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Chapter 6 Market Efficiency and Government Intervention.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 6 Market Efficiency and Government Intervention."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 6 Market Efficiency and Government Intervention

2 The Benefits of Market-Based Exchange Why do we trade??  Make both consumers and producers better off. How can we measure the gains from exchange?  Consumer Surplus  Producer Surplus

3 Consumer Surplus The benefit that a consumer gets from an additional unit of a good is equal to the difference between:  What a consumer is willing and able to pay (marginal benefit) Demand curve graphs the marginal benefit  What they actually have to pay (the actual price).

4 Figure 6.1(a) The Relationship Between Market Price and Marginal Benefit

5 Consumer Surplus Marginal consumer  Indifferent between buying and not buying a good.  Receive no consumer surplus

6 Consumer Surplus This “extra satisfaction” you get can be graphed…  Area under the demand curve and above the market price

7 Examples How would each of the following impact consumer surplus?  A decrease in input prices?  A decline in technology?  An increase in the number of firms in the area?  A per unit tax on the good sold? Inverse relationship between price and consumer surplus

8 Producer Surplus The benefit that a producer gets from producing an additional unit of a good is equal to the difference between:  The price they actually receive  What it costs to produce an additional unit of output (marginal cost). Represented by the supply curve

9 Producer Surplus What is the benefit for producers??  Get a higher price than hoped for Can see this benefit with the supply curve.  Area above the supply curve and below the market price

10 Figure 6.3 Producer Surplus in a Competitive Market

11 Gains from Exchange

12 Application: Taxes and Competitive Equilibrium A per-unit tax adds a fixed dollar amount to each unit of a good sold.  Per-unit tax shifts the supply curve left

13 How find?? Find equilibrium price Supply shifts left in the amount of the tax Find new equilibrium Find point of second equilibrium on ORGINAL supply curve  Shows the actual price realized by firm or equilibrium price – tax = point in question Difference between points determines how much of tax you pay

14 Figure 6.4 The Effect of a Per-Unit Tax on Laptop Sales


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