-
♪ [intro music] ♪
-
[Alex] Local gun buybacks --
-
they're popular
throughout the United States.
-
The city of Peekskill,
New York, for example --
-
they gave out gift cards
to anyone who handed in guns.
-
$200 for a handgun.
-
$100 for a shotgun.
-
And $25 for a non-working gun.
-
Then the police --
they had a photo op
-
displaying all of the guns
that they got off the streets.
-
Now whether or not you agree
with the goals of these programs,
-
we can ask, "Do they really work?"
-
♪ [instrumental music] ♪
-
A concept from economics --
the elasticity of supply --
-
can help us to get an answer.
-
By some estimates,
-
there are four hundred million
guns in the United States,
-
more guns than there are people.
-
And every year, millions
of new guns are manufactured,
-
and billions of guns,
both new and used,
-
are bought and sold.
-
The market for guns
is a big national market.
-
[cklicks]
-
Now think about the supply of guns
-
to a small city
like Peekskill, New York.
-
The demand for guns
in Peekskill is so small,
-
relative to the total
supply of guns,
-
that Peekskill residents
can buy or sell
-
as many guns as they want
at the market price.
-
In other words,
-
the supply curve
is perfectly elastic.
-
Now, there's
nothing surprising here.
-
The supply of all goods
-
produced in a larger market
to a small market
-
is perfectly elastic.
-
Residents of Peekskill --
they can get all the gasoline,
-
all the bread, all the automobiles
-
that they want at the market price.
-
Now we can think
about a gun buyback program
-
as increasing the demand
for guns in Peekskill, New York.
-
New buyers, the police,
-
have entered the market.
-
Now here is the key point.
-
Will the increase in the demand
for guns in Peekskill --
-
will it increase the price
of guns in Peekskill?
-
No.
-
The supply of guns in Peekskill
is perfectly elastic,
-
so the price of guns
won't increase.
-
Instead, what will happen
-
is that the quantity
of guns supplied will increase.
-
Just like everyone else
in Peekskill,
-
the police can buy as many guns
as they want at the market price.
-
Remember,
-
there are four hundred million guns
in the United States.
-
It won't be hard
to find a few hundred
-
to sell to the police in Peekskill.
-
Yes, in the short run,
-
there might be a temporary decline
of guns in Peekskill,
-
as a few people reach
to the back of the closet
-
and find that old revolver
that no longer works,
-
and they think,
"Hey, this is an easy way
-
to get an extra twenty-five bucks."
-
But if the price is high enough,
-
some people might even buy guns
to resell them to the police.
-
That's happened before.
-
In one extreme case,
-
a Houston man -- 3D printed guns
for three dollars each --
-
and turned them in at a buyback
-
where the city
paid him $50 per gun.
-
It's like trying to reduce
the level of water
-
in one end of a big pool.
-
It works temporarily,
-
but it's very temporary.
-
If the price of guns
in Peekskill doesn't rise,
-
then nothing fundamental
has changed in the market for guns.
-
Since the price hasn't changed,
-
the quantity demanded
doesn't change.
-
In other words,
-
we don't move
along the demand curve,
-
and, nothing has shifted
the demand curve of gun buyers.
-
They still have the same tastes
and the same reasons
-
to buy guns as before,
-
so the demand for guns
doesn't shift.
-
Simply put,
-
the gun buyback program
has no effect
-
on the behavior of gun buyers.
-
♪ [instrumental music] ♪
-
Now elsewhere in the world,
such as Australia,
-
gun buyback programs
have been combined with laws,
-
making owning guns illegal.
-
Now in these cases,
-
a buyback program
can get guns off the street
-
because it combines a buyback
with an inelastic supply of guns.
-
♪ [instrumental music] ♪
-
But a local buyback,
-
in a country
where guns are still legal
-
and are being bought
and sold in the millions --
-
that isn't going to reduce
the number of guns on the street.
-
And the fundamental reason is
-
because the supply of guns
to a city is perfectly elastic.
-
Gun buybacks --
-
they're good for a photo op,
but not much else.
-
But you know what is good?
-
Practice questions.
-
You can test your understanding
of elasticity here.
-
We also have test banks
and lesson plans
-
for economics teachers.
-
Or, if you're ready
for more microeconomics,
-
click for the next video.
-
♪ [rock music] ♪