アプリを開く

教科

EconomicsEconomics3 閲覧数·更新日 Jun 3, 2026·6 ページ

Understanding Price Controls in Economics

Ever wondered why there's a housing shortage in Dublin or... もっと見る

1
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

Introduction to Price Controls

Think of price controls as the government playing referee in the market game. Instead of letting supply and demand naturally set prices, the government decides to intervene when they think prices are either too high for consumers or too low for producers.

There are two main weapons in the government's toolkit: maximum prices (called price ceilings) and minimum prices (called price floors). The key thing to remember? For any price control to actually work, it has to fight against what the market naturally wants to do.

A price ceiling must be set below the natural market price to protect consumers, whilst a price floor must be set above the market price to protect producers. If the government sets these controls the wrong way around, they're completely useless - like setting a speed limit of 200km/h on a road where everyone drives 50km/h anyway.

Quick Check: Remember that equilibrium price is where supply meets demand - it's the market's "natural" price without any interference.

2
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

How Price Ceilings Work

Picture this: the government thinks rent in Dublin is mental expensive, so they cap it below market rates. Sounds great for renters, right? Well, here's where economics gets interesting.

When you artificially lower the price, two things happen simultaneously. More people suddenly want to rent (because it's cheaper), but fewer landlords want to provide rental properties (because they're making less profit). This creates a classic shortage - way more demand than supply.

The consequences aren't pretty. You get massive queues for viewings, people camping out overnight for apartment visits, and some dodgy landlords demanding cash payments under the table. The quality of available rentals might drop too, as landlords cut corners to stay profitable.

Black markets often emerge where people buy goods at the controlled price and then illegally resell them at much higher prices to desperate buyers.

Reality Check: Dublin's Rent Pressure Zones are a real example of price ceilings in action - and you can see the housing shortage they've contributed to.

3
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

How Price Floors Work

Now flip the script - imagine the government thinks wages are too low, so they set a minimum wage above what the market would naturally pay. This is designed to help workers earn a decent living, but it creates different problems.

At the higher wage, more people want jobs (because the pay is better), but businesses want to hire fewer people (because labour is now more expensive). This creates a surplus of labour - basically, unemployment.

A small café that could afford three workers at €10/hour might only be able to hire two at €12.70/hour. That third person is now unemployed, even though they might be perfectly happy working for less.

The government often ends up buying surplus products when price floors apply to goods (like agricultural products), which costs taxpayers money. With minimum wages, they just have to deal with higher unemployment rates.

Think About It: Ireland's minimum wage of €12.70/hour is a price floor - consider how this might affect small businesses versus large corporations differently.

4
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

Real-World Examples You'll Recognise

Dublin's rental crisis is a textbook example of price ceiling consequences. The Rent Pressure Zones were meant to make housing affordable, but they've contributed to the massive shortage you see today. Landlords are selling up rather than renting at controlled prices, and the lucky few who find places often face intense competition.

Ireland's minimum wage shows price floors in action. While it definitely helps workers who keep their jobs earn more, some economists argue it makes it harder for young people and inexperienced workers to get hired. Small businesses particularly struggle with the higher labour costs.

The EU's agricultural policies historically involved buying massive surpluses of butter, wine, and other products to maintain minimum prices for farmers. These "butter mountains" and "wine lakes" became infamous examples of price floor consequences.

Each intervention creates winners and losers, and often the unintended consequences are as significant as the intended benefits.

Exam Tip: Always mention Irish examples like RPZs or minimum wage to show you understand how these concepts apply in the real world.

5
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

Mastering Price Controls for Exams

Here's what you absolutely must nail for your exams: diagrams are everything. Draw clear supply and demand curves, mark the equilibrium price, then show your price control line and the resulting shortage or surplus. Label everything clearly or you'll lose marks.

Remember the golden rules: ceilings below equilibrium create shortages, floors above equilibrium create surpluses. If a control is set the wrong way (ceiling above equilibrium or floor below), it's non-binding and does absolutely nothing.

Always explain the unintended consequences - black markets, queues, quality drops, unemployment, or government intervention costs. These side effects often matter more than the original policy goal.

Practice with real examples until they're second nature. Rent controls, minimum wages, and agricultural support schemes are exam favourites because they're so relevant to Irish students.

Success Strategy: Create a simple table comparing price ceilings and floors - purpose, position, results, and side effects. It's perfect for last-minute revision.

6
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

そんなこと聞いてくれるのを待ってたよ...

KnowunityのAIコンパニオンとは?

KnowunityのAIコンパニオンは学生向けに設計されたAIツールで、単なる答えを提供するだけではありません。数百万のKnowunityリソースを基に構築され、関連する情報、個別の学習プラン、クイズ、コンテンツをチャット内で直接提供し、あなたの個別の学習過程に適応します。

Knowunityアプリはどこでダウンロードできますか?

Google Play StoreとApple App Storeからアプリをダウンロードできます。

Knowunityは本当に無料ですか?

その通り!学習コンテンツへの無料アクセス、仲間の学生とのつながり、そして即座のサポートを手のひらで楽しもう。

探しているものが見つからない?他の教科も見てみよう。

生徒たちが愛用中 — あなたもきっと気に入るはず

4.6/5App Store
4.7/5Google Play

このアプリはとても使いやすくて、デザインも良いです。今のところ探していたものは全て見つかったし、プレゼン資料からもたくさん学べました!絶対に課題でも使いたいと思います!もちろん、アイデアを得るのにもすごく役立ちます。

Stefan SiOSユーザー

このアプリは本当に素晴らしいです。学習ノートやサポート資料がとても豊富で[...]。例えば、私の苦手科目はフランス語なんですが、このアプリにはサポートオプションがたくさんあります。このアプリのおかげでフランス語が上達しました。誰にでもおすすめしたいです。

Samantha KlichAndroidユーザー

すごい、本当に驚いた。広告で何度も見かけたからアプリを試してみたら、めちゃくちゃ感動した。このアプリは学校で欲しかった「まさにこれ!」って感じのサポートで、特に練習問題や要点まとめみたいな機能がたくさんあって、個人的にすごく助かってる。

AnnaiOSユーザー

EconomicsEconomics3 閲覧数·更新日 Jun 3, 2026·6 ページ

Understanding Price Controls in Economics

Ever wondered why there's a housing shortage in Dublin or why some businesses struggle with minimum wage costs? It's all about price controls- when the government steps in to set prices instead of letting supply and demand do their... もっと見る

1
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

サインアップしてコンテンツを見よう。無料だよ!

  • 全ドキュメントへのアクセス
  • 成績アップ
  • 数百万人の学生と一緒に学習

Introduction to Price Controls

Think of price controls as the government playing referee in the market game. Instead of letting supply and demand naturally set prices, the government decides to intervene when they think prices are either too high for consumers or too low for producers.

There are two main weapons in the government's toolkit: maximum prices (called price ceilings) and minimum prices (called price floors). The key thing to remember? For any price control to actually work, it has to fight against what the market naturally wants to do.

A price ceiling must be set below the natural market price to protect consumers, whilst a price floor must be set above the market price to protect producers. If the government sets these controls the wrong way around, they're completely useless - like setting a speed limit of 200km/h on a road where everyone drives 50km/h anyway.

Quick Check: Remember that equilibrium price is where supply meets demand - it's the market's "natural" price without any interference.

2
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

サインアップしてコンテンツを見よう。無料だよ!

  • 全ドキュメントへのアクセス
  • 成績アップ
  • 数百万人の学生と一緒に学習

How Price Ceilings Work

Picture this: the government thinks rent in Dublin is mental expensive, so they cap it below market rates. Sounds great for renters, right? Well, here's where economics gets interesting.

When you artificially lower the price, two things happen simultaneously. More people suddenly want to rent (because it's cheaper), but fewer landlords want to provide rental properties (because they're making less profit). This creates a classic shortage - way more demand than supply.

The consequences aren't pretty. You get massive queues for viewings, people camping out overnight for apartment visits, and some dodgy landlords demanding cash payments under the table. The quality of available rentals might drop too, as landlords cut corners to stay profitable.

Black markets often emerge where people buy goods at the controlled price and then illegally resell them at much higher prices to desperate buyers.

Reality Check: Dublin's Rent Pressure Zones are a real example of price ceilings in action - and you can see the housing shortage they've contributed to.

3
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

サインアップしてコンテンツを見よう。無料だよ!

  • 全ドキュメントへのアクセス
  • 成績アップ
  • 数百万人の学生と一緒に学習

How Price Floors Work

Now flip the script - imagine the government thinks wages are too low, so they set a minimum wage above what the market would naturally pay. This is designed to help workers earn a decent living, but it creates different problems.

At the higher wage, more people want jobs (because the pay is better), but businesses want to hire fewer people (because labour is now more expensive). This creates a surplus of labour - basically, unemployment.

A small café that could afford three workers at €10/hour might only be able to hire two at €12.70/hour. That third person is now unemployed, even though they might be perfectly happy working for less.

The government often ends up buying surplus products when price floors apply to goods (like agricultural products), which costs taxpayers money. With minimum wages, they just have to deal with higher unemployment rates.

Think About It: Ireland's minimum wage of €12.70/hour is a price floor - consider how this might affect small businesses versus large corporations differently.

4
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

サインアップしてコンテンツを見よう。無料だよ!

  • 全ドキュメントへのアクセス
  • 成績アップ
  • 数百万人の学生と一緒に学習

Real-World Examples You'll Recognise

Dublin's rental crisis is a textbook example of price ceiling consequences. The Rent Pressure Zones were meant to make housing affordable, but they've contributed to the massive shortage you see today. Landlords are selling up rather than renting at controlled prices, and the lucky few who find places often face intense competition.

Ireland's minimum wage shows price floors in action. While it definitely helps workers who keep their jobs earn more, some economists argue it makes it harder for young people and inexperienced workers to get hired. Small businesses particularly struggle with the higher labour costs.

The EU's agricultural policies historically involved buying massive surpluses of butter, wine, and other products to maintain minimum prices for farmers. These "butter mountains" and "wine lakes" became infamous examples of price floor consequences.

Each intervention creates winners and losers, and often the unintended consequences are as significant as the intended benefits.

Exam Tip: Always mention Irish examples like RPZs or minimum wage to show you understand how these concepts apply in the real world.

5
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

サインアップしてコンテンツを見よう。無料だよ!

  • 全ドキュメントへのアクセス
  • 成績アップ
  • 数百万人の学生と一緒に学習

Mastering Price Controls for Exams

Here's what you absolutely must nail for your exams: diagrams are everything. Draw clear supply and demand curves, mark the equilibrium price, then show your price control line and the resulting shortage or surplus. Label everything clearly or you'll lose marks.

Remember the golden rules: ceilings below equilibrium create shortages, floors above equilibrium create surpluses. If a control is set the wrong way (ceiling above equilibrium or floor below), it's non-binding and does absolutely nothing.

Always explain the unintended consequences - black markets, queues, quality drops, unemployment, or government intervention costs. These side effects often matter more than the original policy goal.

Practice with real examples until they're second nature. Rent controls, minimum wages, and agricultural support schemes are exam favourites because they're so relevant to Irish students.

Success Strategy: Create a simple table comparing price ceilings and floors - purpose, position, results, and side effects. It's perfect for last-minute revision.

6
of 6
# Price Controls

Introduction to price controls

Price controls are when the government sets a price for a good or service,
instead of lett

サインアップしてコンテンツを見よう。無料だよ!

  • 全ドキュメントへのアクセス
  • 成績アップ
  • 数百万人の学生と一緒に学習

そんなこと聞いてくれるのを待ってたよ...

KnowunityのAIコンパニオンとは?

KnowunityのAIコンパニオンは学生向けに設計されたAIツールで、単なる答えを提供するだけではありません。数百万のKnowunityリソースを基に構築され、関連する情報、個別の学習プラン、クイズ、コンテンツをチャット内で直接提供し、あなたの個別の学習過程に適応します。

Knowunityアプリはどこでダウンロードできますか?

Google Play StoreとApple App Storeからアプリをダウンロードできます。

Knowunityは本当に無料ですか?

その通り!学習コンテンツへの無料アクセス、仲間の学生とのつながり、そして即座のサポートを手のひらで楽しもう。

探しているものが見つからない?他の教科も見てみよう。

生徒たちが愛用中 — あなたもきっと気に入るはず

4.6/5App Store
4.7/5Google Play

このアプリはとても使いやすくて、デザインも良いです。今のところ探していたものは全て見つかったし、プレゼン資料からもたくさん学べました!絶対に課題でも使いたいと思います!もちろん、アイデアを得るのにもすごく役立ちます。

Stefan SiOSユーザー

このアプリは本当に素晴らしいです。学習ノートやサポート資料がとても豊富で[...]。例えば、私の苦手科目はフランス語なんですが、このアプリにはサポートオプションがたくさんあります。このアプリのおかげでフランス語が上達しました。誰にでもおすすめしたいです。

Samantha KlichAndroidユーザー

すごい、本当に驚いた。広告で何度も見かけたからアプリを試してみたら、めちゃくちゃ感動した。このアプリは学校で欲しかった「まさにこれ!」って感じのサポートで、特に練習問題や要点まとめみたいな機能がたくさんあって、個人的にすごく助かってる。

AnnaiOSユーザー