Module #6 - Consumer and Producer Surplus
http://s1266.photobucket.com/user/bokurawauta/media/mank07t.48.056.1_zpsd9yuynsm.png.html At the equilibrium price, producer surplus is
$2,500.
Producer surplus equals the
amount received by sellers minus the cost to sellers.
http://s1266.photobucket.com/user/bokurawauta/media/mank07t.42.080.1_zpslvvcflxo.png.html?filters[user]=145534191&filters[recent]=1&sort=1&o=0 Suppose a tax of $2 per unit is imposed on this market. How much will buyers pay per unit after the tax is imposed?
between $5 and $7
The following table represents the costs of five possible sellers. Seller Cost Abby $1,600 Bobby $1,300 Dianne $1,100 Evaline $900 Carlos $800 Suppose each of the five sellers can supply at most one unit of the good. The market quantity supplied is exactly 2 if the price is
$1,050.
http://s1266.photobucket.com/user/bokurawauta/media/mank07t.53.143.1_zpsss3dt53a.png.html The vertical distance between points A and B represents a tax in the market. Total surplus with the tax in place is
$4,500.
If the government levies a $5 tax per MP3 player on buyers of MP3 players, then the price paid by buyers of MP3 players would likely
increase by less than $5.
If the government removes a binding price ceiling from a market, then the price received by sellers will
increase, and the quantity sold in the market will increase.
As the tax on a good increases from $1 per unit to $2 per unit to $3 per unit and so on, the
tax revenue increases at first, but it eventually peaks and then decreases.
If a price floor is not binding, then
there will be no effect on the market price or quantity sold.
At the equilibrium price of a good, the good will be sold by those sellers
whose cost is less than price.