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TO Efficiency: finish definitions and graphing Efficiency and consumer surplus Course information Where are we on the syllabus? Today, finish chapter on efficiency and fairness, next chapter on public goods. Public goods will be the last chapter covered on the midterm. Deriving Consumer Surplus A demand curve (D) is a marginal benefit curve. D for pizzas: tells us the dollars worth of other goods people are willing to forgo to consume one more pizza. D shows the value the consumer places on each pizza. Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus is the MB from a good or service minus the price paid for it, summed over the quantity consumed. Consumer Surplus Consumer surplus from the 10,000 pizzas that people buy is the area of the green triangle. Consumer surplus from pizzas is $. The total benefit from pizzas is $ —the $ that people spend on pizzas plus the $ of consumer surplus. From the Production (Supply) Side of the Market Supply and Marginal Cost Sellers distinguish between cost and price. • Cost: what a seller must give up to produce the good. • Price: what a seller receives when the good is sold. The cost of producing one more unit of a good or service is its marginal cost (MC). This gives us the supply curve. Producer Surplus Producer surplus from the 10,000 pizzas sold is $ a day—the area of the blue triangle. Cost equals total revenue of $ minus the producer surplus of $ Or, the red area under the marginal cost curve. The Efficient Market Defined When marginal cost equals marginal benefit, quantity is efficient. Consumer surplus plus producer surplus is maximized. What is Not Efficient? Underproduction and Overproduction Inefficiency can occur because: • Too little is produced—underproduction. • Too much is produced—overproduction. Inefficiency and Deadweight Loss Deadweight loss: decrease in total surplus and that results from an inefficient underproduction or overproduction. Deadweight loss is borne by the entire society. It is a social loss. Deadweight Loss Underproduction case Efficient production at Suppose produce at 5000 Where is deadweight loss?. Underproduction is inefficient. ARE MARKETS EFFICIENT? Overproduction When the government pays producers a subsidy, the quantity produced exceeds the efficient quantity. A deadweight loss arises than reduces total surplus to less than its maximum. Barriers to Efficiency • Price and quantity regulations • Taxes and subsidies • Externalities • Public goods and common resources • Monopoly • High transactions costs Price and Quantity Regulations Price regulations prevent price adjustments and lead to underproduction or overproduction. Quantity regulations prevent quantity adjustments. Effect of Taxes Taxes and Subsidies Taxes increase the prices paid by buyers and lower the prices received by sellers. So taxes decrease the quantity produced and lead to underproduction. Effect of Subsidies Subsidies lower the prices paid by buyers and increase the prices received by sellers. So subsidies increase the quantity produced and lead to overproduction. BUT, these effects of subsidies and taxes hold only if there are market failures. How markets fail Externalities An externality is a cost or benefit that affects someone other than the seller or the buyer of a good. An electric utility creates an external cost by burning coal that creates acid rain. The utility doesn’t consider this cost when it chooses the quantity of power to produce. Overproduction results. How markets fail A common resource is owned by no one but used by everyone. It is in everyone’s self interest to ignore the costs of their own use of a common resource that fall on others (called tragedy of the commons). This leads to overproduction. When Markets Fail High Transactions Costs Transactions costs are the opportunity costs of making trades in a market. Some markets are just too costly to operate. When transactions costs are high, the market might underproduce. Are Markets Fair? Two broad and generally conflicting views of fairness are: • It s not fair if the rules aren t fair • It s not fair if the result isn t fair. EYE on PRICE GOUGING Should Price Gouging be Illegal? Following a hurricane, the demand for camp stoves increases to D1. With no price gouging law, the price jumps to $ and the quantity increases to stoves per day. This outcome is efficient because the marginal cost of a stove equals the marginal benefit from a stove. EYE on PRICE GOUGING Should Price Gouging be Illegal? If a strict price gouging law requires the price after the hurricane to be $20. At this price, the quantity of stoves supplied remains at 5 per day. Where is the deadweight loss? The price gouging law is inefficient, but is it fair? Inequality