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Encyclopedia > Subsidies

A subsidy is generally a monetary grant given by government in support of an activity regarded as being in the public interest. Sometimes it may also refer to assistance granted by others, such as individuals or non-government institutions, although this is more usually described as charity.


Overview

In standard supply and demand curve diagrams, a subsidy will shift either the demand curve up (subsidized consumption) or the supply curve down (subsidized production). Both cases result in a new, higher equilibrium quantity. Therefore, it is essential to consider the price elasticity of demand when estimating the total costs of a planned subsidy: it equals the subsidy per unit (difference between market price and subsidized price) times the higher equilibrium quantity. One category of goods suffers less from this effect: Public goods are -- once created -- in ample supply and the total costs of subsidies remain constant regardless of the number of consumers; depending on the form of the subsidy, however, the number of producers demanding their share of benefits may still rise and drive costs up.


Examples of subsidies include welfare, farm subsidies, and (in some countries) certain aspects of student loans.


A subsidy normally exemplifies the opposite of a tax, but can also be given using a reduction of the tax burden. These kinds of subsidy are generally called tax expenditures.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
City of Toronto: Children Services (2484 words)
Fee subsidy is available on a first-come, first-served basis, so plan to apply well in advance of when you need it as there is a waiting list.
You must have filed an income tax return to apply for fee subsidy, unless you are a recent immigrant to Canada and would not yet have filed your first tax return.
Fee subsidy is available only to help you with the cost of child care while you are in an approved activity.
Subsidy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1088 words)
In economics, a subsidy is generally a monetary grant given by government to lower the price faced by producers or consumers of a good, generally because it is considered to be in the public interest.
Subsidies protect the consumer from paying the full price of the good consumed, however they also prevent the consumer from receiving the full value of the thing not consumed – in that sense, a subsidized society is a consumption society because it unfairly encourages consumption more than conservation.
Subsidies are paid for by taxation which creates a deadweight loss for that activity which is taxed.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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