Imposed by the government that increases the supply costs of producers.
Air passenger duty
Alcohol duties
Tobacco duties
Landfill tax
Sugar tax
Vertical distance between the pre and post-tax supply curves
Inward, less can be supplied at each price level b) increase the price of the product and reduce the quantity demanded (contraction of demand)
No effect on market price
A producer can shift the burden of the tax onto the consumer
Firms have less scope to raise price after a tax so they absorbed it.
Set tax per unit - parallel shift in supply curve
Percentage of the sales price of a good or service tax - pivotal shift in supply curve
The market price must rise by full amount of the tax
As it's a percentage of the unit cost of supplying the product. - so the higher the price of good the higher tax paid. The absolute amount of tax paid will go up as market price increases.
Indirect taxes levied on three major categories of goods - Alcohol duties, tobacco and road fuels
Insurance premium tax- standard rate of 9.5% and higher rate of 20% applies to travels
Value Added Tax - standard rate is 20%
Government support (financial/otherwise) offered to producers and occasionally consumers.
- Intended to lower production costs for suppliers.
- causes an outward shift of the supply curve leading to a lower market price and an increase in output.
- helping poorer families with food and child-care costs can help relieve poverty and improve work incentives
- encourage output + investment
- protect jobs in loss-making industries hit by recession
- make healthcare more affordable on lower income
Reduce cost of training and employing workers to help improve human capital and employment rates
- reduce external costs of mass transport to address the challenge of climate change and improve air pollution
- encourage arts and cultural services (positive externalities)
- for healthy food, plain packaging on unhealthy food, meat alternatives
- should make healthy options cheaper
-2/3 of UK adults are above healthy weight
- outward shift of supply curve
- subsidy per unit is the vertical distance between the 2 curves
- total gov spending = subsidy per unit multiplied by quantity
- top price is received by producer and bottom price payed by consumer
Consumer and producer surplus will increase
Steep fall in price, quantities and demand are relatively unaffected
Increase the quanities and demand at the new (lower) e price