In a perfectly competitive market, efficiency is achieved when total surplus, the sum of consumer and producer surplus, is maximized. This occurs at the equilibrium level, where supply equals demand.
If production increases beyond this equilibrium level, the marginal cost increases as output rises. The perfectly competitive model assumes that producers continue increasing output until their marginal cost equals the market price. If the market price exceeds equilibrium, producers supply more than consumers demand at that price, leading to surplus inventories. This surplus exerts downward pressure on prices, encouraging higher consumer demand and pushing the market toward equilibrium. As a result, the total surplus decreases.
Any change in supply that moves the quantity away from the equilibrium quantity reduces economic efficiency and results in deadweight loss. Both overproduction and underproduction result in a loss of total surplus, demonstrating that equilibrium maximizes surplus.
Bölümden 12:
Now Playing
Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and Market Efficiency
21 Görüntüleme Sayısı
Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and Market Efficiency
50 Görüntüleme Sayısı
Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and Market Efficiency
59 Görüntüleme Sayısı
Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and Market Efficiency
46 Görüntüleme Sayısı
Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and Market Efficiency
26 Görüntüleme Sayısı
Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and Market Efficiency
22 Görüntüleme Sayısı
Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and Market Efficiency
31 Görüntüleme Sayısı
Consumer Surplus, Producer Surplus, and Market Efficiency
26 Görüntüleme Sayısı
JoVE Hakkında
Telif Hakkı © 2020 MyJove Corporation. Tüm hakları saklıdır