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1 Efficiency §Principles of Microeconomic Theory, ECO 284 §John Eastwood §CBA 213 §523-7353 §e-mail address: John.Eastwood@nau.edu
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2 Learning Objectives §Distinguish between value and price §Define consumer surplus §Distinguish between cost and price §Define producer surplus §Explain why consumer surplus and producer surplus are the gains from trade
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3 Learning Objectives (cont.) §Explain why competitive markets move resources to their highest-valued uses §Explain the sources of inefficiency in our economy
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4 Learning Objectives §Distinguish between value and price §Define consumer surplus §Distinguish between cost and price §Define producer surplus §Explain why consumer surplus and producer surplus are the gains from trade
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5 Efficiency: A Refresher §According to economists, efficiency means the resources have been used to produce the goods and services that people value the most.
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6 Efficiency: A Refresher §Marginal benefit is the benefit that a person receives from consuming one more unit of a good or service l measured as the maximum amount that a person is willing to give up for one additional unit §Principle of decreasing marginal benefit l marginal benefit decreases as consumption increases
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7 Efficiency: A Refresher §Marginal cost is the opportunity cost of producing one more unit of a good or service. l measured as the value of the best alternative foregone §Principle of increasing marginal cost l marginal cost increases as the quantity produced increases
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8 The Efficient Quantity of Pizza Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) Marginal cost and marginal benefit (dollars worth of goods and services) 0 5101520 5 10 15 20 25
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9 The Efficient Quantity of Pizza MB 0 5101520 5 10 15 20 25 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) Marginal cost and marginal benefit (dollars worth of goods and services)
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10 The Efficient Quantity of Pizza 0 5101520 5 10 15 20 25 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) Marginal cost and marginal benefit (dollars worth of goods and services) MB MC
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11 The Efficient Quantity of Pizza 0 5101520 5 10 15 20 25 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) Marginal cost and marginal benefit (dollars worth of goods and services) MB MC Pizza valued more highly than it costs: Increase production Pizza costs more than it is valued: Decrease production
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12 The Efficient Quantity of Pizza 0 5101520 5 10 15 20 25 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) Marginal cost and marginal benefit (dollars worth of goods and services) MB MC Efficient quantity of pizza
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13 Imagine Six Buyers & Six Sellers
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14 Learning Objectives §Distinguish between value and price §Define consumer surplus §Distinguish between cost and price §Define producer surplus §Explain why consumer surplus and producer surplus are the gains from trade
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15 Value, Price, and Consumer Surplus §What is meant by “Value”? l Value of an item is the same thing as its marginal benefit l Marginal benefit - the maximum price people are willing to pay for an additional unit l Willingness determines demand
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16 Demand, Willingness to Pay, and Marginal Benefit Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5101520 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) Price determines quantity demanded D
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17 Demand, Willingness to Pay, and Marginal Benefit Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5101520 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) Price determines quantity demanded Quantity of pizzas demanded at $15 a pizza D
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18 Demand, Willingness to Pay, and Marginal Benefit Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5101520 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) Quantity determines willingness to pay D
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19 Demand, Willingness to Pay, and Marginal Benefit Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5101520 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) D=MB Maximum price willingly paid for the 10,000th pizza Quantity determines willingness to pay
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20 Consumer Surplus §Consumer surplus is the value of a good minus the price paid for it. l if a person buys something for less than they are willing to pay for it, a consumer surplus exists
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21 A Consumer’s Demand and Consumer Surplus Quantity (slices of pizzas per week) 0 10203040 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 Price (dollars per slice) D
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22 A Consumer’s Demand and Consumer Surplus Quantity (slices of pizzas per week) 0 10203040 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 Price (dollars per slice) Market price D
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23 A Consumer’s Demand and Consumer Surplus Quantity (slices of pizzas per week) 0 10203040 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 Price (dollars per slice) Market price Amount paid D
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24 A Consumer’s Demand and Consumer Surplus Quantity (slices of pizzas per week) 0 10203040 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 Price (dollars per slice) Market price Amount paid Lisa’s consumer surplus from the 10th pizza D
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25 A Consumer’s Demand and Consumer Surplus Quantity (slices of pizzas per week) 0 10203040 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 Price (dollars per slice) Market price Amount paid Lisa’s consumer surplus from the 10th pizza Consumer surplus D
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26 Demand Curves Measure Willingness-to-Pay §The Demand Price represents the value of the next unit to consumers. §The area under the demand curve to the left of a quantity, Q, equals the total value of that level of output to consumers. §It is the maximum amount they would be willing to pay for Q.
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27 Consumers’ Surplus §Consumers’ Surplus is the difference between consumers’ maximum willingness-to-pay and the amount they actually paid. §The amount actually paid equals TR=PQ. §Graphically, Consumers’ Surplus (CS) is the area under the demand curve above P e.
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28 Computing CS l CS is the area under the demand curve above P e =$10. l Area (of a right triangle) =(1/2)bh l CS=
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29 Computing CS l CS is the area under the demand curve above P e =$10. l Area (of a right triangle) =(0.5)bh l CS=(0.5)10(10) l CS=50 $/day
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30 Learning Objectives §Distinguish between value and price §Define consumer surplus §Distinguish between cost and price §Define producer surplus §Explain why consumer surplus and producer surplus are the gains from trade
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31 Cost, Price, and Producer Surplus §Cost vs. Price l Cost is what the producer gives up. l Price is what the producer receives. §Marginal cost is the cost of producing one more unit.
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32 Supply, Minimum Supply-Price, and Marginal Cost Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 50100150200 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) S Price determines quantity supplied.
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33 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) Price determines quantity supplied. S Quantity of pizzas supplied at $15 a pizza 0 50100150200 Supply, Minimum Supply-Price, and Marginal Cost
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34 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) S 0 50100150200 Quantity determines minimum supply- price. Supply, Minimum Supply-Price, and Marginal Cost
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35 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) Minimum supply- price for 10,000th pizza Quantity determines minimum supply- price. S=MC 0 50100150200 Supply, Minimum Supply-Price, and Marginal Cost
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36 Learning Objectives §Distinguish between value and price §Define consumer surplus §Distinguish between cost and price §Define producer surplus §Explain why consumer surplus and producer surplus are the gains from trade
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37 Producer Surplus §Producer surplus is the value of a good minus the opportunity cost of producing it. l if a firm sells something for more that it costs to produce, a producer surplus exists
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38 A Producers Supply and Producer Surplus Quantity (pizzas per day) 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) Price determines quantity supplied S 0 50100150200
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39 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) S Quantity (pizzas per day) Market price 0 50100150200 A Producers Supply and Producer Surplus
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40 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) S Quantity (pizzas per day) Market price Cost of Production Max’s producer surplus from the 50th pizza 0 50100150200 A Producers Supply and Producer Surplus
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41 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) S Quantity (pizzas per day) Market price Cost of Production Max’s producer surplus from the 50th pizza Producer surplus 0 50100150200 A Producers Supply and Producer Surplus
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42 5 10 15 20 25 Price (dollars per pizza) S Quantity (pizzas per day) Market price Cost of Production Producer surplus equals profit 0 50100150200 A Producers Supply and Producer Surplus
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43 Supply Curves Measure Costs §Under competitive conditions, the supply curve represents the cost of producing the next unit.
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44 Producers’ Surplus §... is the difference between the amount producers receive, and the minimum amount they would have been willing to accept. §Producers receive TR =PQ. §Graphically, Producers’ Surplus (PS) is the area under the price line, and above Supply.
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45 Computing PS l Producers’ Surplus (PS) is the area under the Pe, and above Supply. l Area =(0.5)bh l PS= l CS+PS=
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46 Computing PS l Producers’ Surplus (PS) is the area under the Pe, and above Supply. l Area =(0.5)bh l PS=(0.5)10(5) l PS=25 $/day l CS+PS=75 $/day
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47 Learning Objectives §Distinguish between value and price §Define consumer surplus §Distinguish between cost and price §Define producer surplus §Explain why consumer surplus and producer surplus are the gains from trade
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48 Is the Competitive Market Efficient? §Recall l Supply and demand will force the price toward the equilibrium price Question: Is this the efficient quantity of pizza?
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49 An Efficient Market for Pizza Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5 101520 Price (dollars per pizza) S Marginal cost-- opportunity cost --of pizza Marginal benefit-- value--of pizza Efficient quantity of pizzas 5 10 15 20 25 D
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50 Is the Competitive Market Efficient? §At Competitive Equilibrium l Resources are being used efficiently l The sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus is maximized
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51 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5 101520 Price (dollars per pizza) S 5 10 15 20 25 D An Efficient Market for Pizza
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52 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5 101520 Price (dollars per pizza) S Producer surplus 5 10 15 20 25 D An Efficient Market for Pizza
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53 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5 101520 Price (dollars per pizza) S Producer surplus Consumer surplus 5 10 15 20 25 D An Efficient Market for Pizza
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54 At P e, both surpluses are greatest. §At a price below Pe, fewer units are sold. l CS may be larger, but PS is smaller. l Some surplus is transferred from producers to consumers. l Some surplus is lost. § At a price above Pe, fewer units are sold. l PS may be larger, but CS is smaller. l Some surplus is transferred from producers to consumers. l Some surplus is lost.
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55 Learning Objectives (cont.) §Explain why competitive markets move resources to their highest-valued uses §Explain the sources of inefficiency in our economy
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56 The Invisible Hand §Adam Smith - Wealth of Nations in 1776 l Participants in a competitive market is “led by an invisible hand to promote an end (the efficient use of resources) which was not part of his intention.”
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57 Learning Objectives (cont.) §Explain why competitive markets move resources to their highest-valued uses §Explain the sources of inefficiency in our economy
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58 Sources of Inefficiency §Price ceilings and floors §Taxes, subsidies, and quotas §Monopoly §Public goods §External costs and benefits These lead to underproduction or overproduction.
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59 Sources of Inefficiency §Deadweight Loss l The decrease in consumer and producer surplus that results from an inefficient allocation of resources
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60 Underproduction Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5 101520 Price (dollars per pizza) S 5 10 15 20 25 D
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61 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5 101520 Price (dollars per pizza) S 5 10 15 20 25 Deadweight loss D Underproduction
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62 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5 101520 Price (dollars per pizza) S 5 10 15 20 25 D Overproduction
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63 Quantity (thousands of pizzas per day) 0 5 101520 Price (dollars per pizza) D S 5 10 15 20 25 Deadweight loss Overproduction
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64 Deadweight Loss §The area lost is known as a “deadweight loss” because it benefits no one. §Taxes produce deadweight losses when they reduce the quantity traded. §Price controls produce deadweight losses.
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65 Deadweight Loss -- Price Ceiling Area=0.5bh=0.5(4)6 Loss = $__/day w/o ceiling CS = $__/day PS = $__/day CS+PS = $__/day With ceiling CS = $__/day PS = $__/day CS+PS = $__/day
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66 Deadweight Loss -- Price Ceiling Area=0.5bh=0.5(4)6 Loss = $12/day w/o ceiling CS = $50/day PS = $25/day CS+PS = $75/day With ceiling CS = $54/day PS = $ 9/day CS+PS = $63/day
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67 Deadweight Loss §Taxes produce deadweight losses when they reduce the quantity traded. l Remove the price ceiling l Add a $3/bbl tax on oil l What is the deadweight loss?
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68 Unit Tax as a Decrease in Supply Qn = __ bbl./day P gross = $__/bbl. Tax, T = $__/bbl. P net = $__/bbl. Buyers pay P gross Firms keep P net Tax rev. = $_/bbl x _ bbl/day) $__/day
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69 Unit Tax as a Decrease in Supply Qn = 8 bbl./day P gross = $12/bbl. Tax, T = $3/bbl. P net = $9/bbl. Buyers pay P gross Firms keep P net Tax rev. = $3/bbl x 8 bbl/day) $24/day Who pays?
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70 Unit Tax -- Deadweight Loss Area=0.5bh=0.5(2)3 Loss = $__/day CS was = $50/day PS was = $25/day CS+PS = $75/day Tax rev = $24/day CS = $__/day PS = $__/day Tx+CS+PS=$__/day
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71 Unit Tax -- Deadweight Loss Area=0.5bh=0.5(2)3 Loss = $3/day CS was = $50/day PS was = $25/day CS+PS = $75/day Tax rev = $24/day CS = $32/day PS = $16/day Tx+CS+PS=$72/day
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72 Compute CS & PS l CS= area above the Pe, and below Demand l PS= area under the Pe, and above Supply. l Area =0.5(b)h l CS= l PS= l CS+PS
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73 Compute CS & PS l CS= area above the Pe, and below Demand l PS= area under the Pe, and above Supply. l Area =0.5(b)h l CS= 0.5(10)10 l CS= $50/day l PS= 0.5(10)5 l PS= $25/day l CS+PS=$75/day
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74 Deadweight Loss -- Subsidy $__/bbl. Area=0.5bh= Loss = CS = PS = Gov. pays the subsidy Consumers gain or lose? Producers gain or lose? Taxpayers? Net benefit
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75 Deadweight Loss -- Subsidy $6/bbl. Area=0.5bh=0.5(4)6 Loss = $12/day CS = 0.5(14)14 = $98/day PS = 0.5(7)14 = $49/day Gov. pays the subsidy =($6/bbl)14bbl day = $84/day Consumers gain = 98-50 = $48/day Producers gain = 49 - 25 = $24/day Taxpayers lose $84/day Net benefit = 72 - 84 = -12
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76 Output Restriction (or Quota) Output limit = 8 bbl./day CS= PS= Consumers Producers Net Benefit =
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77 Output Restriction (or Quota) Output limit = 8 bbl./day Area=0.5bh=0.5(2)3 Loss = $3/day CS = 0.5(8)8 = $32/day PS=8(3)+0.5(8)4= $40/day Consumers lose = 50 - 32 = $18/day Producers gain = 40 - 25 = $15/day Net Benefit =15-18=-$3
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78 Price Floor -- $___/bbl. Floor only CS = PS = Gov. pays Consumers Producers Net Benefit =
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79 Price Floor -- $12/bbl. Floor only CS = 0.5(8)8 = $32/day PS = 8(3)+0.5(8)4= $40/day Consumers lose = 32 - 50 = -18 $/day Producers gain = 40 - 25 = $15/day Net Benefit =15-18=-3 WAIT! IF 14 BBL ARE MADE, THEN...
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80 Price Floor -- $___/bbl. Floor & Gov’t buy excess CS = PS = Gov. pays Consumers Producers Net Benefit =
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81 Price Floor -- $12/bbl. Floor & Gov’t buy excess CS = 0.5(8)8 = $32/day PS = 0.5(7)14 = $49 /day Gov. pays=(14-8)12 = $72 to buy 6 bbl/day; cost to produce = $63 surplus not consumed Consumers lose = 32 - 50 = -$18/day Producers gain = 49 - 25 = $24/day Net Benefit =24 - 18 - 72 Net Benefit = -$66
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82 Which policy is “second best”? Depends on e d and e s
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