Chapter 4: Consumer and Producer Surplus
consumer surplus
a term often used to refer both to individual consumer surplus and total consumer surplus.
producer surplus
a term often used to refer both to individual producer surplus and to total producer surplus.
economic signal
any piece of information that helps people make better economic decisions.
inefficient
describes a market or economy in which there are missed opportunities: some people could be made better off without making other people worse off.
market failure
occurs when a market fails to be efficient.
cost
the lowest price at which a seller is willing to sell a good.
willingness to pay
the maximum price a consumer is prepared to pay for a good.
individual consumer surplus
the net gain to an individual buyer from the purchase of a good; equal to the difference between the buyer's willingness to pay and the price paid.
individual producer surplus
the net gain to an individual seller from selling a good; equal to the difference between the price received and the seller's cost.
property rights
the rights of owners of valuable items, whether resources or goods, to dispose of those items as they choose.
total consumer surplus
the sum of the individual consumer surpluses of all the buyers of a good in a market.
total producer surplus
the sum of the individual producer surpluses of all the sellers of a good in a market.
total surplus
the total net gain to consumers and producers from trading in a market; the sum of the producer surplus and the consumer surplus.