Economics Ch. 6 Market Forces
What are 3 types of choices people have to make?
1. Choices involving uncertainty and risk 2. Choices involving strategic interactions with others 3. Choices involving present vs future outcomes
What factors shift the supply curve rightward?
1. Reduction in costs of resources 2. Decline in costs of substitute 3. Technology advancement for the product 4. Change in expectations that expand production 5. Increase in number of sellers
What Questions do markets answer?
1. What to produce? 2. How to produce it? 3. For whom to produce it?
What shifts the demand curve rightward?
1. an increase in income of consumers 2. increase in price of substitute 3. decrease in price of a compliment 4. increase in number of consumers 5. change in expectations encourages consumers to purchase 6. change in consumer tastes in favor of the product
A situation achieved when a firm produces output most valued by consumers.
A. Allocative Efficiency
Where would the price floor be in relation to the equilibrium?
Above the equilibrium
How do price and quantity demanded affect each other along the demand curve?
As price increases, quantity demanded decreases.
How do price and quantity supplied affect each other along the supply curve?
As price increases, quantity supplied increases.
An approach that borrows insights from psychology to help explain economic decisions.
B. Behavioral economics
Given an upward-sloping supply curve, a rightward shift of the demand curve...
B. increases both equilibrium price and quantity
Where is the price ceiling set in relation to the equilibrium?
Below the equilibrium
The idea that there are limits on the amount of information that people can comprehend and act on.
C. Bounded Rationality
Which of the following demonstrates the problem of bounded rationality?
D. Ted bought the first computer a salesperson recommended him.
A market will stay in equilibrium until...
D. both a & b
What happens when firms are not efficient?
Either have to shape up, or leave market.
What is your self-interest in conflict with?
Ethical sense of fairness
True/False A market is always in a state of equilibrium.
False
True/False A price below a product's equilibrium price will result in a surplus of the product.
False
True/False A price ceiling has an impact only if ceiling price is set above its equilibrium level.
False
True/False Limited will power is more of a problem when decisions are made for the short run than for the long run.
False
True/False: Market Exchange is a voluntary activity where only one side of the market expects to benefit.
False
True/False As long as the supply curve slopes downward, a leftward shift of the demand curve reduces both price and quantity.
False, it has to slope upward.
True/False When the marginal benefit that consumers derive from a good equals the marginal cost of producing that good, that market is said to be productive efficient.
False, it's allocative efficient
What does a surplus do to price?
Forces price down.
Matching: The quantity of a product demanded is not equal to the quantity supplied.
G. Disequilibrium
What does the invisible hand of competition promote?
General Welfare
What causes the price to reach equilibrium in competitive markets?
Independent decisions of buyers and sellers
What are people prone to when facing complex financial decisions?
Inertia
Quantity demanded equals quantity supplied and the market clears
K. Market equilibrium
A maximum legal price above which a product cannot be sold.
M. Price ceiling
A minimum legal price below which a product cannot be sold
N. Price Floor
What causes markets to have to adjust?
New products and changes in supply and demand.
A situation achieved when a firm produces output at the lowest possible cost per unit.
O. Productive efficiency
Disequilibrium
Occurs when quantity demanded and quantity supplied are not in balance
The amount by which the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at a particular price.
P. Shortage
What happens when the demand curve shifts leftward?
Price and quantity decrease
What happens when the demand curve shifts rightward?
Price and quantity increase
How do price and quantity supplied get affected as the supply curve shifts rightward?
Price decreases, quantity supplied increases.
How does the price floor affect markets and economic welfare?
Price floors distort markets and reduce economic welfare.
How do price and quantity supplied get affected as the supply curve shifts leftward?
Price increases, quantity supplied decreases.
How does suppliers desire to eliminate surplus affect price?
Puts a downward pressure on the price.
The amount of a product that remains unsold at a given price.
Q. Surplus
The cost of time and information needed to carry out market exchange.
R. Transaction Costs
How do markets affect transaction costs?
Reduce them
shortage
The amount by which the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at a particular price.
Surplus
The amount by which the quantity exceeds the quantity demanded at a specific price.
What does the demand curve reflect?
The marginal benefit that consumers attach to each unit of goods
A consumer values what at least as much as the product sold?
The money received.
A buyer values what as much as the money paid for it?
The product purchased at least as much as paid for it.
True/False A shift of the supply curve results from a change in quantity demanded at all prices.
True
True/False As long as the demand curve slopes downward, a rightward shift of the supply curve reduces price but increases quantity.
True
True/False As long as the supply curve slopes upward, a rightward shift of the demand curve increases both price and quantity.
True
True/False Competitive markets maximize the amount of consumer surplus in the economy.
True
True/False If a firm's costs of production fall while the demand for their product grows, you can be sure the equilibrium price for the product will fall.
True
True/False the marginal benefit that consumers attach to the final unit purchased just equals the marginal cost of the resources employed to produce the unit.
True
True/False: A surplus puts downward pressure on price while shortage puts upward pressure.
True
When there is a voluntary exchange, it is reasonable to believe that...
a. both buyer and seller gained.
market price
amount of money people are willing and able to pay for the final unit.
Behavioral economics
an approach that borrows insights from psychology to help explain economic choices
Each of the following will cause the demand for butter to increase except....
c. an increase in the number of people who are unemployed
_______ ensure that firms achieve productive efficiency.
competition
Decrease in Demand
consumers are willing and able to buy less of the product at each price
increase in demand
consumers are willing and able to buy more of the product at each price
Each of the following will cause supply to increase except when....
d. a number of experienced workers retire and are replaced by new workers.
nueroeconomics
examines how economic decision making affects ares of the brain
What do consumers do as the price falls?
increase their quantity demanded
The higher the transaction cost, the what?
less likely it is that an exchange takes place.
Willpower
limited self-discipline in following through with decisions that are in one's self-interest, especially long term interests.
In Equilibrium what does marginal benefit equal?
marginal cost
Price ceiling
maximum legal price
Price Floor
minimum legal price
___________ is a subfield of behavioral economics that examines how economic decision making affects areas of the brain.
neuroeconomics
What does supply curve reflect?
opportunity cost of producing the good
What does marginal cost measure?
opportunity cost of resources employed by the firm to produce that final unit sold.
hat happens when something (like Medicaid) is provide for free?
people consume it until their marginal benefit is zero
Decrease in supply
producers are willing and able to supply LESS of the product at each price
Increase in supply
producers are willing and able to supply MORE of the product at each price
What does productive efficient refer to?
producing output at the lowest possible cost.
What do producers do as price falls?
reduce their quantity supplied
What does a price ceiling create?
shortage
What does a price floor above the equilibrium create?
surplus
What does competition ensure?
that firms produce at the lowest possible cost per unit.
Transaction costs
the costs of time and information required to carry out market exchange
Consumer surplus
the difference between the highest price a consumer is willing to pay for a good or service and the actual price the consumer pays
What does equilibrium price equal?
the marginal cost of supplying the final unit sold.
Bounded Rationality
there are limits to the amount of information people can comprehend and act on
What happens when markets have to adjust?
there are temporary shortages.
Why does federal government regulate some prices of agricultural products?
to ensure farmers a higher and more stable income
What is the "invisible hand" by Adam Smith?
voluntary choices of buyers and sellers responding only to their individual incentives.
When does Productive efficiency occur?
when a firm produces at the lowest possible cost per unit.
When does allocative efficiency occur?
when firms produce the output that is most valued by consumers.
market equilibrium
when the quantity consumers are willing and able to buy equals the quantity producers are willing and able to sell