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From California to New York, legislative bodies across the United States are con

ID: 2495793 • 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 $12 million in withdrawals from other banks' ATM machines. On average, noncustomers earn a wage of $22 per hour and pay ATM fees of $375 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 21 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. Based on this information, what would be the nonpecuniary cost of legislation that would place n $1 25 caps on the fees banks can charge for noncustomer transactions? Instructions: Round your answer to the nearest penny (2 decimal places). What would be the full economic price of this legislation?

Explanation / Answer

The equilibrium price= $3.00

ceiling price= $1.25.

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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