12.8
In a perfectly competitive market, efficiency is assumed to be achieved by maximizing total surplus, which is the sum of consumer and producer surplus, as visible on the graph.
The market supply curve represents the marginal cost curve of all firms participating in the market. Suppose the supply is expanded to Q2. However, the marginal cost rises with higher production.
Consequently, the market price would rise to P2. The perfectly competitive market model assumes that producers will increase output until their marginal cost is equal to the prevailing market price.
When the market price is above equilibrium, sellers produce more quantity than is demanded by consumers at that price. This leads to surplus inventories placing downward pressure on the offering price of suppliers.
This price decrease encourages greater quantity demanded by consumers, and the market is moved towards the equilibrium price and quantity that maximizes producer and consumer surplus.
So, a quantity greater than the market equilibrium or less than the market equilibrium results in deadweight loss.
It follows that total surplus is maximized at equilibrium, where supply equals demand.
완벽한 경쟁 시장에서 효율성은 소비자와 생산자 잉여의 합인 총 잉여가 극대화될 때 달성됩니다. 이는 공급이 수요와 같아지는 균형 수준에서 발생합니다.
생산이 이 균형 수준을 넘어 증가하면 산출량이 증가함에 따라 한계 비용이 증가합니다. 완전 경쟁 모델은 생산자가 한계 비용이 시장 가격과 같아질 때까지 산출량을 계속 증가시킨다고 가정합니다. 시장 가격이 균형을 초과하면 생산자는 해당 가격에서 소비자 수요보다 더 많이 공급하여 잉여 재고가 발생합니다. 이 잉여는 가격에 하향 압력을 가하여 소비자 수요를 높이고 시장을 균형으로 밀어붙입니다. 결과적으로 총 잉여가 감소합니다.
수량을 균형 수량에서 벗어나게 하는 공급의 변화는 경제적 효율성을 감소시키고 잉여 손실로 이어집니다. 과잉 생산과 과소 생산 모두 총 잉여의 손실을 초래하여 균형이 잉여를 극대화함을 보여줍니다.
In a perfectly competitive market, efficiency is assumed to be achieved by maximizing total surplus, which is the sum of consumer and producer surplus, as visible on the graph.
The market supply curve represents the marginal cost curve of all firms participating in the market. Suppose the supply is expanded to Q2. However, the marginal cost rises with higher production.
Consequently, the market price would rise to P2. The perfectly competitive market model assumes that producers will increase output until their marginal cost is equal to the prevailing market price.
When the market price is above equilibrium, sellers produce more quantity than is demanded by consumers at that price. This leads to surplus inventories placing downward pressure on the offering price of suppliers.
This price decrease encourages greater quantity demanded by consumers, and the market is moved towards the equilibrium price and quantity that maximizes producer and consumer surplus.
So, a quantity greater than the market equilibrium or less than the market equilibrium results in deadweight loss.
It follows that total surplus is maximized at equilibrium, where supply equals demand.
From Chapter 12:
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