Economic Questions (Calculation Based)
TECON 480 – Class 4
August 5, 2019
Part 2 - Formulating the cost-benefit model
• Assignment #1 answer key posted on Canvas
• Feedback will be provided ASAP
• Assignment #2 due date will be pushed back from Aug 9
• I will update the assignment due dates tonight
• Instructions available on Canvas
2
Announcements / Reminders
Last Class
• Discussed the philosophical basis for cost-benefit analysis
• Provided justification for using net social benefits as a
decision-making criterion
• Discussed some limitations of using net benefits as decision-
making criterion
3
Today’s Class
• Begin a review (?) of microeconomic concepts that are the
foundation of CBA
� Necessary to properly classify and quantity the costs and
benefits used in Steps 3-5
• Discussion of Assignment #1
• Introduction to Assignment #2
4
Today’s Class
• Microeconomic concepts that are the foundation of CBA:
• Demand curve � willingness to pay
• Supply curve � opportunity cost
• Measuring and interpreting surplus:
• Consumers, producers, government
5
Introduction to Microeconomics
• CBA is based primarily on microeconomic concepts
• i.e. TECON 200
• These notes are based on Chapter 3 in Boardman
� Measurement of costs and benefits
� Welfare economics
• For simplicity, we assume the presence of perfect competition
throughout this discussion 6
Demand Curves
• A demand curve indicates the quantity of a good that a
person is willing to purchase at various prices
• The market demand curve is the horizontal sum of all
“individual” demand curves in the market
7
Demand Curves
• The market inverse demand curve represents the price as a
function of the quantity
• Classic graph of demand used in microeconomics
• Prices on the vertical axis
• Quantities on the horizontal axis
• The price can be interpreted as the maximum price that
someone is willing to pay for an additional unit of the good
• The inverse demand curve slopes downward
• Each unit of the good is valued slightly less than the preceding
unit � diminishing marginal utility
8
Demand Curves
9
Demand Curves
• The highest WTP in society for the first unit of good X is P1
• The highest WTP in society for the second unit of good X is P2
• etc…
• Each additional unit is valued at the value given by the height
of the inverse demand curve at the quantity of interest
� For a given quantity Z, the sum of these WTP values for units
(1, 2, …, Z) represents the WTP of society for these Z units of the
good 10
Demand Curves
• In CBA, benefits generally measured in terms of WTP
� P1 measures the marginal benefit of the first unit
� P2 measures the marginal benefit of the second unit, etc.
• If X* is the quantity consumed, the sum of all marginal
benefits for units (1, 2, …, X*) is the total benefits (B)
� The light and dark grey shaded areas (combined)
11
Consumer Surplus
• To consume X*, consumers must pay P* for each unit of the
good
• They spend P*X* in total
• price times quantity (the dark grey shaded area)
• The Consumer Surplus (CS) or the “net benefit” to consumers
equals the total benefits received minus the amount paid:
CS = B - P*X*
� CS is represented on the graph by the light grey shaded area
12
Consumer Surplus
• Changes in consumer surplus is a reasonable measure of the
benefits to consumers from a new project or a new policy
� Consumer surplus provides accurate approximations of WTP
that can be used for CBA
13
Consumer Surplus
• Assume that the initial price and quantity are P* and X* for
good X
• Then consider a policy that reduces the price of the good X
from P* to P1
� Consumers are better off
�Their consumer surplus has increased exactly by the light and
dark grey area on the next slide’s graph 14
Consumer Surplus
• Light grey shaded area = additional surplus of existing consumers
• Dark grey shaded area = total surplus of new consumers
15
What is the maximum amount that consumers would be willing to pay
to obtain the price decrease from P* to P1 � the change in consumer surplus
Consumer Surplus
• Change in price
Let Δ� = �1 − �* < 0 (i.e. the price decreases)
• Change in quantity of good X consumed
Let Δ� = �1 − �* > 0 (i.e. the quantity increases)
16
Consumer Surplus
• If the inverse demand curve is linear, the change in consumer
surplus �� can be computed as:
Δ�� = −(Δ�)�* − ½(Δ�)(Δ�)
� Area of the light grey rectangle + area of the dark grey triangle
• This formula is also valid for a price increase
17
Consumer Surplus
The price elasticity of demand, � � :
• The percentage change in quantity demanded resulting from a
1 percent increase in the price of the good:
18
d
P X E
X P
∆ =
∆
Consumer Surplus
• Price elasticities very useful when we do not know the
demand curve � which is essentially all of the time…
• � �
is always negative, but often presented as its absolute
value (easier to interpret)
� The larger the absolute value of � � , the more elastic
(responsive) is the quantity demanded (i.e. the more sensitive
consumers are to changes in price)
19
Consumer Surplus
• Given the initial price P* and quantity X*, and using Δ� and Δ�
as the changes in quantity and prices:
• Then, we can rewrite this expression as:
20
*
*d
P X E
X P
∆ ≈
∆
*
*
d E X P
X P
∆ ∆ ≈
Consumer Surplus
• When substituting this last expression in the changes in
consumer surplus we have:
� If you know the elasticity, you can predict the effect of a price
increase on consumer surplus without knowing the demand curve 21
( )
( ) ( )
*
2*
*
*
1
2
2
d
CS P X X P
E X P P X
P
∆ = − ∆ − ∆ ∆
∆ ≈ − ∆ −
Example of CS calculation
• How would you determine the change in consumer surplus due
to decreasing the fare of public transit from $3 to $2?
22
Taxes
• Taxation is the main source of financing when the government
implements a policy (or a project)
• Suppose that the government imposes a sales tax on the good X
� The price would increase from P* to P2
� Each unit sold is taxed by (P2 - P*)
• Let’s see the graph representing this situation 23
Taxes
• Quantity sold decreases from X* to X2
• Light grey rectangle is the tax revenue generated
• Tax revenue is a transfer from individuals to the government
24
Taxes
• Dark grey triangle is the deadweight loss (DWL)
• The DWL is the cost of the tax to society
• The DWL is the part of the preceding consumer surplus that is
lost and not offset by any new benefit in the society
• The DWL exists because some of the units previously are no
longer consumed: (X* - X2) units are “lost”
25
Taxes
• The deadweight loss resulting from the implementation of tax
is given by:
• The DWL is the second part of the Δ�� expression that
represents the area of the dark grey triangle
• Since Δ� represents the tax, we can replace it by �:
26
( ) 2*
* 2
d E X P
DWL P
∆ ∆ =
* 2
* 2
d E X t
DWL P
∆ =
Taxes
• A DWL always* results from the implementation of a tax
• To measure the relative weight of the DWL we use the
“leakage”, the ratio of the DWL to the tax revenue collected:
• If the change in output is small, leakage can be expressed as:
27
( )* *2 1 d E t
Leakage XP X
= ∆+
* 2
d E t
Leakage P
=
* almost always…
Assignment #1
• Discussion of answer key
28
• Environmental benefits: lower emissions / carbon footprint
• Reduced congestion
• Faster commute (dedicated lane + off-board fare collection)
• “Real time” travel information
• Higher transit vehicle capacity
• Fewer accidents (injuries, fatalities)
• Create jobs
• Improved accessibility for individuals with disabilities
• Less frequent stops (faster travel time)
• Work/study on commute (access to wi-fi, lower stress)
• Larger customer base for downtown Tacoma businesses
• Direct connection from rural area to downtown
29
Potential Benefits?
Tip: try to avoid “double counting” benefits
• Burden on taxpayers
• Possible gas price increases
• Less frequent stops (longer access/egress time)
• Construction infrastructure cost
• Maintenance costs
• Construction duration & delays
• Implementation of traffic signal technology
• Lane limitations on traffic
• Legal risks
• Security
• Fare collection / hiring fare inspectors (capital / labor costs)
• Parking
• Interfering with existing routes
30
Potential Costs?
Tip: try to avoid “double counting” costs
Supply Curves
• In CBA, we always consider the opportunity costs of resources
• An individual firm usually has a short-run U-shaped marginal
cost (MC) curve
• All costs are opportunity costs
• Short run: at least one factor of production cannot vary
• Example of fixed input: capital 31
Supply Curves
• MC indicates the additional cost to produce each additional
unit of good
• The area below the market supply curve represents the total
variable cost of producing a given amount of good
32
Supply Curves
• The MC curve intersects the average variable cost (AVC) curve
of the firm exactly at its minimum point
• The segment of a firm’s marginal cost curve above the average
variable cost curve is its supply curve
• Supply curve: the quantity of output the firm will produce at
any given price
• When the price is below the average variable cost, the firm
shuts down because it cannot cover the variable costs 33
Supply Curves
• At price P*, the firm
will produce X*
• By producing more
the firm would lose
money because the
additional units cost
more than the
market price P*
34
Market Supply Curve
• The market supply curve is the horizontal sum of all “individual”
firms’ supply curves in the market
• Indicates total quantity available on the market at any given price
35
Market Supply Curve
• The area below the market supply curve represents the total
variable cost of producing a given amount of the good
• Can also interpret it as the minimum revenue required to produce
this amount of the good
36
Market Supply Curve
• At price P1, firms in the market are willing to supply X1 units
• P1 is also the MC of the X1 th unit
• That’s the quantity that (perfectly competitive) firms want to
supply at this price
37
Producer Surplus
• Assuming the market price is P*, then firms would supply X*
units
� Firms’ revenue is P*X*
• Revenue = (price per unit) * (quantity sold)
� The light and dark grey shaded areas on the preceding graph
38
Producer Surplus
• The total variable cost to produce X* is represented by the
dark grey shaded area
• The producer surplus (PS) equals firms’ revenue minus the
total variable cost
PS = P*X* - TVC
• PS is represented on the graph by the light grey shaded area
� PS measures the firms’ benefit 39
Interlude: Bus Rapid Transit
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0NHlOwJza54
40
Social Surplus
• Society’s surplus accounts for the surplus of both consumers
and producers
• Social surplus (SS): �� = �� + ��
• Note: this relationship only holds in the absence of impacts on
the government (i.e. no tax revenue)
� Can find SS in the supply and demand framework
41
Social Surplus
42
Social Surplus
• This framework incorporates both the supply and demand
curves
• Equilibrium occurs at price P* and quantity X*
• CS = dark grey area
• PS = light grey area
• SS is the sum of both grey areas
� Also find the perfect competition equilibrium rule: P = MC 43
Social Surplus
• How can we find the net social benefits from the basic
microeconomic framework?
• Total consumer benefits are represented by the area below the
demand curve
• Total producer costs are represented by the area below the
supply curve
� Social net benefits equal total consumer benefits minus total
producer costs
• Social net benefits = the dark and light grey areas
44
Social Surplus
• Demand curve represents marginal benefits (MB)
• Supply curve represents marginal costs (MC)
� Competitive equilibrium is reached when they are equal
� Therefore net social benefits are maximized
• There is no potential gain in increasing production
• The marginal costs would be larger than the marginal benefits 45
Is there a potential gain by decreasing production in this case?
Social Surplus
• In perfect competition, net social benefits and social surplus
are maximized
� This equilibrium is Pareto efficient
• There is no way to increases the benefits of one group without
negatively affecting the benefits of another group
• i.e., it is “allocatively efficient”
• Therefore, a governmental intervention cannot improve the
efficiency in this framework
• In fact, any intervention would create a DWL
46
Profits
• The producer surplus (PS), as we defined it, does not account for
any fixed costs:
PS = P*X* - TVC
• But, in practice, most projects involve changes in fixed costs that
we need to take into account
47
Profits
• If there are fixed costs, need to adapt the measurement of the
PS
� Include the fixed cost (FC)
� Profit, π = P*X* - TVC – FC = PS - FC
48
Profits
• Consequently, social surplus can be rewritten:
�� = �� + �
• A change in policy would result in net social benefits
measured by:
�� = �� + �
49
Government Surplus
• Sometimes the government intervenes in the economy
• How do we deal with this?
� We need to define a government surplus
• Governmental surplus (GS): financial inflows from taxes minus
governmental expenditures
50
Government Surplus
• When GS ≠ 0, must rewrite the social surplus as:
�� = �� + �� + �
• A change in policy would result in net social benefits
measured by:
Δ�� = Δ�� + Δ�� + Δ �
� In a competitive market, the net social benefit of a project
equals the change in consumer surplus plus the change in
producer surplus plus the net change in government revenue
51
Exercise #1
• Assume that the government builds rent-free housing for low-
income residents at cost C
• It provides an increase in consumer surplus of B
• C includes construction and operating costs
• Assume also that there is no change in producer surplus
What are the net social benefits in that case?
52
Exercise #1
• What if the tenants pay a rent R?
• It is a mistake to include it in the GS
� A rent paid is a transfer from consumers to the government
� It must be ignored in the calculation of net social benefits
• Therefore, this does not change the outcome from that of the
preceding exercise
53
Exercise #1
• An alternative approach is to consider the gross benefits to
consumers and the social cost to society
• The gross benefits equal the whole area under the inverse
demand curve � �� +
• The total costs to society are the rents plus the construction
and operating cost � + �
54
Exercise #1
• Therefore, the net social benefits equal:
��� = (Δ�� + ) − (R + �) = Δ�� − � = B − C
� There are often different ways to calculate the net social
benefits
� However, the results are the same (if done properly)
55
Exercise #2
• Assume now that the government wants to ensure producers
receive a price PT , which is larger than the equilibrium price P*
• At the same time, the government wants to ensure the
producers sell all the output XT that they are willing to supply at
price PT • However, consumers are willing to pay less for this quantity: PD < PT
• PD is the market price without governmental intervention
• We often see this kind of policy (“price supports”) in the
agricultural sector
• Consider a graph representing this situation
56
Exercise #2
• What can the government do to make sure producers receive
PT for each of the XT units?
57
Exercise #2
• Suppose the government offers a subsidy of PT – PD
• What are the distributional implications of this policy?
• What happens with the surplus in this situation?
• Δ CS?
• Δ PS?
• Δ GS? 58
Exercise #2
• Consumer surplus:
• Producer surplus:
59
*
* 0
before
after D
after before D
CS abP
CS aeP
CS CS CS P beP
=
=
∆ = − = >
Consumers are better
off with the policy
*
* 0
before
after T
after before T
PS P bc
PS P dc
PS PS PS P dbP
=
=
∆ = − = >
Producers are better
off with the policy
Exercise #2
• Government surplus:
• Do the gains to consumers and producers outweigh the cost to
the government for this policy?
60
0
0
before
after T D
after before T D
GS
GS P deP
GS GS GS P deP
=
= −
∆ = − = − <
“Government” is worse
off with the policy
Exercise #2
• What is the social surplus without this policy?
• What is the social surplus with this policy?
� DWL is the area bde
61
� Society is worse off with the policy
Practice Problem: Part 1
• Demand curve: P = 10,000 – 10Q
• Supply curve: P = 1,000 + 5Q
Question: In equilibrium, calculate the following:
• Consumer surplus = ?
• Producer surplus = ?
• Social surplus = ? 62
Practice Problem: Part 2
• Suppose that the government imposes a tax of 1500 per unit that the producers must pay
Question: In equilibrium, calculate the following:
• Consumer surplus = ?
• Producer surplus = ?
• Government surplus = ?
• Social surplus = ? 63
Practice Problem: Part 3
• What is the deadweight loss of this tax?
• How would we decide whether this tax is a “good” economic
policy?
64
Assignment #2
• Instructions are posted on Canvas
• Due date will be extended
65