Econ-Ch8
A price is
1. A signal 2. An incentive 3. A bundle of information
Inflation swaps
In financial markets, traders bet on whether inflation will be high or low, and so the price of these securities (they're called "inflation swaps") can yield useful inflation forecasts.
prediction markets
Markets whose payoffs are linked to whether an uncertain event occurs.
internal markets
Markets within a company to buy and sell scarce resources.
identifies who has a comparative advantage in each task
Step one: Determine how long each task would take each person (as in the top panel of Figure 1). This measures the cost of producing each good, in hours. Step two: Convert this into a measure of opportunity cost, by calculating how much of the alternative good you could have produced in that time. Step three: Evaluate who has a comparative advantage at each task by assessing who can produce each good at the lowest opportunity cost.
comparative advantage
The ability to do a task at a lower opportunity cost.
absolute advantage
The ability to do a task using fewer inputs.
gains from trade
The benefits that come from reallocating resources, goods, and services to better uses.
The knowledge problem
When knowledge needed to make a good decision is not available to the decision maker.
Futures
Where a buyer agrees to purchase a commodity like oil, wheat, or natural gas at a specific time in the future—is effectively a bet on the future price of these commodities. Businesses can look at these to obtain useful information about future disruptions to input costs.