A price floor is a government mandated a.
A price floor is a legally mandated.
Perhaps the best known example of a price floor is the minimum wage which is based on the view that someone working full time should be able to afford a basic standard of living.
Buyers and sellers are prevented from exchanging the good at any price below the legal minimum.
In the first graph at right the dashed green line represents a price floor set below the free market price.
The government has mandated a minimum price but the market already bears and is using a higher price.
Minimum price at which all units of the good must be legally sold.
A price floor is the lowest price that one can legally charge for some good or service.
A minimum wage is the lowest wage per hour that a worker may be paid as mandated by federal law.
Minimum price below which legal trades cannot be made.
Having repealed the taxes on tacos and bungee straps the shady valley government has decided to impose price controls on both markets.
A price floor could be set below the free market equilibrium price.
Maximum price above which legal trades cannot be made.
In this case the floor has no practical effect.
Minimum price below which legal trades can be made.
National and local governments sometimes implement price controls legal minimum or maximum prices for specific goods or services to attempt managing the economy by direct intervention price controls can be price ceilings or price floors.