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Unit 6: Consumer Behaviour: Ordinal Approach





             No different was the case of luxury cars either. Although the car segment as a whole was   Notes
             able to post a growth in sales of 2.6 per cent, for the second time in a row the luxury car
             segment was able to grow only in single digits. Now that the base has widened much more,
             the days of a double digit growth in any of these segments is a near impossibility.

                              Table 1: Production and Sales in April-May 1996-98
                           Production   Variation   Production   Variation
                            1997-98     1996-97    1997-98   1996-97
              HCV              216.30      211.53      2.25    154109  192272  -19.80
              LCV               21870       22293      -1.89    18682  20617   -9.38
              Cars              60593    60415 0.29    58850    57360    2.59
              Utility Veh.      71083       71239      -0.22    69471  69216   0.37
              Scooters         189414  220645 -14.15  191457   211233   -9.37
              Motor cycles     172703  140659 22.78  168337    136916   22.93
              Mopeds            92470       10701     -13.59    89122  100969  -11.73

             Question

             How did slowdown affect the can industry?

          6.4 Consumer Surplus

          Consumer surplus is the satisfaction that a consumer obtains from a good over and above the
          price paid. This is the difference between the maximum demand price that buyers are willing to
          pay and the price that they actually pay. A related notion from the supply side of the market is
          producer surplus.


                 Example: Rahul is willing and able to pay ` 30 for a packet of chips. This is his demand
          price. However, the going market price, the actual price that everyone pays for a packet of chips
          is ` 25. While Rahul is willing and able to pay ` 30, he pays only ` 25. He receives a ` 5 consumer
          surplus on this purchase.
          A comparable surplus from the supply side of the market is producer surplus. It is the revenue
          that a producer obtains from a good over and above the price paid. This is the difference between
          the minimum supply price that sellers are willing to accept and the price that they actually
          receive.


                 Example: Suppose that ABC Chips Producer is willing and able to accept `  20 for a
          packet of chips. This is its supply price. This is what it needs to receive to cover production cost.
          However, the going market price, the actual price that everyone pays for a packet of chips is `
          25. While ABC Chips Producer is willing and able to accept ` 20, it receives ` 25. It receives ` 5
          producer surplus on this sale.

          A Diagrammatic Representation

          The demand curve shows the quantum of demand at various potential prices, just as the supply
          curve shows the supply level to the market at various potential prices. For example, at too high
          a price like OP , there is no demand and at too low a price OP , there is no supply. Consumable
                      1                                     2
          quantities are indicated by the demand curve and marketable supplies are indicated by the
          supply curve.







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