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Wikipedia

Shortage

In economics, a shortage or excess demand is a situation in which the demand for a product or service exceeds its supply in a market. It is the opposite of an excess supply (surplus).

Unemployed men queue outside a depression soup kitchen in United States during the Great Depression.
A 2014 image of product shortages in Venezuela

Definitions edit

In a perfect market (one that matches a simple microeconomic model), an excess of demand will prompt sellers to increase prices until demand at that price matches the available supply, establishing market equilibrium.[1][2] In economic terminology, a shortage occurs when for some reason (such as government intervention, or decisions by sellers not to raise prices) the price does not rise to reach equilibrium. In this circumstance, buyers want to purchase more at the market price than the quantity of the good or service that is available, and some non-price mechanism (such as "first come, first served" or a lottery) determines which buyers are served. So in a perfect market the only thing that can cause a shortage is price.

In common use, the term "shortage" may refer to a situation where most people are unable to find a desired good at an affordable price, especially where supply problems have increased the price.[3] "Market clearing" happens when all buyers and sellers willing to transact at the prevailing price are able to find partners. There are almost always willing buyers at a lower-than-market-clearing price; the narrower technical definition doesn't consider failure to serve this demand as a "shortage", even if it would be described that way in a social or political context (which the simple model of supply and demand does not attempt to encompass).

Causes edit

Shortages (in the technical sense) may be caused by the following causes:

Effects edit

Decisions which result in a below-market-clearing price help some people and hurt others. In this case, shortages may be accepted because they theoretically enable a certain portion of the population to purchase a product that they couldn't afford at the market-clearing price. The cost is to those who are willing to pay for a product and either can't, or experience greater difficulty in doing so.

In the case of government intervention in the market, there is always a trade-off with positive and negative effects. For example, a price ceiling may cause a shortage, but it will also enable a certain percentage of the population to purchase a product that they couldn't afford at market costs.[3] Economic shortages caused by higher transaction costs and opportunity costs (e.g., in the form of lost time) also mean that the distribution process is wasteful. Both of these factors contribute to a decrease in aggregate wealth.

Shortages may or will cause:[3]

Examples edit

 
Empty supermarket shelves in the dry pasta section due to panic-buying as the result of the 2020 COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak

Many regions around the world have experienced shortages in the past.

Shortages and "longages" edit

Garrett Hardin emphasised that a shortage of supply can just as well be viewed as a "longage" of demand. For instance, a shortage of food can just as well be called a longage of people (overpopulation). By looking at it from this view, he felt the problem could be better dealt with.[20]

Labour shortage edit

In its narrowest definition, a labour shortage is an economic condition in which employers believe there are insufficient qualified candidates (employees) to fill the marketplace demands for employment at a wage that is mostly employer-determined. Such a condition is sometimes referred to by economists as "an insufficiency in the labour force." An ageing population and a contracting workforce and a birth dearth may curb U.S. economic expansion for several decades, for example.[21]

In a wider definition, a widespread domestic labour shortage is caused by excessively low salaries (relative to the domestic cost of living) and adverse working conditions (excessive workload and working hours) in low-wage industries (hospitality and leisure, education, health care, rail transportation, aviation, retail, manufacturing, food, elderly care), which collectively lead to occupational burnout and attrition of existing workers, insufficient incentives to attract the inflow supply of domestic workers, short-staffing at workplaces and further exacerbation (positive feedback) of staff shortages.[4]

Labour shortages occur broadly across multiple industries within a rapidly expanding economy, whilst labour shortages often occur within specific industries (which generally offer low salaries) even during economic periods of high unemployment.[22] In response to domestic labour shortages, business associations such as chambers of commerce would generally lobby to governments for an increase of the inward immigration of foreign workers from countries which are less developed and have lower salaries.[23] In addition, business associations have campaigned for greater state provision of child care, which would enable more women to re-enter the labour workforce.[24] However, as labour shortages in the relevant low-wage industries are often widespread globally throughout many countries in the world, immigration would only partially address the chronic labour shortages in the relevant low-wage industries in developed countries (whilst simultaneously discouraging local labour from entering the relevant industries) and in turn cause greater labour shortages in developing countries.[25]

Wage factors edit

The Atlantic slave trade (which originated in the early 17th century but ended by the early 19th century) was said to have originated from perceived shortages of agricultural labour in the Americas (particularly in the Southern United States). It was thought that bringing African labor was the only means of malaria resistance available at the time.[26] Ironically, malaria seems to itself have been introduced to the "New World" via the slave trade.[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tucker (2014) Economics Today
  2. ^ "3.3 Demand, Supply, and Equilibrium". Principles of Economics. University of Minnesota. 2016-06-17.
  3. ^ a b c Pettinger, Tejvan. "Shortages". Economics Help. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  4. ^ a b Bhattarai, Abha (2022-09-16). "Worker shortages are fueling America's biggest labor crises". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  5. ^ "Depression and the Struggle for Survival". Library of Congress. Retrieved 30 March 2020. The Great Depression of the 1930s hit Mexican immigrants especially hard. Along with the job crisis and food shortages that affected all U.S. workers, Mexicans and Mexican Americans had to face an additional threat: deportation.
  6. ^ "What You Need To Know About Rationing In The Second World War". Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  7. ^ "Sacrificing for the Common Good: Rationing in WWII (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  8. ^ "Potato eaters shot". International Institute of Social History. 7 July 1917.
  9. ^ "Potato riots in Amsterdam". Bendigo Advertiser. 6 July 1917. p. 7 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ Macias, Amanda. "Prohibition began 100 years ago – here's a look at its economic impact". CNBC. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  11. ^ "The Oil Shocks of the 1970s | Energy History". energyhistory.yale.edu. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  12. ^ "Why Price Controls Should Stay in the History Books". www.stlouisfed.org. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  13. ^ Shapiro, Margaret (1992-01-02). "RUSSIA ENDS PRICE CONTROLS TODAY". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  14. ^ "Venezuela seizes warehouses packed with medical goods, food". Reuters. 2014-10-24. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
  15. ^ "Why are Venezuelans posting pictures of empty shelves?". BBC. 8 January 2015. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  16. ^ Cawthorne, Andrew (21 January 2015). "In shortages-hit Venezuela, lining up becomes a profession". Reuters. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  17. ^ Schaefer Muñoz, Sara (22 October 2014). "Despite Riches, Venezuela Starts Food Rationing; Government Rolls Out Fingerprint Scanners to Limit Purchases of Basic Goods; 'How Is it Possible We've Gotten to This Extreme'". Dow Jones & Company Inc. The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
  18. ^ "Sudan: Frustration grows over fuel, bread shortages". Al Jazeera. 11 March 2020.
  19. ^ Tkyo, Kelly (29 February 2020). "Coronavirus fears empty store shelves of toilet paper, bottled water, masks as shoppers stock up". USA Today.
  20. ^ Video Interview with Garrett Hardin: Longages and Overpopulation Predictions Educational Communications program 803, 1990
  21. ^ Shrinking labour force may curb U.S. expansion for two decades
  22. ^ West, Darrell M. (April 10, 2013). "The Paradox of Worker Shortages at a Time of High National Unemployment". Brookings Institution. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  23. ^ "U.S. Chamber's Bradley: The Current Labor Shortage is 'Unprecedented,' Urges Solutions on Immigration, Childcare". United States Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  24. ^ "Data Deep Dive: A Decline of Women in the Workforce". United States Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  25. ^ Daniel, Dana (2022-07-29). "Train your own nurses, Australia told amid global shortage". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2022-10-06.
  26. ^ "As American as…Plasmodium vivax?"
  27. ^ "UCI: New World malaria linked to slave trade."
  • Kornai, János, Socialist economy, Princeton University Press, 1992, ISBN 0-691-00393-9
  • Kornai, János, Economics of Shortage, Amsterdam: North Holland Press, Volume A, p. 27; Volume B, p. 196 .
  • Gomulka, Stanislaw: Kornai's Soft Budget Constraint and the Shortage Phenomenon: A Criticism and Restatement, in: Economics of Planning, Vol. 19. 1985. No. 1.
  • Planning Shortage and Transformation. Essays in Honor of Janos Kornai, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2000
  • Myant, Martin; Drahokoupil, Jan (2010), Transition Economies: Political Economy in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia, Wiley-Blackwell, ISBN 978-0-470-59619-7

External links edit

  • János Kornai
  • János Kornai
  • and of COMPARING AND ASSESSING ECONOMIC SYSTEMS, Shortage and Inflation: The Phenomenon, PPT (PowerPoint file presentation) at West Virginia University
  • János Kornai 'The Soft Budget Constraint'
  • David Lipton and Jeffrey Sachs 'The Consequences of Central Planning in Eastern Europe'
  • On overview and critique of Kornai's account can be found in Myant, Martin; Jan Drahokoupil (2010). Transition Economies: Political Economy in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 19–23. ISBN 978-0-470-59619-7.
  • Planning For The Looming Labor Shortage - A Supply Chain Perspective by HK Systems
  • "America's New Immigrant Entrepreneurs" - A Duke University Study
  • Criticism of high-tech shortage claims
  • Disputation of High-tech Labor Shortage by Dr. Matloff
  • RAND Study on Alleged Shortage of Scientists
  • The Real Science Gap - "It's not insufficient schooling or a shortage of scientists. It's a lack of job opportunities."

shortage, economics, shortage, excess, demand, situation, which, demand, product, service, exceeds, supply, market, opposite, excess, supply, surplus, unemployed, queue, outside, depression, soup, kitchen, united, states, during, great, depression, 2014, image. In economics a shortage or excess demand is a situation in which the demand for a product or service exceeds its supply in a market It is the opposite of an excess supply surplus Unemployed men queue outside a depression soup kitchen in United States during the Great Depression A 2014 image of product shortages in Venezuela Contents 1 Definitions 2 Causes 3 Effects 4 Examples 5 Shortages and longages 6 Labour shortage 6 1 Wage factors 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksDefinitions editIn a perfect market one that matches a simple microeconomic model an excess of demand will prompt sellers to increase prices until demand at that price matches the available supply establishing market equilibrium 1 2 In economic terminology a shortage occurs when for some reason such as government intervention or decisions by sellers not to raise prices the price does not rise to reach equilibrium In this circumstance buyers want to purchase more at the market price than the quantity of the good or service that is available and some non price mechanism such as first come first served or a lottery determines which buyers are served So in a perfect market the only thing that can cause a shortage is price In common use the term shortage may refer to a situation where most people are unable to find a desired good at an affordable price especially where supply problems have increased the price 3 Market clearing happens when all buyers and sellers willing to transact at the prevailing price are able to find partners There are almost always willing buyers at a lower than market clearing price the narrower technical definition doesn t consider failure to serve this demand as a shortage even if it would be described that way in a social or political context which the simple model of supply and demand does not attempt to encompass Causes editShortages in the technical sense may be caused by the following causes Price ceilings a type of price control which involves a government imposed limit on the price of a product or service Anti price gouging laws Government ban on the sale of a product or service such as prostitution or certain recreational drugs Decisions by suppliers not to raise prices for example to maintain friendly relationships with potential future customers during a supply disruption Artificial scarcity Worker shortages in low wage industries hospitality and leisure education health care rail transportation aviation retail manufacturing food elderly care caused by excessively low salaries relative to the domestic cost of living and adverse working conditions excessive workload and working hours which collectively lead to occupational burnout and attrition of existing workers insufficient incentives to attract the inflow supply of workers through a voluntary exchange short staffing at workplaces and further exacerbation positive feedback of staff shortages 4 Effects editDecisions which result in a below market clearing price help some people and hurt others In this case shortages may be accepted because they theoretically enable a certain portion of the population to purchase a product that they couldn t afford at the market clearing price The cost is to those who are willing to pay for a product and either can t or experience greater difficulty in doing so In the case of government intervention in the market there is always a trade off with positive and negative effects For example a price ceiling may cause a shortage but it will also enable a certain percentage of the population to purchase a product that they couldn t afford at market costs 3 Economic shortages caused by higher transaction costs and opportunity costs e g in the form of lost time also mean that the distribution process is wasteful Both of these factors contribute to a decrease in aggregate wealth Shortages may or will cause 3 Black illegal and Grey unregulated markets in which products that are unavailable in conventional markets are sold or in which products with excess demand are sold at higher prices than in the conventional market Artificial controls of demand such as time such as waiting in line at queues and rationing Non monetary bargaining methods such as time for example queuing nepotism or even violence Panic buying Price discrimination The inability to purchase a product and subsequent forced saving Increase in demand for substitute goods Deadweight loss due to artificial scarcity a net loss of economic welfare to society occurs when an artificial limit of supply by monopolies or oligopolies to maximise profits limits the number of people who can enjoy the good Examples edit nbsp Empty supermarket shelves in the dry pasta section due to panic buying as the result of the 2020 COVID 19 coronavirus outbreakMany regions around the world have experienced shortages in the past Food shortages have occurred in the United States during the Great Depression 5 Rationing in the United Kingdom and the United States occurred mainly during and after the world wars 6 7 Potato shortages in the Netherlands triggered the 1917 Potato riots 8 9 From 1920 to 1933 during prohibition in the United States the creation of a black market for liquor was created due to the low supply of alcoholic beverages 10 During the 1973 oil crisis during which long lines and rationing was used to control demand 11 In the former Soviet Union during the 1980s prices were artificially low by fiat i e high prices were outlawed 12 13 Soviet citizens waited in line for various price controlled goods and services such as cars apartments or some types of clothing From the point of view of those waiting in line such goods were in perpetual short supply some of them were willing and able to pay more than the official price ceiling but were legally prohibited from doing so This method for determining the allocation of goods in short supply is known as rationing From the mid 2000s through the 2010s shortages in Venezuela occurred due to the Venezuelan government s economic policies 14 such as relying on foreign imports while creating strict foreign exchange controls put price controls in place and having expropriations result with lower domestic production As a result of such shortages Venezuelans had to search for products wait in lines for hours and rationing was initiated with the government allowing the purchase of a certain amount of products when it s available through fingerprint recognition 15 16 17 Shortages in Sudan sparked a revolution in 2019 which ended President Omar al Bashir s 30 year rule They continued into 2020 18 Panic buying due to the COVID 19 pandemic caused food and product shortages around the world 19 Shortages and longages editGarrett Hardin emphasised that a shortage of supply can just as well be viewed as a longage of demand For instance a shortage of food can just as well be called a longage of people overpopulation By looking at it from this view he felt the problem could be better dealt with 20 Labour shortage editFurther information Labour economics In its narrowest definition a labour shortage is an economic condition in which employers believe there are insufficient qualified candidates employees to fill the marketplace demands for employment at a wage that is mostly employer determined Such a condition is sometimes referred to by economists as an insufficiency in the labour force An ageing population and a contracting workforce and a birth dearth may curb U S economic expansion for several decades for example 21 In a wider definition a widespread domestic labour shortage is caused by excessively low salaries relative to the domestic cost of living and adverse working conditions excessive workload and working hours in low wage industries hospitality and leisure education health care rail transportation aviation retail manufacturing food elderly care which collectively lead to occupational burnout and attrition of existing workers insufficient incentives to attract the inflow supply of domestic workers short staffing at workplaces and further exacerbation positive feedback of staff shortages 4 Labour shortages occur broadly across multiple industries within a rapidly expanding economy whilst labour shortages often occur within specific industries which generally offer low salaries even during economic periods of high unemployment 22 In response to domestic labour shortages business associations such as chambers of commerce would generally lobby to governments for an increase of the inward immigration of foreign workers from countries which are less developed and have lower salaries 23 In addition business associations have campaigned for greater state provision of child care which would enable more women to re enter the labour workforce 24 However as labour shortages in the relevant low wage industries are often widespread globally throughout many countries in the world immigration would only partially address the chronic labour shortages in the relevant low wage industries in developed countries whilst simultaneously discouraging local labour from entering the relevant industries and in turn cause greater labour shortages in developing countries 25 Wage factors edit The Atlantic slave trade which originated in the early 17th century but ended by the early 19th century was said to have originated from perceived shortages of agricultural labour in the Americas particularly in the Southern United States It was thought that bringing African labor was the only means of malaria resistance available at the time 26 Ironically malaria seems to itself have been introduced to the New World via the slave trade 27 See also editAggregate demand Aggregate supply Aggregation problem Allocative efficiency Eastern Bloc economies Disequilibrium Economic surplus Effective demand Excess demand function Excess supply Induced demand Keynesian formula Reproduction Scarcity Shortage economy Supply shockReferences edit Tucker 2014 Economics Today 3 3 Demand Supply and Equilibrium Principles of Economics University of Minnesota 2016 06 17 a b c Pettinger Tejvan Shortages Economics Help Retrieved 2022 10 06 a b Bhattarai Abha 2022 09 16 Worker shortages are fueling America s biggest labor crises The Washington Post Retrieved 2022 10 06 Depression and the Struggle for Survival Library of Congress Retrieved 30 March 2020 The Great Depression of the 1930s hit Mexican immigrants especially hard Along with the job crisis and food shortages that affected all U S workers Mexicans and Mexican Americans had to face an additional threat deportation What You Need To Know About Rationing In The Second World War Imperial War Museums Retrieved 2022 10 06 Sacrificing for the Common Good Rationing in WWII U S National Park Service www nps gov Retrieved 2022 10 06 Potato eaters shot International Institute of Social History 7 July 1917 Potato riots in Amsterdam Bendigo Advertiser 6 July 1917 p 7 via National Library of Australia Macias Amanda Prohibition began 100 years ago here s a look at its economic impact CNBC Retrieved 2022 10 06 The Oil Shocks of the 1970s Energy History energyhistory yale edu Retrieved 2022 10 06 Why Price Controls Should Stay in the History Books www stlouisfed org Retrieved 2022 10 06 Shapiro Margaret 1992 01 02 RUSSIA ENDS PRICE CONTROLS TODAY Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2022 10 06 Venezuela seizes warehouses packed with medical goods food Reuters 2014 10 24 Retrieved 2015 12 07 Why are Venezuelans posting pictures of empty shelves BBC 8 January 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2015 Cawthorne Andrew 21 January 2015 In shortages hit Venezuela lining up becomes a profession Reuters Retrieved 17 June 2015 Schaefer Munoz Sara 22 October 2014 Despite Riches Venezuela Starts Food Rationing Government Rolls Out Fingerprint Scanners to Limit Purchases of Basic Goods How Is it Possible We ve Gotten to This Extreme Dow Jones amp Company Inc The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 11 November 2014 Sudan Frustration grows over fuel bread shortages Al Jazeera 11 March 2020 Tkyo Kelly 29 February 2020 Coronavirus fears empty store shelves of toilet paper bottled water masks as shoppers stock up USA Today Video Interview with Garrett Hardin Longages and Overpopulation Predictions Educational Communications program 803 1990 Shrinking labour force may curb U S expansion for two decades West Darrell M April 10 2013 The Paradox of Worker Shortages at a Time of High National Unemployment Brookings Institution Retrieved 2022 10 06 U S Chamber s Bradley The Current Labor Shortage is Unprecedented Urges Solutions on Immigration Childcare United States Chamber of Commerce Retrieved 2022 10 06 Data Deep Dive A Decline of Women in the Workforce United States Chamber of Commerce Retrieved 2022 10 06 Daniel Dana 2022 07 29 Train your own nurses Australia told amid global shortage The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 2022 10 06 As American as Plasmodium vivax UCI New World malaria linked to slave trade Kornai Janos Socialist economy Princeton University Press 1992 ISBN 0 691 00393 9 Kornai Janos Economics of Shortage Amsterdam North Holland Press Volume A p 27 Volume B p 196 Gomulka Stanislaw Kornai s Soft Budget Constraint and the Shortage Phenomenon A Criticism and Restatement in Economics of Planning Vol 19 1985 No 1 Planning Shortage and Transformation Essays in Honor of Janos Kornai Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press 2000 Myant Martin Drahokoupil Jan 2010 Transition Economies Political Economy in Russia Eastern Europe and Central Asia Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 470 59619 7External links edit nbsp Look up shortage in Wiktionary the free dictionary Janos Kornai Home Page at Harvard University Janos Kornai Home Page at Collegium Budapest Part 1 and Part 2 of COMPARING AND ASSESSING ECONOMIC SYSTEMS Shortage and Inflation The Phenomenon PPT PowerPoint file presentation at West Virginia University Janos Kornai The Soft Budget Constraint David Lipton and Jeffrey Sachs The Consequences of Central Planning in Eastern Europe On overview and critique of Kornai s account can be found in Myant Martin Jan Drahokoupil 2010 Transition Economies Political Economy in Russia Eastern Europe and Central Asia Hoboken New Jersey Wiley Blackwell pp 19 23 ISBN 978 0 470 59619 7 Planning For The Looming Labor Shortage A Supply Chain Perspective by HK Systems America s New Immigrant Entrepreneurs A Duke University Study Criticism of high tech shortage claims Disputation of High tech Labor Shortage by Dr Matloff RAND Study on Alleged Shortage of Scientists Shortage of skilled workers knocks red tape off top of business constraints league table Grant Thornton IBR The Real Science Gap It s not insufficient schooling or a shortage of scientists It s a lack of job opportunities Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shortage amp oldid 1184384236, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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