Surplus Dynamics Approaching Equilibrium
In a competitive bread market, the equilibrium is established at a price of €2 and a quantity of 5,000 loaves. Explain why a significant total surplus (for both the consumer and the producer) is generated on the 100th loaf sold, while virtually no total surplus is generated on the 5,000th loaf. Your explanation must compare the consumer's willingness to pay and the producer's marginal cost relative to the market price for both of these specific loaves.
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Ch.8 Supply and demand: Markets with many buyers and sellers - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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In a competitive bread market, the equilibrium price is €2 per loaf and the equilibrium quantity is 5,000 loaves. Consider the 1,000th loaf of bread sold. A consumer was willing to pay €3.50 for this loaf, and the bakery's marginal cost to produce it was €1.20. What is the total surplus generated from the sale of this specific loaf?
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Analyzing Surplus Beyond Equilibrium
In a competitive bread market where the equilibrium price is €2, consider a single transaction for one loaf of bread. The consumer's willingness to pay for this loaf is €3, and the bakery's marginal cost to produce it is €1. If this specific loaf is sold for €1.50 instead of the equilibrium price, the total surplus generated from this transaction will increase.
Surplus Dynamics Approaching Equilibrium
In a competitive bread market, the equilibrium is established at a price of €2 per loaf and a quantity of 5,000 loaves. Considering two specific transactions within this equilibrium, how does the total surplus (the sum of consumer and producer surplus) generated from the sale of the 1,000th loaf compare to the total surplus generated from the sale of the 4,000th loaf?
Evaluating a Producer's Claim about Surplus
Evaluating a Market Intervention Policy