Econ Chapter 7
a lower price does what to consumer surplus?-
raises consumer surplus; existing buyers increase in consumer surplus and new buyers enter the marketplace and increase the consumer surplus
a higher price does what to producer surplus?-
raises it; existing sellers increase in producer surplus and new sellers enter the market, increasing producer surplus
welfare economics
study of hoow the allocation of resources affects economic well being
total consumer surplus
the area below the demand curve and above the price (CS= WTP-P; the sum of the consumer surplus of all buyers in the market)
cost
value of everything a seller must give up to produce a good; measure of willingness of sell
consumer surplus (CS)
value to buyers- amount paid by buyers
total surplus
CS+PS (value to buyers- cost to sellers)
decentralized
determined by interactions of many self-interested buyers and sellers
equality
distribute economic prosperity uniformly among the members of society (every member of society gets an equal slice of the pie?)
willingness to pay
maximum amount that a buyer will pay for a good or how much that buyer values the good
total surplus
measure of society's well-being and is used to consider whether the market's allocation is efficient
the benevolent social planner
all knowing, all powerful, well intentioned dictator; wants to maximize the economic well-being of everyone in society; evaluates market outcomes
efficiency
allocation of resources maximizes total surplus (is the pie as big as possible?)
consumer surplus
amount a buyer will pay for a good minus the amount the buyer actually pays (benefits buyers receive from participating in a market)
producer surplus
amount a seller is paid for a good minus the seller's cost of providing it; price received minus willingness to sell
producer surplus (PS)
amount received by sellers- cost to sellers