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C H A P T E R 6 Market Efficiency and Government Intervention Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e O’Sullivan/Sheffrin The Metaphor of the Invisible Hand • The “invisible hand” is Adam Smiths description of how individual buyers and sellers, each acting in their own selfinterest, frequently promote the social interest. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e The Metaphor of the Invisible Hand • To avoid socially inefficient outcomes, four assumptions about markets are necessary: • Informed buyers and sellers • Perfect Competition • No spillover benefits • No spillover cost © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e The Demand Curve and Consumer Surplus • Consumer surplus is the difference between the maximum amount a consumer is willing to pay for a product and the price that he or she pays for the product. • The price of a consumer good is less than or equal to the amount the consumer is willing to pay for the good. Consumer surplus measures the bonus or surplus received by the consumer. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e The Demand Curve and Consumer Surplus • Market consumer surplus equals the sum of the surpluses earned by all consumers in the market. Juan © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Willing Price Consumer to Pay Paid Surplus $22 $10 $12 Tupak $19 $10 $9 Thurl $16 $10 $6 Forest $13 $10 $3 Fivola $10 $10 $0 Siggy $7 Total consumer surplus $30 Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e The Supply Curve and Producer Surplus • Producer surplus is the difference between the price a producer receives for a product and the minimum amount the producer is willing to accept for the product. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e The Supply Curve and Producer Surplus • Market producer surplus equals the sum of the surpluses earned by all producers in the market. Willing to Receive © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Price Producer Received Surplus Abe $2 $10 $8 Bea $4 $10 $6 Cecil $6 $10 $4 Dee $8 $10 $2 Eve $10 $10 $0 Efrin $12 Market producer surplus $20 Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Market Equilibrium and Efficiency • Market equilibrium is efficient because it generates the highest possible total market value. • At a price of $10, total surplus in the market equals $50 = $30 + $20. • An imposed price, above or below equilibrium, creates inefficiencies and reduces total surplus. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Total Surplus Is Lower with a Price Below the Equilibrium Price • A maximum price of $4 reduces the total value of the market. • The first two consumers gain at the expense of the first two producers. • The consumer and producer surplus of the third and fourth lawns are lost entirely. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Total Surplus Is Lower with a Price Below the Equilibrium Price • The maximum price of $4 prevents some beneficial transactions. • For example, the third consumer is willing to pay $16 to have his lawn cut, and the third producer is willing to cut it for $6. The third lawn cut would generate a net benefit of $10. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Total Surplus Is Lower with a Price Above the Equilibrium Price • A minimum price of $19 reduces the total value of the market. • The first two producers gain at the expense of the first two consumers. • The consumer and producer surplus of the third and fourth lawns are lost entirely. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Total Surplus Is Lower with a Price Above the Equilibrium Price • The minimum price of $19 prevents some beneficial transactions. • For example, the third lawn cut would generate a net benefit of $10. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Government Intervention: Controlling Price • If a market is perfectly competitive and has no spillovers, government intervention reduces the total surplus of the market and thus causes inefficiency. • Rent control is a policy under which the government specifies a maximum rent that is below the equilibrium rent. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Government Intervention: Controlling Price • Rent control is a policy under which the government specifies a maximum rent that is below the equilibrium rent. • Rental housing • Gasoline • Medical goods and services • Both maximum and minimum prices create winners and losers. Because the gains are less than the losses, total market surplus decreases. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Winners and Losers WINNERS LOSERS © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Government Intervention: Restricting Quantity • Licensing programs place limits on the number of producers in a given market. • These programs may be intended to protect consumers, but instead create winners and losers and prevent mutually beneficial transactions from taking place. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e The Market Effects of Taxi Medallions © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing • Initially, the market for taxis is in equilibrium at a price of $3 per mile and a quantity of 10,000 miles per day (100 miles per taxi). • A taxi medallion is a license to operate a taxi. In this example, a medallion policy fixes the number of taxis at 80, each providing 100 miles of service per day. Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Licensing and Market Efficiency • • © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing The price of a taxi ride increases to $3.60, thus, consumer surplus decreases. Riders that were willing to pay between $3.00 and $3.60 per mile for taxi service are now prevented from executing mutually beneficial transactions. Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Spillovers and Market Inefficiency • When there are spillover costs, the market equilibrium will be inefficient and government intervention may be beneficial. Spillover PRINCIPLE For some goods the costs or benefits associated with producing or consuming those goods are not confined to the person or organization producing or consuming them. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Spillovers Costs • Each ton of cardboard generates 5 gallons of waste at a cost of $2 per gallon. Then, the pollution cost per ton of cardboard equals $10. • When 50 tons of cardboard are produced, the pollution cost equals $500. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Tradeoffs From Producing Less • When production drops to 40 tons, consumer and producer surplus decline. • The reduction in cardboard production generates good news and bad news: it reduces the cost of pollution, but it also reduces producer and consumer surplus. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Tradeoffs From Producing Less • As long the savings from pollution are greater than the loss of surplus, the good news outweigh the bad news. • Is the reduction in cardboard production to 40 tons the right amount? © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Determining the Socially Efficient Quantity of Cardboard • To determine what is the socially efficient amount of cardboard production, we can use the marginal principle. • In this case, the marginal cost is the loss of consumer and producer surplus per additional ton of cardboard produced, and the marginal benefit is the pollution savings per additional ton. Marginal PRINCIPLE Increase the level of an activity if its marginal benefit exceeds its marginal cost; reduce the level of an activity if its marginal cost exceeds its marginal benefit. If possible, pick the level at which the activity’s marginal benefit equals its marginal cost. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Determining the Socially Efficient Quantity of Cardboard • When the vertical distance between supply and demand at a given quantity equals $10 (or the savings per unit in treatment costs), marginal benefit equals marginal cost and the quantity of cardboard is socially optimal. This occurs at 36 tons of cardboard. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e Market Effects of a Pollution Tax • Knowing that the efficient amount of output is 36 tons, the government can force producers to reduce output to this amount by imposing a pollution tax • The pollution tax shifts the supply curve up by $10, and the market settles in equilibrium at a price of $37 and 36 tons of cardboard. © 2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 3/e