Consumer Surplus
Consumer surplus is the welfare gain consumers receive from purchasing goods. It is the difference between the maximum price consumers are willing to pay (shown by the demand curve) and the market price they actually pay. It represents the net benefit to consumers.
Real World
When Apple launches a new iPhone at £999, some fans would happily pay £1,500 — the £501 difference is their consumer surplus, which is why they feel they got a bargain on launch day.
Exam Focus
Always shade the correct triangle on diagrams — below the demand curve and above the price line.
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