Microeconomics Exam I
Core principles
- scarcity principle - cost-benefit principle - incentive principle - principle of comparative advantage - principle of increasing opportunity costs - equilibrium principle - efficiency principle
Excess Supply and Demand
- when the market price exceeds the equilibrium price, the market is said to be characterized by excess supply (surplus) - when the market prices lies below the equilibrium price, the market is said to be characterized by excess demand (a shortage)
supply
A stock of a resource from which a person or place can be provided with the necessary amount of that resource.
sunk cost
a cost that is beyond recovery at the moment a decision must be made
the shift from the "Old" to the "New" line in the accompanying graph represents:
a decrease in the vertical intercept - a decrease in the vertical intercept of a line is represented by a downward parallel shift
Economists believe that scarcity is
a fundamental fact of life for everyone
variable
a quantity that if free to take on different values
Efficiency
an outcome is said to be efficient if no one could be made better off without making someone else worse off
when assessing the costs and benefits associated with taking an action, it is generally best to consider costs and benefits:
as absolute dollar amounts rather than proportions
the total cost of carrying N unites of an activity divided by N is the activity's
average cost
a quantity that is fixed in value is know as a:
constant
trade
decisions about how much of each good to produce and trade ultimately come down to the relationship between opportunity costs and relative prices
in the graph of a straight line, the vertical intercept is the value taken by the:
dependent variable when the independent variable is equal to zero
independent variable
determines the value of another variable in an equation
when making decisions, people sometimes make mistakes because they:
fail to consider implicit costs
if someone is rational, then they
have well-defined goals that they try to fulfill as best they can
Equilibrium
in the market occurs at the price-quantity pair for which both buyers and sellers are satisfied
in standard economic models, a rational person
makes choices by weighing the extra benefits of an action against its extra costs
economists believe that people
never have enough time, money or energy to do everything or have everything they want
Common decision pitfalls
pitfall 1: ignoring opportunity costs pitfall 2: measuring costs and benefits as proportions rather than absolute dollar amounts pitfall 3: failing to ignore sunk costs pitfall 4: failing to understand average vs. marginal costs and benefits
economic surplus
refers to the benefit of taking any action minus its cost
when deciding whether to take an action, sunk costs should...
should be ignored
Cost-Benefit Principle
states that a rational individual/firm/society should pursue an action if the extra benefits from taking that action outweigh the extra costs.
production possibilities curve
tells us about how much of one good must be traded off to produce more of the other good
comparative advantage
the ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer
the cost-benefit principle states that an individual or society should take an action if, and only if
the extra benefits from taking the action are at least as great as the extra costs
marginal cost
the increase in total benefit that results from carrying out one additional unit of the activity
demand
the quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to buy
Opportunity Cost (OC)
the value of the next-best alternative activity or opportunity that must be foregone