eli5 How is the economic value of an item determined if different sellers sell it at different prices?

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eli5 How is the economic value of an item determined if different sellers sell it at different prices?

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Anonymous 0 Comments

The simplest way to put it is that the economic value of an item is whatever price a seller and a buyer agree to (with the assumption both are acting in “rational self interest”). This may change over time or even just between people.

In economics, there is no fixed value of a good or service, just what people are currently willing to pay.

In day-to-day, we will generally take a look at what a bunch of buyers and sellers all over are willing to pay/sell for, and state that the “value” is somewhere in that range.

Anonymous 0 Comments

I would imagine it’s determined by which one actually sells. In a rational world people would just buy from the cheapest. Obviously there may be non price costs such as inconvenience which would I guess be quantified by how much more one was willing to pay when buying from a higher price seller. If people are just randomly buying at all different prices for no reason then it has a range of value?