Econ 201
Determinants of Demand
(1) (own) Price (2) Income (3) Tastes/Preferences (4) Prices of Closely Related Goods (Substitutes and Complements) (5) Expectations of Future Events such as falling or rising prices.
Determinants of Supply
(1) resource prices and (2) technology
There are 4 potential groups of "losers" due to increased wages
1. Workers lose when output falls (from Q to Q') and therefore fewer workers are needed. 2. Consumers lose because they now pay higher prices (from P to P'). 3. Businesses lose because their costs of production go up thus lowering profits. 4. Governments lose when tax revenues drop if firms sell less and/or go out of business.
PPF assumptions
1. only 2 goods are produced 2. all resources are fixed in supply 3. technology (how resources are put together to make the 2 goods) is fixed 4. the same resources may be used to produce either good; and 5. all resources are fully utilized.
Total surplus
Sum of producer and consumer surplus
Pareto-Efficient Allocation
When no further Pareto-superior improvements are possible
Pareto-Superior Move
a move from one combination to another makes at least one individual better off without making any other worse off
Substitute goods
a pair of goods whereby a price rise of one causes a higher demand for the other, ceteris paribus
Demand
a relationship between price and quantity demanded of a particular good, at a particular time
Equilibrium
a situation whereby there is no tendency for price or quantity to change, where supply and demand curves intersect
a. Cars are becoming more fuel efficient, and therefore get more miles to the gallon.
a. More fuel efficient cars means there is less need for gasoline. This causes a leftward shift in the demand for gasoline and thus oil. Since the demand curve is shifting down the supply curve, the equilibrium price and quantity both fall.
the production possibilities frontier itself consists of
all the possible pareto-efficient combinations
Complementary goods
are a pair of goods whereby a price rise of one causes a lower demand for the other, ceteris paribus
substitution effect
arises because consumers purchase more of a product as its price falls, and fewer substitutes goods
income effect
arises because falling prices allow higher consumption within the consumer's fixed budget
law of increasing opportunity cost
arises because resources are scarce and heterogeneous
change in demand
arises when there is a new relation between price and quantity of demand, ceteris paribus
b. The winter is exceptionally cold.
b. Cold weather increases the need for heating oil. This causes a rightward shift in the demand for heating oil and thus oil. Since the demand curve is shifting up the supply curve, the equilibrium price and quantity both rise.
c. A major discovery of new oil is made off the coast of Norway.
c. A discovery of new oil will make oil more abundant. This can be shown as a rightward shift in the supply curve, which will cause a decrease in the equilibrium price along with an increase in the equilibrium quantity. (The supply curve shifts down the demand curve so price and quantity follow the law of demand. If price goes up, then the quantity goes down.)
d. The economies of some major oil-using nations, like Japan, slow down.
d. When an economy slows down, it produces less output and demands fewer inputs, including energy, which is used in the production of virtually everything. A decrease in demand for energy will be reflected as a decrease in the demand for oil, or a leftward shift in demand for oil. Since the demand curve is shifting down the supply curve, both the equilibrium price and quantity of oil will fall.
Consumer surplus comes from the notion that
demand curves represent maximum prices that consumers are willing & able to purchase specific quantities of goods & services
Consumer surplus
difference between what consumers are at most willing to pay and what they actually pay
e. A war in the Middle East disrupts oil-pumping schedules.
e. Disruption of oil pumping will reduce the supply of oil. This leftward shift in the supply curve will show a movement up the demand curve, resulting in an increase in the equilibrium price of oil and a decrease in the equilibrium quantity.
Stock
equity stake of its owners
Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF)
exhibits how many goods & services may be produced within an economy
f. Landlords install additional insulation in buildings.
f. Increased insulation will decrease the demand for heating. This leftward shift in the demand for oil causes a movement down the supply curve resulting in a decrease in the equilibrium price and quantity of oil.
Adam Smith
first to marvel at how markets promote the greater social purpose as if guided by an "invisible hand"
demand for labor
from the point of view of employers: the higher the wage, the fewer workers they will employ
supply of labor
from the point of view of workers. Workers want to work more as wage rates rise
g. The price of solar energy falls dramatically.
g. Solar energy is a substitute for oil-based energy. So if solar energy becomes cheaper, the demand for oil will decrease as consumers switch from oil to solar. The decrease in demand for oil will be shown as a leftward shift in the demand curve. As the demand curve shifts down the supply curve, both equilibrium price and quantity for oil will fall.
h. Chemical companies invent a new, popular kind of plastic made from oil.
h. A new, popular kind of plastic will increase the demand for oil. The increase in demand will be shown as a rightward shift in demand, raising the equilibrium price and quantity of oil.
Market demand curve
horizontal summation of all the individual demand curves
Negative externalities
individuals do not pay for all the resources that they use, arise when there is a divergence between private costs and social costs (Ex. cost of noise)
Normative economic analysis
involves opinion or subjective evaluation
Positive economic analysis
involves pure "scientific" prediction
Scarce resources
land, labor, capital and entrepreneurship
Prices
language of markets
Supply
lists units of a specific product that sellers are willing & able to sell at various prices during a given time period, ceteris paribus
Invisible hand
mass of knowledge brought to markets defies easy comprehension, but nonetheless consumers and producers unwittingly provide it to markets
Market equilibrium also occurs where total surplus is
maximized
Ceteris paribus
means "holding all else that matters constant."
Opportunity cost
measures loss of the next best alternative
Scarcity
necessitates choice
Positive externalities
occur whenever private markets fail to allocate resources on the basis of social benefits
normal good
one where an increase in income causes demand for the (normal) good to rise
inferior good
one where an increase in income causes demand to fall
determinants of demand are
price, income, taste, prices of closely-related goods, and expectations of changes in these same factors
Price floor
protects markets by not letting the price drop too low
Successful businesses
provide products consumers want at prices that allow them to remain in business
Shortage
quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied
Surplus
quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded
Price ceiling
rationalized by the belief that the private market would set the price "too high" and therefore a price ceiling is warranted to "protect" consumers
Microeconomics
studies individual economic units; e.g., businesses, consumers
Macroeconomics
studies the economy as a whole; e.g., gross domestic product (GDP)
Price system
the ability of prices to fluctuate in a private market economy and thereby remove shortages or surpluses - that is, reach equilibrium
Producer Surplus
the difference between what producers receive and the minimum payments they would have been willing to receive
Economics
the study of the allocation of scarce resources to satisfy competing ends
Total welfare
the sum of the welfare of consumers (consumer surplus) and the welfare of producers (producer surplus)
law of demand
there is an inverse relation between price and quantity demanded of a good or service, ceteris paribus
Market surplus is a distance, not an area
true
Price per unit is always on the _________________, and quantity of demand always on the ______________.
vertical axis, horizontal axis
efficient level of production
would consider all costs and occurs at the intersection of demand and social costs curve