The market for pizza is characterized by a downward-sloping demand curve and an upward-sloping supply curve.a.Draw the competitive market equilibrium. Label the price, quantity, consumer surplus, and producer surplus. Is there any deadweight loss? Explain.b.Suppose that the government forces each pizzeria to pay a $1 tax on each pizza sold. Illustrate the effect of this tax on the pizza market, being sure to label the consumer surplus, producer surplus, government revenue, and deadweight loss. How does each area compare to the pre-tax case?c.If the tax were removed, pizza eaters and sellers would be better off, but the government would lose tax revenue. Suppose that consumers and produc-ers voluntarily transferred some of their gains to the government. Could all parties (including the government) be better off than they were with a tax? Explain using the labeled areas in your graph
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Textbook Solutions for Principles of Microeconomics
Question
Hotel rooms in Smalltown go for $100, and 1,000 rooms are rented on a typical day.a.To raise revenue, the mayor decides to charge hotels a tax of $10 per rented room. After the tax is imposed, the going rate for hotel rooms rises to $108, and the number of rooms rented falls to 900. Calculate the amount of revenue this tax raises for Smalltown and the deadweight loss of the tax. (Hint: The area of a triangle is base height.)b.The mayor now doubles the tax to $20. The price rises to $116, and the number of rooms rented falls to 800. Calculate tax revenue and deadweight loss with this larger tax. Are they double, more than double, or less than double? Explain.
Solution
Step 1 of 3
The tax imposed increases the price of the product; thus, the demand will decrease. The government imposes the tax; hence, it will give revenue to the government.
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