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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Supply-demand equilibrium chart}} ''This conversation was exported from ChatGPT''<ref>{{cite web|title=Supply-demand equilibrium chart|url=https://chatgpt.com/share/6946c66c-2724-8008-9329-bbf931e75f88|publisher=ChatGPT|access-date=2025-12-20}}</ref> == gpt-5-2 == === User: Can you produce me a single supply-demand-eqilibrium economics chart that shows both rent control a straight line below… === Can you produce me a single supply-demand-eqilibrium economics chart that shows both rent control (a straight line below equilibrium that caps rents) and a Section 8 style housing subsidy (an upward shift in the demand line reflecting the additional purchasing power of the voucher)? === Assistant: I’ve generated a single, clean supply–demand–equilibrium diagram that includes both policies at once, exactly as you de… === I’ve generated a single, clean supply–demand–equilibrium diagram that includes both policies at once, exactly as you described. How to read the chart (for teaching purposes): * Original Demand (downward sloping): Baseline willingness to pay for housing. * Supply (upward sloping): Landlords’ marginal cost of providing units. * Equilibrium point: Where supply and original demand intersect. * Rent control: - Shown as a horizontal dashed line below the equilibrium rent. - This caps rents and creates a quantity demanded greater than quantity supplied at that price (a shortage). * Section 8–style housing voucher: - Shown as an upward shift of the demand curve. - This reflects increased purchasing power rather than a change in tastes. - At any given rent, more housing is demanded. Pedagogical payoff (especially useful for role-playing managers or policy debates): * You can contrast price controls (which distort prices directly) with demand-side subsidies (which operate through willingness to pay). * The diagram makes it easy to ask: - Who benefits under rent control vs. vouchers? - Why vouchers tend to raise rents in constrained markets? - Why shortages persist under rent control even with subsidies present? If you’d like, I can: * Add shortage arrows and labeled excess demand, * Redraw this in a textbook “blackboard” style, or * Create a second panel showing only Section 8 to isolate its effects for students. == References == <references /> [[Category:ChatGPT Shares]] [[Category:openai]]
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