Theory

Algebraic Proof that Competitive Equilibrium Maximizes Total Surplus

A formal proof demonstrates that the quantity at which a competitive market reaches equilibrium is also the quantity that maximizes the total gains from trade. The proof begins with the first-order condition for maximizing total surplus, which is satisfied at a quantity Q* where the derivative of the total surplus function is zero. This condition means the derivative of the integrated inverse demand function, F'(Q*), equals the derivative of the cost function, C'(Q*). Since F'(Q*) represents the inverse demand curve, P = f(Q), and C'(Q) represents the inverse supply curve, the condition for surplus maximization is met at the quantity Q* where f(Q*) = C'(Q*). This point, where the inverse demand curve intersects the inverse supply curve, is precisely the definition of the competitive equilibrium quantity. Consequently, the allocation at competitive equilibrium, with price P* = f(Q*) = C'(Q*), is proven to maximize total surplus.

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Updated 2026-05-02

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