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Micro Economics





                    Notes          A price floor exists when the price is artificially held above the equilibrium price and is not


                                   allowed to fall. There are many examples of price  floors. In some cases, private businesses

                                   maintain the price floor while, in other cases, it is the government that maintains the price fl oor.

                                   One price floor that was maintained by the private businesses used to be called “fair trade”.
                                   In the case of fair trade, the manufacturer would set a price for the product that was above the
                                   equilibrium price. The manufacturer then told the retail stores that the price could not be lowered
                                   or the store would not be able to sell any of the manufacturer’s products.
                                   When a “price floor” is set, a certain minimum amount must be paid for a good or service. If the


                                   price floor is below a market price, no direct effect occurs. If the market price is lower than the
                                   price floor, then a surplus will be generated. Minimum wage laws are good examples of price

                                   fl oors.


                                      Task     Give examples from real life situations, where a price ceiling or price fl oor has
                                     been imposed.





                                     Case Study    Demand – Supply and Price of Gold
                                          ast month saw more housewives in the jewellery shops than in any month in the
                                          past. There were no big festivals, neither too many marriages. What attracted them
                                     Lwas the fall in the price of gold. That was so the world over.
                                     Gold prices have been falling for nearly a decade now. Last week they had drifted to their
                                     lowest in the past 18 years. The highest price in the world market was reached in 1980
                                     when it touched $850 an ounce, almost three times the present price. Indian buyers did not
                                     experience the full impact because of the restrictions on import of gold. These have been

                                     significantly eliminated and the price behaviour in the domestic market now conforms to
                                     the international price.
                                     The fall in the price of gold has more to do with the change in demand. Gold has many
                                     uses, Jewellery is only of them. It is an industrial metal, a form of saving for the rainy day
                                     and an international reserve asset for most central banks. The lure of gold for ornaments
                                     remains almost in tact. But as a form of saving or as reserve for the central banks, gold is
                                     no longer attractive. It is precisely this loss in trust that has caused the fall in the price of
                                     gold.

                                     Gold has become a bad investment. Anyone would weigh an asset in terms of the return it
                                     earns, the security it gives and the ready market it enjoys. The last is the best with gold. But
                                     with the price going down; investment in gold makes no sense. An investment of ` 1,000
                                     in gold in India in 1990 would have fetched today ` 1,120. That gives a yield of less than 3
                                     per cent. Not worth the game.

                                     The same investment in equity would have matured into  ` 1,900 and in bank deposit
                                     ` 2,200. Gold is no longer a viable investment though the housewife may still buy gold
                                     partly for display and partly from ignorance about the alternative opportunities.

                                     The penchant for jewellery is much more in India and West Asia than in most other countries.
                                     The world demand for jewellery was 2,807 tonnes last year. Gold that was actually mined
                                     was only 1,350 tonnes. The balance came from sales by the central banks. The bankers are

                                                                                                         Contd...



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