Microeconomics,, 16th Canadian Edition

(Sean Pound) #1

5.3 An Introduction to Market


Efficiency LO 3, 4


Demand curves show consumers’ willingness to pay for each unit of
the product. For any given quantity, the area below the demand curve
shows the overall value consumers place on that quantity of the
product.
Supply curves show the lowest price producers are prepared to accept
in order to produce and sell each unit of the product. This lowest
acceptable price for each additional unit reflects the firm’s costs
required to produce each additional unit.
For any given quantity exchanged of a product, the area below the
demand curve and above the supply curve (up to that quantity) shows
the economic surplus generated by the production and consumption
of those units.
A market’s surplus is maximized when the quantity exchanged is
determined by the intersection of the demand and supply curves. This
outcome is said to be efficient.
Policies that intervene in otherwise free and competitive markets—
such as price floors, price ceilings, and output quotas—generally lead
to a reduction in the total amount of economic surplus generated in
the market.
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