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Title: EFFICIENCY%20AND%20EQUITY


1
5
EFFICIENCY AND EQUITY
CHAPTER
2
Objectives
  • After studying this chapter, you will able to
  • Define efficiency
  • Distinguish between value and price and define
    consumer surplus
  • Distinguish between cost and price and define
    producer surplus
  • Explain the conditions under which markets move
    resources to their highest-valued uses and the
    sources of inefficiency in our economy
  • Explain the main ideas about fairness and
    evaluate claims that markets result in unfair
    outcomes

3
Self-Interest and the Social Interest
  • When you buy a pair of shoes or a textbook or
    fill your gas tank, or even just take a shower,
    you express your view about how scarce resources
    should be used.
  • You make choices that are in your self-interest.
  • Markets coordinate your choices with those of
    everyone else.
  • Do markets do a good job?
  • Do they enable our self-interest choices to be in
    the social interest?
  • And do markets produce a fair outcome?

4
Efficiency and the Social Interest
  • Allocative efficiency is one aspect of the social
    interest and the aspect about which economists
    have most to say.
  • An efficient allocation of resources occurs when
    we produce the goods and services that people
    value most highly.
  • Resources are allocated efficiently when it is
    not possible to produce more of a good or service
    without giving up some other good or service that
    is valued more highly.
  • Efficiency is based on value, and peoples
    preferences determine value.

5
Efficiency A Refresher
  • Marginal Benefit
  • Marginal benefit is the benefit a person receives
    from consuming one more unit of a good or
    service.
  • We can measure the marginal benefit from a good
    or service by the dollar value of other goods and
    services that a person is willing to give up to
    get one more unit of it.
  • The concept of decreasing marginal benefit
    implies that as more of a good or service is
    consumed, its marginal benefit decreases.

6
Efficiency A Refresher
  • Figure 5.1 shows the decreasing marginal benefit
    from each additional slice of pizza, measured in
    dollars per slice.

7
Efficiency A Refresher
  • Marginal Cost
  • Marginal cost is the opportunity cost of
    producing one more unit of a good or service. The
    measure of marginal cost is the value of the best
    alternative forgone to obtain the last unit of
    the good.
  • We can measure the marginal cost of a good or
    service by the dollar value of other goods and
    services that a person is must give up to get one
    more unit of it.
  • The concept of increasing marginal cost implies
    that as more of a good or service is produced,
    its marginal cost increases.

8
Efficiency A Refresher
  • Figure 5.1 shows the increasing marginal cost of
    each additional slice of pizza, measured in
    dollars per slice.

9
Efficiency A Refresher
  • Efficiency and Inefficiency
  • If the marginal benefit from a good exceeds its
    marginal cost, producing and consuming more of
    the good uses resources more efficiently.

10
Efficiency A Refresher
  • If the marginal cost of a good exceeds its
    marginal benefit, producing and consuming less of
    the good uses resources more efficiently.

11
Efficiency A Refresher
  • If the marginal cost of a good equals its
    marginal benefit, resources are being use
    efficiently.

12
Value, Price, and Consumer Surplus
  • Value, Willingness to Pay, and Demand
  • The value of one more unit of a good or service
    is its marginal benefit, which we can measure as
    maximum price that a person is willing to pay.
  • A demand curve for a good or service shows the
    quantity demanded at each price.
  • A demand curve also shows the maximum price that
    consumers are willing to pay at each quantity.

13
Value, Price, and Consumer Surplus
  • Figure 5.2 shows these two ways of interpreting a
    demand curve.
  • In part a, shown here, the demand curve tells us
    the quantity that consumers plan to buy at a
    given price.

14
Value, Price, and Consumer Surplus
  • In part b, shown here, the demand curve tells us
    the maximum price that consumers are willing to
    pay for a given quantity.

This price measures the marginal benefit of the
good at that given quantity.
15
Value, Price, and Consumer Surplus
  • Consumer Surplus
  • Consumer surplus is the value of a good minus the
    price paid for it, summed over the quantity
    bought.
  • It is measured by the area under the demand curve
    and above the price paid, up to the quantity
    bought.
  • Figure 5.3 on the next slide shows the consumer
    surplus for pizza for an individual consumer.

16
Value, Price, and Consumer Surplus
The price paid is the market price, which is the
same for each unit bought.
The quantity bought is determined by the demand
curve and the blue rectangle shows the amount
paid for pizza.
The green triangle shows the consumer surplus
from pizza.
17
Value, Price, and Consumer Surplus
The consumer surplus on the 10th slice is the 2
that the consumer is willing to pay minus the
1.50 that she does pay, which is 50 cents a
slice.
18
Cost, Price, and Producer Surplus
  • Cost, Minimum Supply-Price, and Supply
  • The cost of one more unit of a good or service is
    its marginal cost, which we can measure as
    minimum price that a firm is willing to accept.
  • A supply curve of a good or service shows the
    quantity supplied at each price. A supply curve
    also shows the minimum price that producers are
    willing to accept at each quantity.

19
Cost, Price, and Producer Surplus
  • Figure 5.4 shows these two ways of interpreting a
    supply curve.
  • In part a, shown here, the supply curve tells us
    the quantity that producers plan to sell at a
    given price.

20
Cost, Price, and Producer Surplus
  • In part b, shown here, the supply curve tells us
    the minimum price that producers are willing to
    accept for a given quantity.

This price measures the marginal cost of
producing that given quantity of the good.
21
Cost, Price, and Producer Surplus
  • Producer Surplus
  • Producer surplus is the price of a good minus the
    marginal cost of producing it, summed over the
    quantity sold.
  • Producer surplus is measured by the area below
    the price and above the supply curve, up to the
    quantity sold.
  • Figure 5.5 on the next slide shows the producer
    surplus for pizza for an individual producer.

22
Cost, Price, and Producer Surplus
The price is the market price, which is the same
for each unit sold.
The quantity sold is determined by the supply
curve and the red area shows the total cost of
producing pizza.
The blue triangle shows the producer surplus from
pizza.
23
Cost, Price, and Producer Surplus
The producer surplus on the 50th pizza is the 15
that the producer receives minus the 10 that it
cost to produce, which is 5 a pizza.
24
Is the Competitive Market Efficient?
  • Efficiency of Competitive Equilibrium
  • Figure 5.6 shows that a competitive market
    creates an efficient allocation of resources at
    equilibrium.
  • In equilibrium, the quantity demanded equals the
    quantity supplied.

25
Is the Competitive Market Efficient?
  • At the equilibrium quantity, marginal benefit
    equals marginal cost, so the quantity is the
    efficient quantity.

The sum of consumer and producer surplus is
maximized at this efficient level of output.
26
Is the Competitive Market Efficient?
  • The Invisible Hand
  • Adam Smiths invisible hand idea in the Wealth
    of Nations implied that competitive markets send
    resources to their highest valued use in society.
  • Consumers and producers pursue their own
    self-interest and interact in markets.
  • Market transactions generate an efficienthighest
    valueduse of resources.

27
Is the Competitive Market Efficient?
  • Obstacles to Efficiency
  • Markets are not always efficient and the
    obstacles to efficiency are
  • Price ceilings and floors
  • Taxes, subsidies, and quotas.
  • Monopoly
  • External costs and external benefits.
  • Public goods and common resources

28
Price ceiling and Price floor
  • Price ceiling
    Price floor

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30
Is the Competitive Market Efficient?
  • Underproduction and Overproduction
  • Obstacles to efficiency lead to underproduction
    or overproduction and create a deadweight lossa
    decrease in consumer and producer surplus.

31
Is the Competitive Market Efficient?
  • Figure 5.7a shows the effects of underproduction.

The efficient quantity is 10,000 pizzas a day.
If production is restricted to 5,000 pizzas a
day, a dead weight loss arises from
underproduction.
32
Is the Competitive Market Efficient?
  • Figure 5.7b shows the effects of overproduction.

Again, the efficient quantity is 10,000 pizzas a
day.
If production is expanded to 15,000 pizzas a day,
a dead weight loss arises from overproduction.
33
Is the Competitive Market Fair?
  • Ideas about fairness can be divided into two
    groups
  • Its not fair if the result isnt fair
  • Its not fair if the rules arent fair

34
Is the Competitive Market Fair?
  • Its Not Fair if the Result Isnt Fair
  • The idea that its not fair if the result isnt
    fair began with utilitarianism, which is the
    principle that states that we should strive to
    achieve the greatest happiness for the greatest
    number.
  • If everyone gets the same marginal utility from a
    given amount of income, and if the marginal
    benefit of income decreases as income increases,
    taking a dollar from a richer person and given it
    to a poorer person increases the total benefit.
    Only when income is equally distributed has the
    greatest happiness been achieved.

35
Is the Competitive Market Fair?
  • Figure 5.8 shows how redistribution increases
    efficiency.
  • Tom is poor and has a high marginal benefit of
    income.

Jerry is rich and has a low marginal benefit of
income.
Taking dollars from Jerry and giving them to Tom
until they have equal incomes increases total
benefit.
36
Is the Competitive Market Fair?
  • Utilitarianism ignores the cost of making income
    transfers.
  • Recognizing these costs leads to the big tradeoff
    between efficiency and fairness.
  • Because of the big tradeoff, John Rawls proposed
    that income should be redistributed to point at
    which the poorest person is as well off as
    possible.

37
Is the Competitive Market Fair?
  • Its Not Fair If the Rules Arent Fair
  • The idea that its not fair if the rules arent
    fair is based on the symmetry principle, which
    is the requirement that people in similar
    situations be treated similarly.

38
Is the Competitive Market Fair?
  • In economics, this principle means equality of
    opportunity, not equality of income. Robert
    Nozick suggested that fairness is based on two
    rules
  • The state must create and enforce laws that
    establish and protect private property.
  • Private property may be transferred from one
    person to another only by voluntary exchange.
  • Pages 114115 present an extended illustration of
    two proposals for achieving a fair and efficient
    use of resources.

39
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47
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??75? 39,086 8,232 11,137 79,192 NA
??76? 41,617 8,169 7,727 97,193 NA
??77? 44,374 8,934 8,294 110,747 NA
??78? 46,248 13,999 9,721 117,811 NA
??79? 48,926 12,562 11,000 99,301 NA
??80? 51,390 15,112 5,520 113,671 NA
??81? 57,897 16,236 8,792 99,541 NA
??82? 66,254 19,495 6,387 116,277 66,602
??83? 184,078 23,172 82,994 64,624 113,043
??84? 211,895 27,170 9,364 60,822 177,278
??85? 228,566 31,143 37,421 14,522 295,649
??86? 237,456 21,048 29,554 15,762 364,307
??87? 241,727 23,528 21,254 16,758 462,955
??88? 258,339 23,542 2,996,312 10,253 602,193
??89? 283,955 23,949 62,946 9,695 740,867
??90? 315,790 21,406 96,886 10,173 668,695
??91? 336,219 20,536 17,900 10,485 753,556
??93? NA 24,592 66,271 10,522 1,217,452
48
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