Market Efficiency Flashcards
Define the concept of market efficiency in a perfectly competitive market.
Market efficiency occurs at market equilibrium, and is achieved through the characteristics of a perfectly competitive market:
- Large numbers of producers and consumers - competition of price.
- Limited product differentiation - minimal difference between products ensures that buyers cannot differentiate between the products.
- Free entry and exit into the market - easy for producers to enter and exit the market.
Define consumer surplus.
Consumer surplus is the difference between the price a consumer pays for a product, and the price they are willing to pay.
Define producer surplus.
Producer surplus is the difference between the price a producer sells their product at, and the price they are wiling to sell at.
Define total surplus.
Total surplus is the measure of economic welfare (wellbeing of an economy e.g. living standards) that a market creates for consumers and producers.
It is formulated by:
consumer surplus + producer surplus, or;
total benefits - total costs (producer and consumer)
Define deadweight loss (DWL).
The term Deadweight loss refers to a reduction of total surplus, as a result of either underproduction, or overproduction.
How is DWL created, and how can they be eliminated to achieve market efficiency?
Through government intervention, DWL is created with:
- Price ceilings - maximum price that sellers are allowed to charge.
By keeping price below market equilibrium, quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied to the extent that it may create a shortage - DWL is formed as it reduces total surplus (increasing consumer surplus, reducing producer surplus). - Price floors - minimum price that sellers are to charge. By keeping price above market equilibrium, quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded to the extent that it may create a surplus - DWL is formed as it reduces total surplus (increase producer surplus, reducing consumer surplus).