From California to New York, legislative bodies across the United States are con
ID: 1220168 • Letter: F
Question
From California to New York, legislative bodies across the United States are considering eliminating or reducing the surcharges that banks impose on noncustomers, who make $14 million in withdrawals from other banks’ ATM machines. On average, noncustomers earn a wage of $20 per hour and pay ATM fees of $3.25 per transaction. It is estimated that banks would be willing to maintain services for 5 million transactions at $1.25 per transaction, while noncustomers would attempt to conduct 22 million transactions at that price. Estimates suggest that, for every 1 million gap between the desired and available transactions, a typical consumer will have to spend an extra minute traveling to another machine to withdraw cash.
Instructions: Round your answer to the nearest penny (2 decimal places).
Based on this information, what would be the nonpecuniary cost of legislation that would place a $1.25 cap on the fees banks can charge for noncustomer transactions?
$_________
What would be the full economic price of this legislation?
$_________
Explanation / Answer
The equilibrium price is $3.00, but the ceiling price is $1.25. Notice that, given the shortage of14 million transactions caused by the ceiling price of $1.25, the average consumer spends anextra 14 minutes traveling to another ATM machine. Since the opportunity cost of time is $24 perhour, the non-pecuniary price of an ATM transaction is $5.60 (the $24 per hour wage times thefractional hour, 14/60, spent searching for another machine).Thus, the full economic price under the price ceiling is $6.85 per transaction.
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