The European Union's Common Agricultural Policy has maintained above-market prices for milk, butter, and wheat for decades. At the supported prices, European farmers produce more than European consumers want to buy — the predictable result of a binding price floor. The EU has accumulated, stored, and periodically dumped excess production — famously creating "butter mountains" and "milk lakes" of surplus agricultural commodities. The floor price protected farmers' incomes; the cost was overproduction, consumer losses, and enormous fiscal expenditure to absorb the surplus. That trade-off, scaled globally, explains why agricultural price supports are the most contested element of international trade negotiations.
What it is
A price floor is a legally mandated minimum price — buyers cannot pay less than the floor price for the covered good or service. It is binding only when set above the market equilibrium price. A floor below equilibrium has no effect — the market price is already above it.
The mechanics follow directly from supply and demand:
- At the floor price (above equilibrium), quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded → surplus
- The surplus cannot self-correct through price decreases (blocked by the floor)
- Excess production must be absorbed through government purchases, storage, export, or reduced output by sellers willing to quit at below-floor market prices
The intended effect
Price floors are enacted to protect sellers from prices perceived as inadequately low. Agricultural price supports protect farmers from price volatility and below-cost production. The minimum wage protects workers from poverty wages. Professional licensing minimum fee schedules (common in legal and medical professions historically) protect practitioners from price competition. The immediate effect does benefit sellers who can sell at the above-market price and who find buyers willing to pay it.
The tradeoff
Binding price floors create predictable costs:
Surplus: persistent excess supply that cannot clear because price adjustment is blocked. In labor markets, this surplus is unemployment — more workers want jobs at the minimum wage than employers want to hire at that price (in competitive markets).
Misallocation: resources flow into the subsidized sector beyond their efficient level. Agricultural price supports encourage too much land to be farmed — the USDA's conservation programs have historically paid farmers to take acreage out of production specifically to counter the overproduction incentive created by price supports.
Deadweight loss: transactions that would benefit both buyers and sellers at below-floor prices go unmade. The USDA's farm income data documents the ongoing fiscal cost of agricultural support programs — billions annually — that represents the taxpayer cost of absorbing or preventing the surplus that price floors create.
How it plays out in practice
The minimum wage is the most empirically studied price floor. In competitive labor markets, setting a wage floor above equilibrium creates unemployment — the standard competitive analysis. In monopsonistic markets, the floor can increase both wages and employment by correcting buyer power. The Congressional Budget Office's minimum wage analyses typically find modest employment reductions alongside significant wage gains — the policy embodying the price floor tradeoff between protecting lower-wage workers and the employment effects of above-equilibrium pricing.





