Top Banner
Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer values the good. 1 name WTP Flea $30 0 Anthon y 250 Chad 175 John 125 Example: 4 buyers’ WTP for an iPod 1. Demand
17

Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

Jan 19, 2016

Download

Documents

Nigel Flowers
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

Willingness to Pay (WTP)A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good.

WTP measures how much the buyer values the good.

1

name WTP

Flea $300

Anthony 250

Chad 175

John 125

Example: 4 buyers’ WTP for an iPod

1. Demand

Page 2: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

WTP and the Demand Curve

Q: If price of iPod is $200, who will buy an iPod, and what is quantity demanded?

2

A: Flea & Anthony will buy an iPod, Chad & John will not.

Hence, Qd = __ when P = $200.

name WTP

Flea $300

Anthony 250

Chad 175

John 125

Page 3: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

WTP and the Demand Curve

Derive the demand schedule:

3

4John, Chad, Anthony, Flea

0 – 125

3Chad, Anthony, Flea

126 – 175

2Anthony, Flea176 – 250

1Flea251 – 300

0nobody$301 & up

Qdwho buysP (price of iPod)

name WTP

Flea $300

Anthony 250

Chad 175

John 125

Page 4: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

$0

$50

$100

$150

$200

$250

$300

$350

0 1 2 3 4

WTP and the Demand Curve

P Qd

$301 & up 0

251 – 300 1

176 – 250 2

126 – 175 3

0 – 125 4

P

Q

Qd=0

Qd=1

Qd=2

Qd=3

Qd=4

$175

$125

4

Page 5: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

$0

$50

$100

$150

$200

$250

$300

$350

0 1 2 3 4

About the Staircase Shape…

This D curve looks like a staircase with 4 steps.

5

P

Q

If there were a huge # of buyers, as in a competitive market,

there would be a huge # of very tiny steps,

and it would look more like a smooth curve.

Page 6: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

Cost and the Supply Curve• Cost is the value of everything a seller must give up to

produce a good (i.e., opportunity cost).

• Includes cost of all resources used to produce good, including value of the seller’s time.

• Example: Costs of 3 sellers in the lawn-cutting business.

6

name cost

Angelo $10

Hunter 20

Kitty 35

A seller will only produce and sell the good if the price exceeds his/her cost.

Hence, cost is a measure of

willingness to sell.

2. Supply

Page 7: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

Cost and the Supply Curve

7

335 & up

220 – 34

110 – 19

0$0 – 9

QsPDerive the supply schedule from the cost data:

name cost

Angelo $10

Hunter 20

Kitty 35

Page 8: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

Cost and the Supply Curve

$0

$10

$20

$30

$40

0 1 2 3

P

Q

P Qs

$0 – 9 0

10 – 19 1

20 – 34 2

35 & up 3

$35

8

Page 9: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

(1) Consumer Surplus (CS)Consumer surplus is the amount a buyer is willing to pay minus the buyer actually pays.

9

name WTP

Flea $300

Anthony 250

Chad 175

John 125

Suppose P = $260.

Flea’s CS = $300 – 260 = $__.

The others get no CS because they do not buy an iPod at this price.

Total CS = $___.

3. Welfare measures—CS and PS

Page 10: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

$0

$50

$100

$150

$200

$250

$300

$350

0 1 2 3 4

CS and the Demand Curve

10

P

Q

Flea’s WTP P = $260

Flea’s CS =

$300 – 260 = $40

Total CS = $40

Page 11: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

$0

$50

$100

$150

$200

$250

$300

$350

0 1 2 3 4

CS and the Demand Curve

11

P

Q

Flea’s WTP

Anthony’s WTP

Instead, suppose P = $220

Flea’s CS =

$300 – 220 = $80

Anthony’s CS =

$250 – 220 = $30

Total CS = $110

Page 12: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

$0

$50

$100

$150

$200

$250

$300

$350

0 1 2 3 4

CS and the Demand Curve

12

P

Q

The lesson:

Total CS equals the area below

the demand curve & above the price.

Page 13: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

P

Q

CS with Lots of Buyers & a Smooth D Curve

Q: P = $30, CS=?

A: CS is the area below the D curve and above the P. Recall: area of a triangle equals ½ x base x heightSo, CS=½ x 15 x $30 = _____

13

The Demand for Shoes

D

h

$

Price per pair

1000s of pairs of shoes

Page 14: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

$0

$10

$20

$30

$40

0 1 2 3

(2) Producer Surplus

P

Q

Producer surplus (PS): the amount a seller is paid for a good minus the seller’s cost.

14

Page 15: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

$0

$10

$20

$30

$40

0 1 2 3

Producer Surplus and the S Curve

P

Q

Suppose P = $25

Angelo’s PS = $15

Hunter’s PS = $5

Total PS = $20

Kitty’s

cost

Hunter’s cost

Angelo’s cost

Total PS equals the area below the price and

above the supply curve.

$25

15

Page 16: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

P

Q

PS with Lots of Sellers & a Smooth S Curve

The supply of shoes

SQ: P=$40, PS=?A: PS is the area below the P and above the S curve.

The height of this triangle is $40 – 15 = $25.

So,PS= _____________ = $312.5

h

Price per pair

1000s of pairs of shoes

$15

16

Page 17: Willingness to Pay (WTP) A buyer’s willingness to pay for a good is the maximum amount the buyer will pay for that good. WTP measures how much the buyer.

profit

17

Q

Costs and Revenue

MC

ATCP = $10 MR

50

$6

profit per unit

= P – ATC= $10 – $6 = $4

Total profit = (P – ATC) x Q = $4 x 50= $200

Total profit = TR-TC = ________________

= _________________= _____

Greg Mankiw: CHAPTER 14 FIRMS IN COMPETITIVE MARKETS

4. Profit