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Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs Efficient allocation where MB = MC This assumes all costs and benefits are included (including environmental costs) • Do competitive markets produce efficient outcomes?
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Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Part 3Markets and Efficiency

• Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously

• Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs

• Efficient allocation where MB = MC• This assumes all costs and benefits

are included (including environmental costs)

• Do competitive markets produce efficient outcomes?

Page 2: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Demand and Marginal Benefit

• People value many different goods and services

• The total benefit (value) of a good to a person is the benefit gained from the whole of the amount of the good consumed

• The marginal benefit (value) of a good to a person is the additional benefit that consuming the last unit provides

• A person’s relative valuation of a good is expressed in their willingness to pay

Page 3: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Willingness to Pay

• People have a limited budget so that purchasing one thing for $5 means not purchasing the other things that $5 could have bought

• If I pay $5 for a unit of a good it means I value that unit of that good at least as much as (and maybe more than) the other things I could have bought for $5

• My willingness to pay for the last unit I purchase is a measure of its marginal benefit to me

Page 4: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Willingness to Pay

• Willingness to pay for additional units of a good declines with quantity for each individual

• People vary in their willingness to pay depending on their incomes and preferences

• At the level of the market will find willingness to pay will decline with quantity.

Page 5: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Willingness to Pay and Demand Curves

• Under most circumstances (small or zero income effects from price changes) a demand curve can also be thought of as a marginal benefit curve or as a marginal willingness to pay curve

• The area under the demand curve to the left of the last unit purchased can be thought of as measuring total benefit or total willingness to pay

Page 6: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Willingness to Pay and Demand Curves

P

Q

Total benefit or total WTP for Q1

Q1

P1P1 = MB or marginal WTPat Q1

(green shaded area)

D

Page 7: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Consumers’ Surplus

P

Q

Consumers’ Surplus: excessof total WPT over amount actually paid

Q1

P1P1 = MB or marginal WTPat Q1

Amount actually paid (P1 x Q1)

Given a price of P1 consumers purchase up to Q1. They pay P1 for all units although previous units are valued more

D

Page 8: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Supply and Marginal Cost

• The cost of production of a good is its opportunity cost--the other goods that could have been produced instead with the resources used

• Provided all productive resources are priced in competitive markets, the opportunity cost of producing something will be reflected in the cost of production (cost of the productive resources used)

Page 9: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Supply and Marginal Cost

• The marginal cost of production is the opportunity cost of producing one more unit of the good

• Marginal opportunity costs tend to rise with output

• Producers will only produce up to the point where the price they receive equals the marginal cost of production (profit max)

• The supply curve is a marginal cost curve

Page 10: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Supply and Marginal Cost

MC=S

10

Marginal opportunity costOf the 10th unit = $15

15

P

Q

Firm will supply the 10th unit if the price is$15. This is the minimum price that producerswill accept for that unit of production

Page 11: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Producers’ Surplus

S=MC

15

P

Q10

Producers’ Surplus

Cost of production

Producer would have been willing to Produce units 1-9 for less than $15 but Receives the same price for all units

Page 12: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Is the Competitive Market Efficient?

S=MC

D=MB

15

P

10 Q

CS

PS

At E the Social Surplus is maximized.Maximum of total benefit over the total opportunity cost.

E Sum of CS andPs is the Social Surplus

Page 13: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Is the Market Always Efficient?

• Markets may not result in economic efficiency for a number of reasons - Price floors and ceilings- Taxes, subsidies, quotas- Monopoly- Public goods- External costs or benefits

• These barriers to efficiency are very widespread

Page 14: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Inefficiencies: Underproduction and

OverproductionP

S

D

Q

Deadweight loss

Deadweight loss

Q’

Q’

S

D

P

Q

Underproduction

Overproduction

Q*

Q*

Page 15: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Efficiency and Equity

• Efficiency is an allocation of resources where MB=MC

• An efficient allocation can only be defined given some initial allocation of resources between individuals

• Willingness to pay is budget constrained

• Efficient markets may well result in very unequal distributions of income

Page 16: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Markets with Price or Quantity Regulation

• Housing markets and rent ceilings

Shortage

Qs Qd

Rc

Rb

Deadweight loss

S

Q

Rent

D

Page 17: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Markets with Price or Quantity Regulation

• Labour Markets with minimum wages

Qd Qs

WminS

Q

Wage

D

Unemployment

W*

Q*

Page 18: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Markets with Price or Quantity Regulation

• Agricultural markets--problems of price and income instability due to supply fluctuations and inelastic demand

• Markets in inventories and price stabilization

• Attempts to raise farm incomes

- Price floors

- Quotas

- Subsidy programs

Page 19: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Agricultural Price Floors and Quotas

P

Q

D

S

Q*Q’

Q’ = quota amount

P*

P’

Surplus at P’

Q”

P’ = price floor

Page 20: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Agricultural Subsidies

D

S

S-subsidy

Q* Q’

P*P’

P’+sub

Subsidy

P

Q

Page 21: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Sales Taxes and Prices

• The incidence of a sales tax

• Incidence and the elasticity of demand and supply

Per unit tax

P*

P’+ tax

P’

S + tax

S

D

P

Q

Taxrevenue

Q*Q’

Page 22: Part 3 Markets and Efficiency Concept of economic (allocative) efficiency introduced previously Decreasing marginal benefits and increasing marginal costs.

Sales Taxes and Efficiency

Tax revenueP’

Q’

Consumers’ surplus

Producers’ surplus

Deadweight loss

D

S

S+tax

P

Q