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Yr11 Economics Assignment HELP!! (1 Viewer)

penny.sullivan

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hey anybody who can help would be much help as i am so stuck and have no idea; so heres the question...

Using Australia examples, explain how governments intervene in the free operation of the price mechanism. How can this intervention be justified?

please help anybody!!!

Penny :cool:
 

midifile

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penny.sullivan said:
hey anybody who can help would be much help as i am so stuck and have no idea; so heres the question...

Using Australia examples, explain how governments intervene in the free operation of the price mechanism. How can this intervention be justified?

please help anybody!!!

Penny :cool:
Look at areas where the price mechanism doesn't work (in other words when market failure occurs). The price mechanism only takes into account the private costs and benefits of those who enter into the exchange (buyers and sellers) but not the social benefits and costs
- merit goods - Merit goods are things that businesses and individuals underestimate the benefits of such as health care and funding for the arts. The free market would not provide an adequete quantity of these things so the government must subsidise them or provide them for free
- public goods - Like merit goods (public schools, defence, roads etc) these don't have a great profit margin so businesses would not supply them, and therefore the government must intervene
- externalities - The government often charges exice on things that have negative externalities to discourage their use (ie smoking).
- the environment - Environmental goods have a lack of property rights (they either dont belong to anyone or belong to everyone), which means that they are often exploited. This can fall under externalities as a lot of environmental damage is externalities

The government also sometimes controls the prices of items using price ceilings and price floors. They will implement price ceilings to protect consumers from exploitation from firms (esp. monopolies) or when the product is a neccesity (ie medicines or water), otherwise the businesses could charge however much they wanted and consumers whould have to pay. Price floors are implemented to protect businesses as it ensure a minimum price for their products


Hope that helps :)
 

midifile

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Oh i didnt really say too much on how they intervene but you can just talk about price ceilings price floors as well as allocation of money in the budget (ie to education, defence environment etc) as well as the implementation of exise duties. If you go to the Australian budget 08-09 to can get heaps of up to dat policies and spending figures for these areas
 

munchiecrunchie

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some australian examples you could use are:

the fuelwatch scheme, ACCC regulation

carbon emissions trading

australia now a signatory to the kyoto protocol (which will alter the prices of goods)

australia's wool industry (back in the 1970's i think, there was a price floor, check up wool price floor scheme)

minimum award wages

alcohol and cigarette taxes

subsidies of medication eg pharmaceutical benefits scheme



not sure how relevant all of these are, but hope that helps.
 

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