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Published byMitchell Lynch Modified over 8 years ago
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Indirect Tax A fee charged ("levied") by a government on expenditure, goods and services bought. There are two types of indirect tax; specific/ unit tax and ad valorem A unit tax is a set amount of tax per unit sold, such as a 10p tax on packets of cigarettes. Ad valorem tax is a percentage tax based on the value added by the producer e.g. VAT
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A unit/ specific tax
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The incidence of a tax The economic incidence, or burden, of a tax indicates the extent to which someone is made worse off by the tax.
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Activity Page 74 in text books..
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On Diagram B, which area identifies the consumer incidence of the indirect tax? [1 mark] A ABCJ B DCJG C BDPF D APFG
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Theme 1: Introduction to markets and market failure
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Subsidies A payment made by government to lower the cost of production and at the same time increase the quantity of the good/service produced Examples: subsidies paid by the UK government to fund the railways subsidies paid by the UK government to fund the installation of greener energy sources, such as wind and solar power
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The subsidy causes the firm's supply curve to shift to the right The amount spent on the subsidy is equal to the subsidy per unit multiplied by total output
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To what extent will a subsidy feed through to lower prices for consumers? This depends on price elasticity of demand. The more inelastic the demand curve the greater the consumer's gain from a subsidy. When demand is relatively price elastic, the main effect of the subsidy is to increase the equilibrium quantity traded rather than lead to a much lower market price.
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Data Response Questions – P78
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