Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Consumer Surplus Consumer and Producer Surplus Bill Gibson EC 11, Spring 2011 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Why are demand curves downward sloping First answer: substitution Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Why are demand curves downward sloping First answer: substitution Second answer: when price is high resource will only be allocated to high value uses Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Why are demand curves downward sloping First answer: substitution Second answer: when price is high resource will only be allocated to high value uses When price is low, resource will also be allocated to some low value uses Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Why are demand curves downward sloping First answer: substitution Second answer: when price is high resource will only be allocated to high value uses When price is low, resource will also be allocated to some low value uses High value uses is just another way of saying: high marginal benefit Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Why are demand curves downward sloping First answer: substitution Second answer: when price is high resource will only be allocated to high value uses When price is low, resource will also be allocated to some low value uses High value uses is just another way of saying: high marginal benefit When price is low those with high marginal benefit enjoy the low price more than those with low marginal benefit Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Why are demand curves downward sloping First answer: substitution Second answer: when price is high resource will only be allocated to high value uses When price is low, resource will also be allocated to some low value uses High value uses is just another way of saying: high marginal benefit When price is low those with high marginal benefit enjoy the low price more than those with low marginal benefit Marginal benefit is same thing as “willingness to pay” Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Why are demand curves downward sloping First answer: substitution Second answer: when price is high resource will only be allocated to high value uses When price is low, resource will also be allocated to some low value uses High value uses is just another way of saying: high marginal benefit When price is low those with high marginal benefit enjoy the low price more than those with low marginal benefit Marginal benefit is same thing as “willingness to pay” Example What do we call the extra kick that those with high marginal benefit receive? Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Why are demand curves downward sloping First answer: substitution Second answer: when price is high resource will only be allocated to high value uses When price is low, resource will also be allocated to some low value uses High value uses is just another way of saying: high marginal benefit When price is low those with high marginal benefit enjoy the low price more than those with low marginal benefit Marginal benefit is same thing as “willingness to pay” Example What do we call the extra kick that those with high marginal benefit receive? Answer: Consumer surplus Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus Area under demand curve and above price Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus Area under demand curve and above price If demand curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus Area under demand curve and above price If demand curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Rp If not linear must integrate p max Qd (p )dp Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus Area under demand curve and above price If demand curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Rp If not linear must integrate p max Qd (p )dp Sum of CS for all consumers Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus Area under demand curve and above price If demand curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Rp If not linear must integrate p max Qd (p )dp Sum of CS for all consumers Example Can CS ever be zero? Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus Area under demand curve and above price If demand curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Rp If not linear must integrate p max Qd (p )dp Sum of CS for all consumers Example Can CS ever be zero? Answer: Yes...but only when demand curve is flat Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Producer surplus Area below the price and above the supply curve. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Producer surplus Area below the price and above the supply curve. Add to CS to get total potential gains from trade Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Producer surplus Area below the price and above the supply curve. Add to CS to get total potential gains from trade If supply curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Producer surplus Area below the price and above the supply curve. Add to CS to get total potential gains from trade If supply curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Rp If not linear must integrate pmin Qs (p )dp Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Producer surplus Area below the price and above the supply curve. Add to CS to get total potential gains from trade If supply curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Rp If not linear must integrate pmin Qs (p )dp Sum of PS for all firms Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Producer surplus Area below the price and above the supply curve. Add to CS to get total potential gains from trade If supply curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Rp If not linear must integrate pmin Qs (p )dp Sum of PS for all firms Example Can PS ever be zero? Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Producer surplus Area below the price and above the supply curve. Add to CS to get total potential gains from trade If supply curve linear use area of triangle A = bh/2 Rp If not linear must integrate pmin Qs (p )dp Sum of PS for all firms Example Can PS ever be zero? Answer: Yes...but only when supply curve is flat Bill Gibson University of Vermont !"#$%&'()$%(*+%$),!-.) Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus Area beneath the demand curve and above the price P CS for consumer with highest marginal benefit 80 Lower MB so CS is less 20 Demand CS =(80-20)90/2 =2,700 90 Note: recall that area of a triangle is !(base x height) Bill Gibson University of Vermont Q 11 Consumer Surplus At Q=24, there are buyers who value buying the good more than sellers value selling the good (there are unexploited gains from trade up until 65 units) Unexploited Gains and Wasteful Trade Price of Oil per Barrel Satisfied Wants $57 P* Supply Curve Unsatisfied Wants Unexploited gains from trade MC < MB $30 Wasteful trades MC>MB $15 Demand Curve Quantity of Oil (MBD) 24 Q* = 65 Q = 100 Equilibrium Quantity Bill Gibson 14 University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Calculations Example What are equilibrium P and Q Qd = 90 − P Qs = −150 + 3P Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Calculations Example What are equilibrium P and Q Qd = 90 − P Qs = −150 + 3P Answer: Set Qd = Qs → 90 − P = −150 + 3P → P = 60Q = 30; Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Calculate maximum gains from trade Example Add producer and consumer surplus Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Calculate maximum gains from trade Example Add producer and consumer surplus Answer: Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Calculate maximum gains from trade Example Add producer and consumer surplus Answer: Use formula for triangle 1/2 base × height Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Calculate maximum gains from trade Example Add producer and consumer surplus Answer: Use formula for triangle 1/2 base × height Base is 90-50 = 40 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Calculate maximum gains from trade Example Add producer and consumer surplus Answer: Use formula for triangle 1/2 base × height Base is 90-50 = 40 Height is 30 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Calculate maximum gains from trade Example Add producer and consumer surplus Answer: Use formula for triangle 1/2 base × height Base is 90-50 = 40 Height is 30 Maximum gains from trade (1/2)(40)(30) = 600 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Market equilibrium When Qs = Qd at a given P, the market is in equilibrium Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Market equilibrium When Qs = Qd at a given P, the market is in equilibrium Amount consumers would purchase at this price is matched exactly by the amount producers wish to sell Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Market equilibrium When Qs = Qd at a given P, the market is in equilibrium Amount consumers would purchase at this price is matched exactly by the amount producers wish to sell Solving model is finding P, Q combination s.t. Qs = Qd Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Market equilibrium When Qs = Qd at a given P, the market is in equilibrium Amount consumers would purchase at this price is matched exactly by the amount producers wish to sell Solving model is finding P, Q combination s.t. Qs = Qd No shortages–excess demand Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Market equilibrium When Qs = Qd at a given P, the market is in equilibrium Amount consumers would purchase at this price is matched exactly by the amount producers wish to sell Solving model is finding P, Q combination s.t. Qs = Qd No shortages–excess demand No surpluses–excess supply Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Market equilibrium When Qs = Qd at a given P, the market is in equilibrium Amount consumers would purchase at this price is matched exactly by the amount producers wish to sell Solving model is finding P, Q combination s.t. Qs = Qd No shortages–excess demand No surpluses–excess supply Example How does price change? Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Market equilibrium When Qs = Qd at a given P, the market is in equilibrium Amount consumers would purchase at this price is matched exactly by the amount producers wish to sell Solving model is finding P, Q combination s.t. Qs = Qd No shortages–excess demand No surpluses–excess supply Example How does price change? Answer: Have ∆P ∆t = f (ED ) which means price rises with excess demand and falls with excess supply Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Click to download the Excel spreadsheet Demand and supply curves are fully determined by their slope and intercept. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Click to download the Excel spreadsheet Demand and supply curves are fully determined by their slope and intercept. Must be careful here: price (P) is on the vertical axis but really should be on horizontal. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Click to download the Excel spreadsheet Demand and supply curves are fully determined by their slope and intercept. Must be careful here: price (P) is on the vertical axis but really should be on horizontal. If problem is given in form Q = a − bP must solve for P before plotting. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Click to download the Excel spreadsheet Demand and supply curves are fully determined by their slope and intercept. Must be careful here: price (P) is on the vertical axis but really should be on horizontal. If problem is given in form Q = a − bP must solve for P before plotting. This gives: P = a/b − Q/b so the slope is 1/b and intercept is Q/b. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Click to download the Excel spreadsheet Demand and supply curves are fully determined by their slope and intercept. Must be careful here: price (P) is on the vertical axis but really should be on horizontal. If problem is given in form Q = a − bP must solve for P before plotting. This gives: P = a/b − Q/b so the slope is 1/b and intercept is Q/b. True for both supply and demand curves. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Click to download the Excel spreadsheet Demand and supply curves are fully determined by their slope and intercept. Must be careful here: price (P) is on the vertical axis but really should be on horizontal. If problem is given in form Q = a − bP must solve for P before plotting. This gives: P = a/b − Q/b so the slope is 1/b and intercept is Q/b. True for both supply and demand curves. Example Let demand be P = 10 − 5Q and supply be P = 1 + 4Q. Calculate the the equilibrium price and quantity. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus Click to download the Excel spreadsheet Demand and supply curves are fully determined by their slope and intercept. Must be careful here: price (P) is on the vertical axis but really should be on horizontal. If problem is given in form Q = a − bP must solve for P before plotting. This gives: P = a/b − Q/b so the slope is 1/b and intercept is Q/b. True for both supply and demand curves. Example Let demand be P = 10 − 5Q and supply be P = 1 + 4Q. Calculate the the equilibrium price and quantity. Answer: Set Ps equal: 10 − 5Q = 1 + 4P or 9 = 9Q gives Q = 1 and so P = 5. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price ceiling were P = 2 ? Producers would like to charge a higher price but cannot. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price ceiling were P = 2 ? Producers would like to charge a higher price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 2 supply is only 1/4 = 0.25. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price ceiling were P = 2 ? Producers would like to charge a higher price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 2 supply is only 1/4 = 0.25. The willingness to pay at this quantity is = 10 − 5(1/4) = 8.75 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price ceiling were P = 2 ? Producers would like to charge a higher price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 2 supply is only 1/4 = 0.25. The willingness to pay at this quantity is = 10 − 5(1/4) = 8.75 Deadweight loss is 1/2base × height Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price ceiling were P = 2 ? Producers would like to charge a higher price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 2 supply is only 1/4 = 0.25. The willingness to pay at this quantity is = 10 − 5(1/4) = 8.75 Deadweight loss is 1/2base × height = (1/2)(8.75 − 2)(1 − 0.25) = 2.53 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price ceiling were P = 2 ? Producers would like to charge a higher price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 2 supply is only 1/4 = 0.25. The willingness to pay at this quantity is = 10 − 5(1/4) = 8.75 Deadweight loss is 1/2base × height = (1/2)(8.75 − 2)(1 − 0.25) = 2.53 Example What is value of lost time? Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price ceiling were P = 2 ? Producers would like to charge a higher price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 2 supply is only 1/4 = 0.25. The willingness to pay at this quantity is = 10 − 5(1/4) = 8.75 Deadweight loss is 1/2base × height = (1/2)(8.75 − 2)(1 − 0.25) = 2.53 Example What is value of lost time? Answer: = (8.75 − 2)0.25 = 1.6875 as can be confirmed from the spreadsheet. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price floor were P = 7? Producers would like to charge a lower price but cannot. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price floor were P = 7? Producers would like to charge a lower price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 7 demand is only 3/5 = 0.6. Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price floor were P = 7? Producers would like to charge a lower price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 7 demand is only 3/5 = 0.6. The supply price this quantity is 1 + 4(0.6) = 3.4 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price floor were P = 7? Producers would like to charge a lower price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 7 demand is only 3/5 = 0.6. The supply price this quantity is 1 + 4(0.6) = 3.4 Deadweight loss is 1/2base × height Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price floor were P = 7? Producers would like to charge a lower price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 7 demand is only 3/5 = 0.6. The supply price this quantity is 1 + 4(0.6) = 3.4 Deadweight loss is 1/2base × height = (1/2)(7 − 3.4)(1 − 0.6) = 0.72 Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price floor were P = 7? Producers would like to charge a lower price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 7 demand is only 3/5 = 0.6. The supply price this quantity is 1 + 4(0.6) = 3.4 Deadweight loss is 1/2base × height = (1/2)(7 − 3.4)(1 − 0.6) = 0.72 Example What is value wasted quality? Bill Gibson University of Vermont Consumer Surplus What if the price floor were P = 7? Producers would like to charge a lower price but cannot. Calculate deadweight loss: at P = 7 demand is only 3/5 = 0.6. The supply price this quantity is 1 + 4(0.6) = 3.4 Deadweight loss is 1/2base × height = (1/2)(7 − 3.4)(1 − 0.6) = 0.72 Example What is value wasted quality? Answer: = (7 − 3.4)0.6 = 2.16 as can be confirmed from the spreadsheet. Bill Gibson University of Vermont