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Price Floors: The Minimum Wage

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

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

English subtitles

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