Sugar Daddy: Quotas and the U.S. Government
Publication date: 20 January 2017
Abstract
Since 1981, the U.S. federal government has operated a price support program to help sugar beet and sugar cane producers and processors. This complex program works through a combination of loans, import quotas, and duties. As a result, sugar prices in the United States are significantly higher than world prices. For example, in December 2001, U.S. consumers paid 22.9 cents per pound, while the world price was just 9 cents per pound. The General Accounting Office estimates that the total cost to consumers is $1.9 billion a year. Uses a simple demand-and-supply framework with real-world data to assess the economic and political consequences of the U.S. sugar program.
To illustrate welfare concepts such as consumer surplus, producer surplus, and dead-weight loss in a concrete, real-world market context.
Keywords
Citation
Al-Najjar, N., Baliga, S. and Forman, C. (2017), "Sugar Daddy: Quotas and the U.S. Government", . https://doi.org/10.1108/case.kellogg.2016.000327
Publisher
:Kellogg School of Management
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