Consumer and Producer Surplus
consumer's willingness to pay
the maximum price at which a consumer would buy a good; different consumers = different willingness to pay
well functioning markets are efficient because of:
1.) property rights - when you buy a good, you are the owner 2.) economic signals - prices acting as signals
3 ways you might (unsuccessfully) try to increase total surplus in competitive markets
1.) reallocate consumption among consumers 2.) reallocate sales among sellers 3.) change in quantity traded *key takeaway point: you shouldn't try to interfere with the market
competitive markets are usually efficient in these ways:
1.) they allocate consumption of the good to the potential buyers who most value its consumption 2.) they allocate sales to potential sellers who most value its sale (e.g. who have the lowest cost) 3.) ensure that all transactions are mutually beneficial - every consumer who makes a purchase values the good more than every seller who makes a sale
total producer surplus
area above the supply curve but below the price (triangle)
total consumer surplus
entire shaded area on graph - the sum of the individual consumer surpluses; areas above the market price line on graph (formula: area = 1/2 (base x height)
consumer surplus
the difference between market price and what consumers are willing to pay
producer surplus
the difference between the market price and what the producers are willing to sell for; the difference (vertical distance) between market price and the price willing to sell; the shaded area between market price and supply curve
total surplus
the sum of producer and consumer surplus
total surplus
the sum of producer and consumer surplus; maximized at market equilibrium
what happens when other consumers enter the market
they add more surplus and as a consequence total consumer surplus increases
consumer surplus rises...
with a fall in price (makes intuitive sense - more money you can save)