Even when a market is efficient, governments often intervene to pursue greater fairness or to please a powerful interest group. Interventions can take the form of price controls or quantity controls, both of which generate predictable and undesirable side effects consisting of various forms of inefficiency and illegal activity.
A price ceiling, a maximum market price below the equilibrium price, benefits successful buyers but creates persistent shortages. Because the price is maintained below the equilibrium price, the quantity demanded is increased and the quantity supplied is decreased compared to the equilibrium quantity. This leads to predictable problems: inefficiencies in the form of inefficiently low quantity transacted, inefficient allocation to consumers, wasted resources, and inefficiently low quality. It also encourages illegal activity as people turn to black markets to get the good. Because of these problems, price ceilings have generally lost favour as an economic policy tool. But some governments continue to impose them either because they don’t understand the effects or because the price ceilings benefit some influential group.
A price floor, a minimum market price above the equilibrium price, benefits successful sellers but creates persistent surplus. Because the price is maintained above the equilibrium price, the quantity demanded is decreased and the quantity supplied is increased compared to the equilibrium quantity. This leads to predictable problems: inefficiencies in the form of inefficiently low quantity transacted, inefficient allocation of sales among sellers, wasted resources, and inefficiently high quality. It also encourages illegal activity and black markets. The most well known kind of price floor is the minimum wage, but price floors are also commonly applied to agricultural products.
Quantity controls, or quotas, limit the quantity of a good that can be bought or sold. The quantity allowed for sale is the quota limit. The government issues licences to individuals, the right to sell a given quantity of the good. The owner of a licence earns a quota rent, earnings that accrue from ownership of the right to sell the good. It is equal to the difference between the demand price at the quota limit, what consumers are willing to pay for that quantity, and the supply price at the quota limit, what suppliers are willing to accept for that quantity. Economists say that a quota drives a wedge between the demand price and the supply price; this wedge is equal to the quota rent. Quantity controls lead to inefficiencies in the form of mutually beneficial transactions that do not occur, in addition to encouraging illegal activity.