Econ Mid-Term
Substitution Effect
the change in the quantity consumed as the consumer substitutes other goods that are now relatively cheaper in place of the good that has become relatively more expensive
Law of Diminishing Returns
when a fixed input is held constant, beyond some point, increases in the variable input will yield smaller and smaller increases in output (short run) ((too many cooks in the kitchen --> less productive)
Inferior Goods
↓ consumption with higher income (ex. hamburger, canned food)
The Midpoint formula
➤% change in quantity= change in quantity/ (old quantity + new quantity)/2 ➤% change in price= change in price/ (old price + new price)/ 2
Cross Price Elasticity of Demand(subs & coms)
➤For subs, cross price elasticity of demand is positive ➤For complements, cross price elasticity of demand is neg
Effects of a Quota
➤decrease the quantity supplied ➤higher prices (if binding) ➤decrease the quantity demanded ➤no surplus results ➤allocation: efficient ➤lost economic surplus
Mandate
a *minimum* quantity that sellers are required to sell (low income housing mandates)
Price Ceiling
a maximum price that sellers can charge (ex. rent control on apartments, limits on Uber surge pricing)
Sunk Costs
costs that already incurred that cannot be reversed (O.C. says you should ignore sunk costs)
Taste
demand if fashionable → shift right, demand if unfashionable → shift left
Price and Quantity move in the same direction
demand shifted
Substitute Goods(replace each other)
demand ↑↑ when price of substitutes ↑↑, demand ↓↓ when price of substitutes ↓↓
Complementary Goods(go together)
demand ↓↓ when price of complementary good ↑↑, demand ↑↑ when price of complementary good ↓↓
Marginal Benefit
the "extra benefit" from one more unit
Marginal Cost
the "extra cost" from one more unit
Income Effect
the change in quantity of the good consumed that results from a change in overall purchasing power of the consumer due to a change in price of that good (you feel richer)
Extensive margin
the cheaper something is, the more customers you get
Intensive margin
the cheaper something is, the more each customer buys
Consumer Surplus
the difference between a consumer's willingness to pay and the price
Producer Surplus
the difference between the price and the producer's cost
Intensive Margin (supply)
the higher the price, the more each seller produces
Extensive Margin
the higher the price, the more sellers enter the market (and lower prices cause loss-making firms to exit the market)
Number and Type of Buyers
the individuals in the market are changing, doesn't shift the individual demand, does shift the market demand
Opportunity Cost Principle
the most valuable alternative that you have to give up to get it → ask yourself "or what?"
Number and Types of Sellers
the number of sellers in the market changes, doesn't shift individual supply, does shift market supply
Connectedness Principle
to fully understand the consequences of your decisions account for
Congestion Effects
when a good becomes less useful because other people use it, increased use by others will decrease demand (ex. traffic congestion)
Diseconomies of Scale
when increasing all of your inputs leads to a proportionally smaller increase in output (long run issue) ((many cooks in a larger kitchen, recipe gets changed))
Rising Cost of Time
you only have so many hours in the day, so the more time you devote to your business, the higher the opportunity cost
Economic Surplus
your benefit minus your cost, a measure of how much extra well-being your decision created
Normal Goods
↑ consumption with high income (ex. steak, wine, cars, shirts)
Effects of a Price Floor
➤higher prices (if binding) ➤increase the quantity supplied ➤decrease the quantity demanded ➤*surplus* results ➤disequilibrium leads to forces which lower "effective price"
Effects of Price Ceiling
➤lower prices (if binding) ➤decrease the quantity supplied ➤increase the quantity demanded ➤*shortages* result ➤disequilibrium forces increase "effective price", partly undoing price regulation
Equilibrium Price
price that equates quantity supplied with quantity demanded
Total Revenue
price x quantity
Economic Profit
profitability of a new business after subtracting the opportunity cost of entrepreneurship (foregone wages, foregone investment income)
Equilibrium Quantity
quantity at which supply equals demand
Income Elasticity of Demand
responsiveness of demand to changes in income ➤ can be used to distinguish normal from inferior goods ➤ normal goods: buy more as income rises, income elasticity is pos ➤ inferior goods: you "make do", but buy less when your income rises, income elasticity is neg ➤ for income-elastic goods, income elasticity is greater than 1 ➤ for income inelastic goods, income elasticity is positive but less than 1
Price of Inputs (Variable Costs)
rise in the price of variable inputs (labor, raw materials) causes a rise in marginal cost, yielding decrease in supply
Shutdown Condition
shutdown and produce nothing if your revenues do not exceed your recoverable (non-sunk) costs.......loss occurs when: costs > revenues.....shutdown when: (costs-sunk costs)>revenues
if production can be increased cheaply...
supply curve will be elastic
if increased production is expensive...
supply curve will be inelastic
Price and Quantity move in opposite directions
supply shifted
Unitary Elasticity
% change in Quantity= % Change in Price (Ed= 1)
Cross-Price elasticity of demand (eqn)
% change in quantity of this good/ % change in price of another good
Price Elasticity of Demand
% change in quantity ÷ % change in price
Income Elasticity of Demand
% change in quantity/ % change in come
Price Elasticity of Supply (EQN)
% change in quantity/ % change in price
Increasing Marginal Costs
At some point, producing each additional item comes at a higher marginal cost than the previous item
How Analysts Estimate Market Supply
1. Survey all possible suppliers 2. Add up the total quantity supplied 3. Scale the quantities supplied by the survey respondents, so that they represent the whole market 4. Plot the market supply curve
Four Steps to Estimate Market Demand
1. Survey your customers 2. Add up the total quantity demanded 3. Scale the quantities demanded by the survey respondents, so that they represent the whole market 4. Plot the market demand curve
Elasticity
A measure of responsiveness, the more responsive the more elastic
Demand for Normal Goods
Increase in income shifts demand right
Perfectly Inelastic
An increase in price leaves the quantity demanded unchanged (Ed< 1) (vertical line)
Expectations
Connectedness principle → buying tomorrow is a sub. for buying today
Fixed Costs
Costs that stay the same regardless of output (managers, buildings).....don't change when you produce another unit → irrelevant to the "or what?" question
Variable Costs
Costs that vary with the amount of output (wages, oil expenditures)
Cost Benefit Principle
Evaluation the full set of benefits and costs of any choice you face, and *only pursue that choice if its benefits are at least as large as the costs*
Short Run
Horizon over which some inputs can't be changed (➤can't change: inputs like size of refineries, plants, firms) (➤can change: inputs like labor, raw materials)
Demand for Inferior Goods
Increase in income shifts demand curve left
Surplus
Net Benefits
Long Run
Planning horizon over which all inputs can be changed (➤expand or shrink refinery, plant, firm ➤all costs are adjustable)
Shortage
Quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied occurs at any price lower than the equilibrium price
Perfectly Elastic
Quantity is infinitely responsive to even tiny price changes (horizontal line)
Elastic Demand
Quantity is quite responsive (Ed> 1)
Inelastic Demand
Quantity is quite unresponsive (Ed< 1)
Surplus
Quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded occurs at any price higher than the equilibrium price
Price Elasticity of Supply
Responsiveness of quantity supplied to the price ➤a more responsive quantity supplied is to a change in price, more elastic the supply curve
Rational Rule for Sellers
Sell more of an item if the marginal cost has not risen to be greater than (or equal to) the marginal benefit. Keep selling until PRICE=MARGINAL COST
Law of Demand
The quantity demanded is higher when prices are lower
Individual Supply
The quantity one person supplies, at each price
Law of Supply
The quantity supplied is higher when prices are higher
Market Supply
The total quantity supplied by the market at each price
Network Effects
When a good becomes more useful because other people use it, increase use by others will increase demand (ex. facebook)
Quota
a *maximum* quantity that sellers can sell (immigration laws, hunting season)
Economic Burden
Who bears the burden of the tax? ➤how much the buyers pay, how much less sellers receive
Statutory Burden
Who is responsible for paying the tax to the government
Price Floor
a minimum price that sellers can charge (ex. minimum wage, dairy price floor)
Subsidy
a payment made by the government to those who make a specific choice, neg tax ➤effects: increase the equilibrium quantity, increase the price
Substitutions in Production
alternative uses of your productive capacity ➤opportunity cost of producing gas is producing more diesel
When demand is elastic...
an increase in price causes a large reduction in quantity demanded ➤raising prices lowers revenue
When demand is inelastic...
an increase in price will cause only a slight reduction in quantity demanded ➤raising prices increases revenue
Marginal Principle
break "how many" choices into a series of smaller marginal choices, ask "one more?"
Rational Rule for Buyers
buy more of an item if its marginal benefit is greater than (or equal to) the price
Rising Input Prices
buying more and more of an input increases the opportunity cost of that output
Slope
change in price / change in quantity
Framing
how different alternatives are described
Perfect Competition
identical good, many buyers & sellers, each whom is a small share of market, implies analyzing price-takers
Expectations and Long Run Supply
if prices are expected to rise: invest in increasing production capacity, production today is a complement for production tomorrow ➤if the price is expected to rise, increase production capacity today
Equimarginal Rule
if something is worth doing, keep doing it until the marginal benefits equal your marginal costs
Complements in Production
joint produced (by products) ➤if I produce more beer, I can produce more Vegemite
Expectation and Short Run Supply
opportunity cost of selling today is selling tomorrow ➤if the price is expected to be high tomorrow keep production high today, decrease supply today, increase supply tomorrow
Equilibrium
point at which there is no tendency for change, where the curves cross ➤(quantity demanded= quantity supplied)