Jackee said:
introduction of subsidy involves government providing an amount of money to aid the production process, which means more goods can be produced, which will lead to a lower price and more demand due to this lower price ( on both international and domestic markets ). it also translates to lower inflation.
I think this post points out a rather big misconception about subsidies.
That is, that by nature they reduce prices.
This is incorrect.
The goal of a subsidy is to allow domestic producers to compete at the global price level. Indeed if you look at the standard supply and demand analysis for a subsidy it demonstrates that there is no change in price, merely a shift from international to domestic suppliers.
The reason there is not an assosciated change in price is because domestic suppliers are price takers. They cannot charge more than the world price (otherwise consumers would import these goods instead), and they can charge less than the world price but this would not be profit maximising behaviour (remembering that they can sell as much or as little as they like because at the world price they can always sell offshore).
So all that really happens, is that more domestic suppliers are willing to enter the market when given government assistance.
Now where this can get tricky is when we stop talking about homogeneous goods (commodities etc) and start talking about heterogeneous goods (cars etc). For example if the government gives subsidies to say Holden, we might say that it will lower the price because there is no obvious single "world price" for cars. You cannot directly compare a Holden to a Toyota (even if it has the same specifications and is of the same type of car). Usually subsidies do not make cars cheaper by the way they are constructed. For example subsidies given to Mitsubishi and Toyota are given for them to keep making cars in Australia (in order to protect jobs). The subsidy is essentially a payment made to these companies that covers the costs of the savings that could otherwise be made by relocating. So as you can see these cars would unlikely be cheaper if the subsidy was removed.