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Chapter 3 Market Efficiency and Elasticity

This document summarizes key concepts related to market efficiency and elasticity. It discusses [1] how markets achieve equilibrium through price rationing in response to changes in supply and demand, [2] reasons for potential government intervention in markets due to market failures, and [3] the concepts of consumer surplus, producer surplus, and deadweight loss as they relate to market efficiency. It also covers [4] the definition of elasticity as a measure of responsiveness to price or income changes, and different types of elasticity including price, income, and cross-price elasticity.

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Arif Fikri
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views

Chapter 3 Market Efficiency and Elasticity

This document summarizes key concepts related to market efficiency and elasticity. It discusses [1] how markets achieve equilibrium through price rationing in response to changes in supply and demand, [2] reasons for potential government intervention in markets due to market failures, and [3] the concepts of consumer surplus, producer surplus, and deadweight loss as they relate to market efficiency. It also covers [4] the definition of elasticity as a measure of responsiveness to price or income changes, and different types of elasticity including price, income, and cross-price elasticity.

Uploaded by

Arif Fikri
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 27

CHAPTER 4:

MARKET EFFICIENCY & ELASTICITY

3.1 The Market System

3.2 Constraint on the Market: Government Intervention

3.3 Market Efficiency & Surpluses Maximization

3.4 Elasticity

1
Output (Product) Market

DD & SS Interaction

Changes in DD / SS:
Equilibrium Price &
Quantity Production
Utility (excluded)
Consumer surplus Market System Supplier surplus
Factors effect DD Market Efficiency Factors effect SS
Elasticity Government Elasticity
Intervention Market structure
2
3.1 The Market System

Stability or equilibrium point:


supply = demand

This situation achieved and re-achieved after


disequilibrium through the an important
functions of the market (price system):

PRICE RATIONING

3
Price Rationing:
Definition:
i. Allocates output to consumers and resources to
firms through price adjustment.
ii. Price rationing when Qty DD > Qty SS (shortage)
iii. Allocation based on willingness & ability to pay
(answering the “for whom to produce” problem).
Figure: Price Rationing

4
Note:
Price rationing is consider as market oriented approach
because:
i. Allocates through open market
ii. No government intervention

Weaknesses (market failure): Inability to recognize that


each society have the right, necessity or needs to certain
type of outputs like health care, accommodation, basic
food and safety

lottery approach, political


Use non- approach and mixed approach
market / non-
pricing approach
government intervention
5
Situations of Market failure:
a) External benefit:
i. Free-riders
ii. Road (transport), hospital (public health), dam
(flood/electricity)
b) External cost:
i. Negative effect/cost to others
ii. Pollution
c) Imperfect information:
i. Seller has more info than buyer
ii. “Lemon market” & info disclosure
d) Imperfect competition:
i. Market controlled by monopoly, cartel, illegal co-
operation
ii. Government ownership, law & regulation 6
3.2 Constraint on the Market:
Case for Government Intervention

a) Price ceiling:
i. Maximum price sellers may charge
ii. To control unjust high price
iii. Excess demand (Ration coupon as complement
action to control DD)
iv. Emerging of black market

7
b) Ration coupon:
i. Ticket/coupon entitle individual to purchase
ii. Coupons trading – alike price rationing
iii. Serve as redistributing income

c) Favored customer:
i. Special treatment
ii. Results in hidden cost

d) Waiting in line (Queuing):


i. Product cost = cost of waiting
ii. A form of deadweight loss

8
e) Price floor:
i. Minimum price for buying – selling
ii. To adjust unfair low price
iii. Excess of supply (government has to buy up
excess)
iv. Alternative: subsidization
Figure: Price Floor: Minimum Wages
f) Other restriction:
i. Price control
ii. Licensing
iii. Taxes
iv. Quota

9
3.3 Market Efficiency & Surpluses Maximization

What is “Efficient Market”?:

i. Pareto efficient: A market is efficient if there is no


way to make any person better off without hurting
anybody else. (Relate to PPF)
ii. Relate to PPF: Reduce production of product “Y” to
increase production of product “X”.

10
What is “Consumer Surplus”?:
i. Extra value individual received
ii. What people willing to pay
iii. Maximum amount willing to pay minus current
market price

Figure: Consumer Surplus

11
What is “Producer Surplus”?:
i. Extra value producer received
ii. What producer pay for the right to sell at current
price
iii. Minimum amount willing to sell minus current
market price
Figure: Producer Surplus

12
Surplus maximization:

i. Market efficient = maximize sum of consumer &


producer surpluses
ii. Achieved when DD = SS

Figure: Surplus maximization

13
Deadweight loss:
i. Losses of consumer and producer surplus that are
not transferred to other parties
ii. Occur from over or under production
Figure: Deadweight loss over production

14
3.4 Elasticity
A measure of how “responsive” demand is to some
change in price or income:

i. The slop of a demand function (∆q/∆p)


ii. The slope of the demand curve (∆p/∆q)
iii. Elasticity method
Figure Demand Curve Slope & Responsiveness

15
Elasticity is a general concept to:

i. quantify the response in one variable when another


variable changes
ii. measure the percentage change in one variable
brought about by a 1 percent change in some other
variable
iii. Elasticity is unit free

Type of elasticity:
i. Price elasticity of demand
ii. Income elasticity
iii. Cross-price elasticity

16
Price elasticity of demand calculation: How responsive
consumers are to changes in the price of a product

ε = [(∆q/q)*100%] / [(∆p/p)*100%] ………… (Equation 3.1)

= (∆q/q)*100% * (p/∆p)*(1/100%)

ε = (p/q)*(∆q/∆p) …………… (Equation 3.2)

Slope of
Ratio of demand
price to multiply
function
quantity 17
Example: Use Figure 3.7 (a) & (b). Assumed price
decrease from P1 = $3 to P2 = $2.

For Figure 3.7 (a):


ε = (p/q)*(∆q/∆p) …………… (Equation 3.2)
= (3/5)*[(10 – 5)/(2 – 3)]
=–3
or

Same answer for Figure 3.7 (b):


proving that different unit of measurement did
not effect elasticity.
18
BUT different answer if assumed price increase
from P1 = $2 to P2 = $3.

Solution: Mid-point formula

19
NOTE: Which one is more elastic?

More elastic Less elastic


In negative
value
–5 –4 –3 –2 –1

Less elastic More elastic


In absolute
value
1 2 3 4 5

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Table shows values & types for elasticity of demand

21
Elasticity of linear demand curve:
i. Change from point to point
ii. Decrease when move downward
iii. Elastic at upper range, inelastic at lower range

Figure: Elasticity of a Linear Demand Curve

Elasticity= -10

Elasticity= -0.375

22
Calculus proving (No. 1):
Consider a linear demand curve, q = a – bp
i. The slope = – b
ii. If q = 0; p = a / b (price intercept)
ε = (p/q)*(∆q/∆p) …………… (Equation 3.2)
= (p/q)* (– b)
= [p / (a – bp)]* [– b] (›› q = a – bp)

– 1 = [p / (a – bp)]* [– b] (unitary elasticity)


– 1 = (– bp) / (a – bp)
bp = (a – bp)
2bp = a
p = a / 2b
(middle point)

23
Calculus proving (No. 2):

Linear demand curve, q = a – bp


At price axis intercept, q = 0 & p = a / b
ε = (p/q)*(∆q/∆p) …………… (Equation 3.2)
= [(a/b) / 0]* (– b)
=∞ (›› infinity elasticity at price intercept)

24
Calculus proving (No. 3):

Linear demand curve, q = a – bp


At quantity axis intercept, p = 0 & q = a
ε = (p/q)*(∆q/∆p) …………… (Equation 3.2)
= (0/a)*(– b)
=0 (›› zero elasticity at qty intercept)

25
Cross price elasticity:
Measure of the response of the quantity of one good
demanded to a change in the price of another good

ε = [(∆q/q)*100%] / [(∆p’/p’)*100%]

For substitute product: ε(p’) positive (the price of one product and
quantity demanded for another product move in the same direction)

For complement product: ε(p’) negative (the price of one product


and quantity demanded for another product move in the opposite direction)

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Others elasticity:

Elasticity of supply is a measure of the response of


quantity of a good supplied to a change in price of that
good. Its value is likely to be positive in output markets
due to the law of supply.

Elasticity of labor supply is a measure of the response of


labor supplied to a change in the price of labor

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