Tutorial 4
Tutorial 4
Underproduction Overproduction
The free market allocates the supply of a good to the buyers who value it most
highly (WTP) and allocates the demand for goods to the sellers who can produce
it at the lowest cost
Underproduction - the value of the product to the marginal buyer is greater than
the cost to the marginal seller.
Underproduction - Total surplus would rise if output increased.
Overproduction- the value of the product to the marginal buyer is less than the
cost to the marginal seller.
Overproduction - Total surplus would rise if output decreased.
Example:
The cost of producing flat-screen TVs has fallen over the past decade. Let’s consider
some implications of this fact.
(a)Draw a supply and demand diagram to show the effect of falling production costs
on the price and quantity of flat-screen TVs sold. In your diagram, show what
happens to consumer surplus and producer surplus.
(b)Suppose the supply of flat-screen TVs is very elastic. Who benefits most from
falling production costs --- consumers or producers of these TVS?
(a) Consumer surplus: changes from A to (A + B + C + D). An increase of (B+ C +
D).
Producer surplus: changes from (B + E) to (E + F + G). A change of (F + G – B)
which could be positive or negative.
Total surplus rises by (B + C + D) + (F + G – B) = (C + D + F + G)
(b) If the supply of flat-screen TVs is very elastic, then the shift of the supply curve
benefits consumers most. To take the most dramatic case, suppose the supply
curve were horizontal, then there is no producer surplus at all. Consumers capture
all the benefits of falling production costs, with consumer surplus rising from A to
(A + B).
Chapter 6 Supply, Demand and Government Policies
Price ceiling
A legal maximum on the price at which a good
can be sold
Price floor
A legal minimum on the price at which a good can
be sold
Tax on buyers
If the government requires the buyer to pay a
certain dollar amount for each unit of a good
purchased, the demand curve will shift left by
the exact amount of the tax.