, producer surplus and total surplus at equilibriunm Suppose the government imposes a tax of $2 for each unit bought. Derive the new equilibrium price that consumers pay, the price that firms receive, and quantity c. d. Calculate the deadweight loss of this tax. e. In a diagram, show the equilibrium in part a and...
2. Suppose that the daily market for red wine in the Quad Cities is estimated by: Qd = 100 - 5P Qs = -8 +4P Where P is in dollars per bottle, and Q is the number of bottles. a. (1) Solve algebraically for equilibrium price and quantity. Now suppose that a tax of $9 per unit is levied on this product. As a result, the supply curve shifts upward by the vertical distance of $9. d. (1) What is...
Suppose the supply of a good is given by the equation Q 800P 2,400, and the demand for the good is given by the equation 2,000-200P , where quantity (Q) is measured in millions of units and price (P) is measured in dollars per unit. The government decides to levy an excise tax of $2.00 per unit on the good, to be paid by the seller. Calculate the value of each of the following, before the tax and after the...
Question 1: In a perfectly competitive market, the demand curve is given as: Q=100-5P, the supply curve is given as Q=3P-12. Compute the total social surplus of this market. If the government impose a tax on the producers, and the tax rate is $2 per unit produced. What is the deadweight loss? If the government impose a tax on the consumers, and the tax rate is $2 per unit purchased, graphically show the change in the market equilibrium and the...
The following graph shows the daily market for wine when a tax on sellers is set at $0 per bottle. Suppose the government institutes a tax of $40.60 per bottle, to be paid by the seller. (Hint: To see the impact of the tax, enter the value of the tax in the Tax on Sellers field and move the green line to the after-tax equilibrium by adjusting the value in the Quantity field. Then enter zero in the Tax on...