Science, Tech, Math › Social Sciences The Definition and Concepts of Economic Efficiency Share Flipboard Email Print Tom Merton/ OJO Images/ Getty Images Social Sciences Economics U.S. Economy Employment Supply & Demand Psychology Sociology Archaeology Ergonomics By Mike Moffatt Mike Moffatt Professor of Business, Economics, and Public Policy Ph.D., Business Administration, Richard Ivey School of Business M.A., Economics, University of Rochester B.A., Economics and Political Science, University of Western Ontario Mike Moffatt, Ph.D., is an economist and professor. He teaches at the Richard Ivey School of Business and serves as a research fellow at the Lawrence National Centre for Policy and Management. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on April 01, 2018 Generally speaking, economic efficiency refers to a market outcome that is optimal for society. In the context of welfare economics, an outcome that is economically efficient is one that maximizes the size of the economic value pie that a market creates for society. In an economically efficient market outcome, there are no available Pareto improvements to be made, and the outcome satisfies what is known as the Kaldor-Hicks criterion. More specifically, economic efficiency is a term typically used in microeconomics when discussing production. Production of a unit of goods is considered to be economically efficient when that unit of goods is produced at the lowest possible cost. Economics by Parkin and Bade give a useful introduction to the difference between economic efficiency and technological efficiency: There are two concepts of efficiency: Technological efficiency occurs when it is not possible to increase output without increasing inputs. Economic efficiency occurs when the cost of producing a given output is as low as possible.Technological efficiency is an engineering matter. Given what is technologically feasible, something can or cannot be done. Economic efficiency depends on the prices of the factors of production. Something that is technologically efficient may not be economically efficient. But something that is economically efficient is always technologically efficient. A key point to understand is the idea that economic efficiency occurs "when the cost of producing a given output is as low as possible". There's a hidden assumption here, and that is the assumption that all else being equal. A change that lowers the quality of the good while at the same time lowers the cost of production does not increase economic efficiency. The concept of economic efficiency is only relevant when the quality of goods being produced is unchanged. Cite this Article Format mla apa chicago Your Citation Moffatt, Mike. "The Definition and Concepts of Economic Efficiency." ThoughtCo, Apr. 5, 2023, thoughtco.com/definition-of-economic-efficiency-1147869. Moffatt, Mike. (2023, April 5). The Definition and Concepts of Economic Efficiency. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/definition-of-economic-efficiency-1147869 Moffatt, Mike. "The Definition and Concepts of Economic Efficiency." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/definition-of-economic-efficiency-1147869 (accessed June 2, 2023). copy citation