What Price Means (Micro)
Censoring Pleas for Help (1/23/1999)
Price control after natural disasters may misallocate scarce resources to less urgent needs
Demand Elasticity and Total Revenue (11/2/2011)
A linear downward-sloping demand curve has a range of demand elasticities and an inverted U-shaped total revenue curve under single pricing.
Excess Demand Blues - Scalpers profit from ticket shortage (2/23/2004)
Excess demand generated by low concert ticket price created profitable opportunity for scalpers.
Gray Market (11/5/1999)
Gray markets appear when cheaper goods in one market are diverted to compete with more expensive but similar goods in another market.
Happy Hogging! (1/16/2006)
Price hikes in anticipation of shortages can lead to re-allocation of scarce resources to higher-valued uses.
Hedging Inflation with Prostitution (1/30/2015)
Prostitution has proven to be an effective hedge against high inflation induced by subsidies and price control in Venezuela.
Is a Fine a Price? (9/1/2005)
A fine which normally connotes shame can be confused with a price which connotes right if a fine is not properly implemented.
Lounging in Luxury - Can You Afford It? (1/29/2014)
The value of luxury goods can be preserved only if access to them is restricted.
Marginal Cost and Average Total Cost (transcript) (1/29/2012)
Marginal cost and average total cost can be derived from the short-run total cost subject to the law of diminishing returns.
One-Price Law – Making an Illegal Buck (2/27/2007)
Artificially-imposed price difference between markets can lead to flow of goods from short-supplied areas to well-supplied areas to equalize their effective prices.
Price Gouging - Historical vs Opportunity Cost cartoon (10/8/2017)
Pricing at opportunity cost rather than historical cost can solve market shortages. In other words, "price gouging" can be an unsung hero.
Price Signals as Guides for Resource Allocation (7/7/2006)
High prices for scarce resources ensure that these resources will be used for only high-valued purposes.
Prices and Sanctions? (8/13/1999)
Prices compel decision makers to consider the monetary costs of their acts, whereas sanctions deter people from doing what is wrong.
Rent Ceiling (8/31/2000)
Rent control in Boston, MA has led to most apartments charging rent right up to the price ceiling. The effective rent is actually higher if under-the-table payments are included.
Should parking be free? (11/2/2011)
Free parking generates lower total benefit when parking spaces are scarce.
Should parking be free? (transcript) (3/27/2007)
Narrated lecture comparing total benefits under free vs paid parking when parking spaces are scarce.
Slippery Oil (9/7/2005)
Oil is a fungible world commodity that should be sourced where it is the cheapest and sold to the highest bidder regardless of national boundaries.
Sugar Daddy (6/22/2006)
US subsidies to domestic sugar cane and sugar beet growers have resulted in huge collateral damage to domestic industries and overseas producers.
Supply and demand (11/2/2011)
Market prices and quantities supplied and demanded are determined by the interactions between supply and demand.
Supply and demand (transcript) (3/27/2007)
Narrated lecture on supply and demand curves and price determination under free market.
Surge Pricing Ride Service (12/13/2014)
Dynamic pricing allows mobile-dispatched ride services such as Uber to digitally match supply and demand at the expense of regular taxi companies.
The Case for Sweatshops (1/23/1999)
Sweatshops in low wage countries supplying goods to American companies may offer better paying jobs than other local firms.
Underground Sins (1/14/2006)
High sales tax on cigarettes inadvertently encouraged underage smoking and reduced tax revenues.
Visa Auction (2/27/2007)
Auction of immigrant visas could ensure that scarce visas go to only those who are willing to pay the most to get them and that immigrants do not displace native-born workers simply because of their willingness to accept lower pay.
Who Is Over a Barrel? (1/20/2015)
The impact of low oil prices on oil output depends on the cost structures of different types of oils.