Title: Economic surplus
1Economic surplus
- Gains and losses with international trade
Economic Welfare
2Consumer surplus
- Consumer surplus is the net gain to consumers
being able to buy a product through a market - Consumer surplus is the difference between the
highest price someone is willing to pay for a
product and the actual market price that is paid,
then summed over all units that are demanded and
consumed
3- The highest price that someone is willing to pay
for a unit of a product indicates the value that
the buyer attaches to that unit - In order to measure consumer surplus, one has to
have - Market price, quantity demanded, and slope or
shape of the demand curve
4Consumer surplus can then be measured as the area
below the demand curve and above the market-price
line
CONSUMER SURPLUS IS THE AREA GIVEN BY THE
TRIANGE, C
PRICE
a
a the intercept of the inverse demand function,
while P market price, and Q the quantity
consumed at the price P
C
C
Price in the market
P
DEMAND
Q
QUANTITY
5AS DEMAND SHIFTS OUTWARD TO THE RIGHT, GIVEN THE
SAME MARKET PRICE, THEN CONSUMER SURPLUS INCREASES
CONSUMER SURPLUS IS THE AREA GIVEN BY THE
TRIANGE, C
a
PRICE
C
ALSO RECALL THAT THE AREA OF A TRAINGLE IS ½
TIMES BASE TIMES HEIGHT
DEMAND
C
Price in the market
P
Q
QUANTITY
SO CONSUMER SURPLUS IS THEREFORE, ½(a p)Q
6Now we impose an actual supply function and
derive the price as the equilibrium price from
the condition that demand supply in the market
A PERFECTLY COMPETITIVE MARKET IS ASSUMED HERE
CONSUMER SURPLUS TRIANGLE
PRICE
NOW, WE HAVE ANOTHER SURPLUS CALLED PRODUCERS
SURPLUS --- THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MARKET PRICE
AND THE SUPPLY CURVE
a
SUPPLY
E
P
DEMAND
g
Q
QUANTITY
g IS THE INTERCEPT OF THE INVERSE SUPPLY FUNCTION
7LETS USE AN ACTUAL DEMAND FUNCTION AND AN ACTUAL
SUPPLY FUNCTION, BUT WITHOUT ANY INCOME EFFECT
(IN DEMAND) AND WITHOUT ANY PRICE OF INPUTS (IN
SUPPLY)
- SUPPOSE THE DEMAND FUNCTION IS THEN GIVEN AS
- QD 18 1.2P, FOR QD QUANTITY AND P PRICE
- LET THE SUPPLY FUNCTION BE GIVEN BY
- QS -2 0.6P, FOR QS QUANTITY AND P PRICE
- WE NOW NEED THE EQUILIBRIUM PRICE AND QUANTITY IN
THE MARKET - SET QD QS, OR 18 1.2P -2 0.6P
- SOLVE FOR P BY REARRANGING AS 1.8P 16, OR
- P 16/1.8 8.89
- THEN SUBSTITUTE P8.89 INTO THE DEMAND FUNCTION
TO GET Q 18 1.2(8.89) 7.33
8SO EQUILIBRIUM PRICE IS 8.89 AND EQUILIBRIUM
QUANTITY IN THE MARKET IS 7.33
- WE NOW WANT TO CALCULATE THE CONSUMER AND
PRODUCER SURPLUS VALUES - INVERSE DEMAND FROM THE DEMAND FUNCTION Q 18
1.2P IS GIVEN BY P 18/1.2 Q/1.2 - WHICH IS EQUAL TO P 15 0.83Q
- SO OUR INTERCEPT, a, IS NOW a 15
- INVERSE SUPPLY FROM THE SUPPLY FUNCTION Q -2
0.6P IS GIVEN BY P 2/0.6 Q/0.6 - WHICH IS EQUAL TO P 3.33 1.67Q
- SO OUR INVERSE SUPPLY INTERCEPT, g, IS NOW g
3.33
9NOW ON TO CONSUMER SURPLUS AND PRODUCER SURPLUS
GIVEN EQUILIBRIUM PRICE IS P 8.89 EQUILIBRIUM
QUANTITY IS Q 7.33 a 15, AND g 3.33
- CONSUMER SURPLUS ½(15 8.89)(7.33)
- WHICH IS APPROXIMATELY EQUAL TO 22.39
- PRODUCER SURPLUS ½(8.89 3.33)(7.33)
- WHICH IS APPROXIMATELY 20.38
CONSUMER SURPLUS 22.39
PRICE, P
a
Actually Inverse supply
Equilibrium price, P
Actually inverse demand
PRODUCER SURPLUS 20.38
g
Equilibrium quantity Q
QUANTITY, Q
10THE AREA UNDER THE SUPPLY CURVE AND UP TO A
QUANTITY SUPPLIED OF Q IS THE PAYMENT TO VARIABLE
INPUTS (VARIABLE COSTS) --- SO THE PRODUCER
RECEIVES A SURPLUS OVER VARIABLE COSTS ---
PRODUCERS SURPLUS
CONSUMER SURPLUS AREA aEP
PRICE
a
SUPPLY
P IS EQUILIBRIUM PRICE
E
P
SUPPLY DEMAND AT POINT E
DEMAND
g
PRODUCERS SURPLUS AREA gPE
QUANTITY
Q
Q IS EQUILIBRIUM QUANTITY