ECO 110 - Final Exam
Production Possibilities Curve
A graph that describes the maximum amount of one good that can be produced for every possible level of production of the other good
Labor Union
A group of workers who bargain collectively with employers for better wages and working conditions
Perfectly Competitive Market
A market in which no indivudal supplier has significant influence on the market price of the product
Equation
A mathematical expression that describes the relationship between two or more variables
Price Ceiling
A maximum allowable price, specified by law
Natural Monopoly
A monopoly that results from economies of scale (increasing returns to scale)
Change in the Quantity Demanded
A movement along the demand curve that occurs in response to a change in price
Change in the Quantity Supplied
A movement along the supply curve that occurs in response to a change in price
Long Run
A period of time of sufficient length that all the firm's factors of production are variable
Short Run
A period of time sufficiently short that at least some of the firm's factors of production are fixed
Constant Returns to Scale
A production process is said to have __________ if, when all inputs are changed by a given proportion, output changes by the same proportion
Increasing Returns to Scale
A production process is said to have ____________________ if, when all inputs are changed by a given proportion, output changes by more than that proportion; also called economies of scale
Efficient Point
Any combination of goods for which currently available resources do not allow an increase in the production of one good without a reduction in the production of the order
Inefficient Point
Any combination of goods for which currently available resources enable an increase in the production of the other
Barrier to Entry
Any force that prevents firms form entering a new market
Marginal Benefit
The _____________ of an activity is the increase in total benefit that results from carrying out one additional unit of activity
Explicit Costs
The actual payments a firm makes to its factors of production and other suppliers
Marginal Product of Labor (MP)
The additional output a firm gets by employing one additional unit of labor
Marginal Utility
The additonal utility gained from consuming an additional unit of a good
Consumer Surplus
The economic surplus gained by the buyers of a product as measured by the cumulative difference between their respective reservation prices and the price they actually paid
Producer Surplus
The economic surplus gained by the sellers of a product as measured by the cumulative difference between the price received and their respective reservation prices
Income Elasticity of Demand
The percentage by which a good's quantity demanded changes in response to a 1 percent change in income
Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand
The percentage by which the quantity demanded of the first good changes in response to a 1% change in the price of the second
Price Elasticity of Demand
The percentage change in the quantity demanded of a good or service that results form a one percent change in its price
Price Elasticity of Supply
The percentage change in the quantity supplied that will occur in response to a one percent change in the price of a good or service
Substitutes
Two goods are substitutes in consumption if an increase in the price of one causes a rightward shift in the demand curve for the other (or if a decrease causes a leftward shift)
Inferior Good
A good whose demand curve shifts leftward when the incomes of buyers increase
Normal Good
A good whose demand curve shifts rightward when the incomes of buyers increase
Supply curve
A graph or schedule showing the quantity of a good that sellers wish to sell at each price
Equilibrium
A balanced or unchanging situation in which all forces at work within a system are cancelled by others
External Benefit (Positive Externality)
A benefit of an activity received by people other than those who pursue the activity
Cartel
A coalition of firms that agree to restrict output for the purpose of earning an economic profit
External Cost (Negative Externality)
A cost of an activity that falls on people other than those who pursue the activity
Fixed Cost
A cost that does not vary with the level of an activity; the sum of all payments made to the firm's fixed factors of production
Sunk Cost
A cost that is beyond recovery at the moment a decision must be made
Variable Cost
A cost that varies with the level of an activity; the sum of all payments made to the firm's variable factors of production
Compensating Wage Differential
A difference in the wage rate - negative or positive - that reflects the attractiveness of a job's working conditions
Perfectly Discriminating Monopolist
A firm that charges each buyer exactly his or her reservation price
Price Taker
A firm that has no influence over the price at which it sells its product
Profit-Maximizing Firm
A firm whose primary goal is to maximize the difference between its total revenues and total costs
Price Setter
A firm with at least some latitude to set its own price
Market Power
A firm's ability to raise the price of a good without losing all it's sales
Public Good
A good or service that , to at least some degree, is both nonrival and nonexcludable
Collective Good
A good or service that, to at least some degree, is nonrival but excludable
Nonexcludable Good
A good that is difficult, or costly, to exclude nonpayers from consuming
Nonrival Good
A good whose consumption by one person does not diminish its availability for others
Law of Diminishing Returns
A property of the relationship between the amount of a good or service produced and the amount of a variable factor required to produce it; the law says that when some factors of production are fixed, increased production of the good eventually requires ever larger increases in the variable factor
Constant (or parameter)
A quantity that is fixed in value
Demand Curve
A schedule or graph showing the quantity of a good that buyers with to buy at each price
Change in Demand
A shift of the entire demand curve
Change in Supply
A shift of the entire supply curve
Effiecient (Pareto-Efficient)
A situation is efficient if no change is possible that will help some people without helping others
Perfectly Elastic Supply Curve
A supply curve whose elasticity with respect to price is infinite
Perfectly Inelastic Supply Curve
A supply curve whose elasticity with respect to price is zero
Head Tax
A tax that collects the same amount from every taxpayer
Regressive Tax
A tax under which the proportion of income paid in taxes declines as income rises
Outsourcing
A term increasingly used to connote having services performed by low-wage workers overseas
Independent Variable
A variable in an equation whose value determines the value taken by another variable in the equation
Dependent Variable
A variable in an equation whose value is determined by the value taken by another variable in the equation
Variable Factor of Production
An Input whose quantity can be altered in the short run
Employer Discrimination
An arbitrary preference by an employer for one group of workers over another
Economic Loss
An economic profit that is less than zero
Externality
An external cost or benefit of an activity
Free-Rider Problem
An incentive problem i nwhich too little of a good or service is produced because nonpayers cannot be excluded from using it
Oligopoly
An industry structure in which a small number of large firms produce products that are either close or perfect substitutes
Factor of Production
An input used in the production of a good or service
Fixed Factor of Production
An input whose quantity cannot be altered in the short run
Efficiency
Condition that occurs when all goods and services are produced and consumed at their respective socially optimal levels
Coase Theorem
If at no cost people can negotiate the purchase and sale of the right to perform activities that cuase externalities, they can always arrive at efficeint solutions to the problems caused by externalities
Monopolistic Competition
Industry structure in which a large number of firms produce slightly differentiated products that are resonably close substitutes for one another
Market Equilibrium
Occurs when all buyers and sellers are satisfied with their respective quantities at the market price
Common Resource
One for which nonpayers cannot easily be excluded and for which each unit consumed by one person means one less unit available for others
Progressive Tax
One in which the proportion of income paid in taxes rises as income taxes
Comparitive Advantage
One person has a comparitave advantage over another if his or her opportunity cost of performing a task is lower than the other person's opportunity cost
Absolute Advantage
One person has an absolute advantage over another if he or she takes fewer hours to perform a task than another person
Proportional Income Tax
One under which all taxpayers pay the same proportion of their incomes in taxes
Law of Demand
People do less of what they want to do as the cost of doing it rises
Marginal Revenue
The change in a firm's total revenue that results from a one-unit change in output
Income Effect
The change in teh quantity demanded of a good that results because a change in the price of a good changes the buyer's purchasing power
Substitution Effect
The change in the quantity demanded of a good that results because buyers switch to or from substitutes when the price of a good changes
Deadweight Loss
The deadweight loss caused by a policy is the reduction in economic surplus that results from adoption of that policy
Elastic
The demand for a good is elastic with respect to price if its price elasticity of demand is greater than 1
Inelastic
The demand for a good is inelastic with respect to price if its price elasticity of demand is less than one
Perfectly Elastic Demand
The demand for a good is perfectly elastic with respect to price if its price elasticity of demand is infinite
Perfectly Inelastic Demand
The demand for a good is perfectly inelastic with respect to price if its price elasticity of demand is zero
Unit Elastic
The demand for a good is unit elastic with respect to pricce if its price elasticity of demand is equal to 1
Accounting Profit
The difference between a firm's total revenue and its explicit costs
Economic Profit
The difference between a firm's total revenue and the sum of its explicit and implicit costs; also called excess profits
Total Surplus
The difference between the buyer's reservation price and the seller's reservation price
Excess Supply (Surplus)
The difference between the quantity supplied and the quantity demanded when the price of a good exceeds the equilibrium price; sellers are dissatisfied when there is excess supply
Excess Demand (Shortage)
The difference between the quantity supplied and the quantity demanded when the price of a good lies below the equilibrium price; buyers are dissatisfied when there is excess demand
Value of Marginal Product of Labor (VMP)
The dollar value of the additional output a firm gets by emplying one additional unit of labor
Economic Surplus
The economic surplus from takin gany action is the benefit of taking the action minus its cost
Marginal Cost
The marginal cost of an activity is the increase in total cost that results from carrying out one additional unit of the activity; as output changes from one level to another, the change in total cost divided by the corresponding change in output
Market
The market for any good consists of all buyers and sellers of that good
Pure Monopoly
The only supplier of a unique product with no close substitutes
Opportunity Cost
The opportunity cost of an activity is the value of what must be forgone to undertake the activity
Implicit Costs
The opportunity costs of the resources supplied by the firm's owners
Hurdle Method of Price Discrimination
The practice by which a seller offers a discount to all buyers who overcome some obstacle
Price Discrimination
The practice of charging different buyers different prices for essentially the same good or service
Equilibrium Price and Equilibrium Quantity
The price and quantity of a good at the intersection of the supply and demand curves for the good
Socially Optimal Quantity
The quantity of a good that results in the maximum possible economic surplus from producing and consuming the good
Economics
The study of how people make choices under conditions of scarcity and of the results of those choices for society
Microeconomics
The study of individual choice under scarcity and its implications for the behavior of prices and quantities in individual markets
Macroeconomics
The study of the performance of national economies and the policies that governments use to try to improve that performance
Total Cost
The sum of all payments made to the firm's fixed variable factors of production
Tragedy of the Common
The tendency for a resource that has no price to be used until its marginal benefit falls to zero
Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
The tendency for the additional utility gained from consuming an additional unit of a good to diminsih as consumption increases beyond some point
Profit
The toal revenue a firm receives from the sale of its product minus all costs - explicit and implicit - incurred in producing it
Customer Discrimination
The willingness of consumers to pay more for a product by members of a favored group, even if the quality of a product is unaffected
Average Benefit
Total benefit of undertaking n units of an activity divided by n
Average Total Cost (ATC)
Total cost divided by total output
Average Cost
Total cost of undertaking n units of an activity divided by n
Complements
Two goods are complements in consumption if an increase in the price of one causes a leftward shift in the demand curve for the other (or if a decrease causes a rightward shift)
Average Variable Cost (AVC)
Variable cost divided by total output