A version of the Becker-Lancaster characteristics model featuring quality-quantity tradeoffs reveals a number of surprising market behaviors that can result from price regulations that are imposed on competitive markets for products that have adjustable non-price attributes.  Quality need not clear a competitive market in the same way that prices do, because quality can reduce the willingness to pay for quantity. Producers can benefit from price ceilings, at the expense of consumers.  Price ceilings can result in quality-degradation “death spirals” that would not occur under quality regulation or excise taxation.  The features of tastes and technology that lead to such outcomes are summarized with pairwise comparisons of (not necessarily constant) elasticities.

More on this topic

BFI Working Paper·Sep 18, 2025

The Five Shanghai Themes

Harald Uhlig
Topics: Economic Mobility & Poverty, Energy & Environment, Financial Markets, Health care
BFI Working Paper·Aug 13, 2025

Post-Roe Planning: The Effect of Dobbs v. Jackson on Contraceptive and Sterilization Choices

Yana Gallen and Daisy Lu
Topics: Health care
BFI Working Paper·Aug 7, 2025

Pharmacy Benefit Managers and Vertical Relationships in Drug Supply

Zarek Brot-Goldberg, Catherine Che, and Benjamin Handel
Topics: Health care