First degree price discrimination occurs when normal markets are interfered with and producers are allowed to learn exactly what each consumer is willing and able to pay for the good or service. Using this data, all the producers set individual prices for each consumer, eliminating competition and forcing the consumers that are willing and able to pay a higher price to pay it. In
this pricing scheme, those who are willing and able to pay only a lower price get a break.
So I am going to have to answer this with that I think my Big decision is a free market
in an economic system in which prices are determined by unrestricted
competition between privately owned businesses. Today, in higher education we
are losing this system due to high government involvement. The Department of
Education spends about $30 billion a year on subsidies for higher education
where most of the funding goes towards student aid programs. This is the
problem. With the rise of student subsidies is inflation in tuition and other
college cots. Consumers are pressured to pay the rising costs for higher
education to give them a better future and potential job. The government
subsidies help support the rising costs as well as low income families.
However, colleges and universities take the initiative to set tuition higher to
capture those funds. By lowering government subsidies towards student aid
programs, it would force colleges and universities to lower their tuition and
help create competition which would lead to better information on higher
education schools.
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