Draw a supply and demand graph, and identify the areas of consumer surplus and producer surplus. Given the demand curve, how will an increase in supply affect the amount of consumer surplus shown in your diagram? Explain.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The supply and demand graph can be plotted in the following manner:

An increase in the supply increases the consumer surplus amount by reducing the price, as shown in the diagram given below:

Step by step solution

01

Step 1. Plotting the consumer and producer surplus using demand and supply curves 

Consider the following graph, where S is the supply curve, D is the demand curve, and P is the equilibrium price:

Consumer Surplus:

  • The demand curve is used to show the maximum willingness to pay for all the consumers in the market. The sum of the differences between each consumer’s maximum willingness to pay and the equilibrium price gives the consumer surplus.
  • Graphically, it is the area between the demand curve and the equilibrium price (above the price line) as shown by the triangle abP.

Producer Surplus:

  • The supply curve is used to show the minimum acceptable price of all the suppliers in the market. The sum of the differences between equilibrium price and each supplier’s minimum acceptable price gives the producer surplus.
  • Graphically, it is the area between the supply curve and the equilibrium price (below the price line) as shown by the triangle cbP.

Thus, the consumer surplus (CS) and producer surplus (PS) are shown by the area of two triangles, which are abP and cbP, respectively.

02

Step 2. Effect of an increase in supply on the consumer surplus

Consider the graph given below. An increase in the supply will shift the supply curve from S to S1. As a result, the new intersection between the demand and supply curve happens at point d, and thus, the new equilibrium price is P1.

The fall in price increases consumer surplus, as the difference between their maximum willingness to pay and the new equilibrium price is higher than before. The initial amount of consumer surplus (area of triangle abP) increases with this change in price. The consumer surplus increases by the area of Pbd, marked by the gray region.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Use marginal cost-marginal benefit analysis to determine if the following statement is true or false: “The optimal amount of pollution abatement for some substances, say dirty water from storm drains, is very low; the optimal amount of abatement for other substances, say cyanide poison, is close to 100 percent.”

Consider a used-car market with asymmetric information. The owners of used cars know what their vehicles are worth but have no way of credibly demonstrating those values to potential buyers. Thus, potential buyers must always worry that the used car they are being offered may be a low-quality “lemon.”

  1. Suppose that there are equal numbers of good and bad used cars in the market. Good used cars are worth \(13,000, and bad used cars are worth \)5,000. What is the average value of a used car?
  2. By how much does the average value exceed the value of a bad used car? By how much does the value of a good used car exceed the average value?
  3. Would a potential seller of a good used car be willing to accept the average value as payment for the vehicle?
  4. If a buyer negotiates with a seller to purchase the seller’s used car for a price equal to the average value, is the car more likely to be good or bad?
  5. Will the used-car market come to feature mostly—if not exclusively—lemons? Explain. How much will used cars end up costing if all the good cars are withdrawn from the market?

Refer to Table 4.1. If the six people listed in the table are the only consumers in the market, and the equilibrium price is \(11 (not the \)8 shown), how much consumer surplus will the market generate?

Person
Maximum willingness to pay (\()
Actual Price (\))
Bob1311
Barb1211
Bill1111
Bart1011
Brent911
Betty811

What information does a government need if it wants to attempt to reduce a widespread negative externality like air pollution? Who, typically, is actually in possession of that information? How do markets in tradable emissions permits solve the asymmetric information problem affecting pollution abatement efforts?

Look at Tables 4.1 and 4.2 together. What is the total surplus if Bob buys a unit from Carlos? If Barb buys a unit from Courtney? If Bob buys a unit from Chad? If you match up pairs of buyers and sellers so as to maximize the total surplus of all transactions, what is the largest total surplus that can be achieved?

PersonMaximum willingness to pay (\()
Actual price (\))

Consumer surplus (\()
Bob1385 (=13-8)
Barb1284 (=12-8)
Bill1183 (=11-8)
Bart1082(=10-8)
Brent981 (=9-8)
Betty880(=8-8)
PersonMinimum acceptable price (\))
Actual price (\()
Consumer surplus (\))
Carlos385 (=8-3)
Courtney
484 (=8-4)
Chuck
583 (=8-5)
Cindy
682 (=8-6)
Craig
781 (=8-7)
Chad
880 (=8-8)
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