ECoN Final Exam PRAY FOR ME

अब Quizwiz के साथ अपने होमवर्क और परीक्षाओं को एस करें!

"Willingness to pay" is the same as ""

"total benefit"

Suppose I am willing to pay $2.50 for 3 bites of ice cream and $2.75 for 4 bites of ice cream. So, the fourth bite of ice cream has a marginal benefit of __

$0.25

TOP HAT: Which of the following is a possible "price" for a cookie that would be acceptable to both Ariel and Bella:

(2.5 hamburgers) Without trade: It costs Bella 3 hamburgers to make a cookie Ariel makes 1 hamburger if she gives up 1 cookie With this price: It costs Bella 2.5 hamburgers to get a cookie Ariel gets 2.5 hamburgers if she gives up 1 cookie

Marginal cost ex

(change in total cost) / (quantity)

opportunity cost formula

(give up/gain)

Alex opportunity cost of one orange is

(give up/gain) You give up 1 apple to get 3 oranges Opportunity cost of 1 orange is of an apple

Alex opportunity cost of one apple is

(give up/gain) You give up 3 oranges to get 1 apple Opportunity cost of 1 apple is 3 oranges

how giving you money to charity may somehow fall under the rhelum of acting in your own self interest

-Enjoy talking to your friends about how generous you are -Feel good about yourself when you give -Believe your gift will make a difference for a cause you care about

Specialization

-if Alex doesn't produce apples and specializes in oranges, she can make 300 oranges. -If Clara only produces apples she can produce 200 apples -if neither specialize, together 150 apples and 250 oranges are produced. 200 app > 150 app 300 oran > 250 oran

Claras production schedule apples v oranges: What is Clara's opportunity cost of producing an orange?

1 apple

Determinants of Demand

1) Normal and Inferior goods 2) Tastes and Preferences 3) Number of buyers 4) Expectations 5) Substitutes 6) Compliments

3 reasons the demand curve slopes down

1)Diminishing Marginal Benefit 2)income Effect 3)Substitution Effect

Alex has to give up 3 oranges to make 1 apple Clara has to give up 1 apple to make 1 orange - How many oranges per apple should the trade price be

2 oranges per apple. Any price between 1 and 3 oranges-per-apple makes both people better off

TOP HAT: LEBRON CUPCAKE _ Summary: 20 tablespoons of cocoa powder 1 tablespoon per chocolate cupcake 2 tablespoons per double-chocolate cupcakes If LeBron only makes chocolate cupcakes, how many cupcakes can he make?

20

TOP HAT: What is the opportunity cost of 8 small jets for Boeing? (Hint: use points A and B to answer the question)

6 Dreamliners

Efficient:

A attainable set of goods where, when produced, there is no way to produce more of one good without producing less of another good

Normal Good:

A good for which there is a direct (positive) relationship between the demand for the good and income.

Inferior Good:

A good for which there is an inverse (negative) relationship between the demand for the good and income.

Model

A model is a way of simplifying something complicated We lose some of the details, but keep the parts we need

Law of Demand:

A principle which states that as the price of a good rises, the quantity demanded will decrease, all else held constant.

Attainable:

A set of goods that could be produced

Production Possibilities Schedule (PPS) definition

A table that shows the possible combinations of two different goods or services that can be produced with fixed resources and technology (can illustrate trade-offs)

for each additional square foot when building a house, what are the benefits and costs? How much sq feet will u build

After 2,000 square feet, the marginal benefit ($100) is less than the marginal cost ($125), so I do not want to add those square feet. I will choose to build a 2,000 square-foot house

An "incentive" is:

An opportunity to make yourself better off Something that induces a person to act

Summary: 20 tablespoons of cocoa powder 1 tablespoon per chocolate cupcake 2 tablespoons per double-chocolate cupcakes If LeBron only makes double-chocolate cupcakes, how many cupcakes can he make?

Answer: 10

If LeBron makes 8 chocolate cupcakes, how many double-chocolate cupcakes can he make? 20 tablespoons of cocoa powder 1 tablespoon per chocolate cupcake tablespoons of cocoa powder left 2 tablespoons per double-chocolate cupcake

Answer: 6 double-chocolate cupcakes

Market

Any place where, or mechanism by which, buyers and sellers interact to trade goods and services (eBay, car dealership etc)

Ariel Give up 10 cookies, get 10 hamburgers Give up 1 cookie, get 1 hamburger O.C. of 1 cookie is 1 hamburger Bella Give up 2 cookies, get 6 hamburgers Give up 1 cookie, get 3 hamburgers O.C. of 1 cookie is 3 hamburgers

Ariel has the lower O.C. for a cookie Ariel has the comparative advantage at cookies This means Bella has the comparative advantage at hamburgers

TOP HAT: To make a cookie, Ariel has an opportunity cost of 1 hamburger and Bella has an opportunity cost of 3 hamburgers. _______ will make hamburgers and _____ will eat hamburgers

Ariel; Ariel and Bella

1)Diminishing Marginal Benefit

As people consume more of a good during a fixed time period, the satisfaction received from each additional unit falls. Reduced satisfaction means a reduced willingness to pay If you want to sell me more pizza, you need to lower the price

TOP HAT: Ariel can produce 10 hamburgers and no cookies or 10 cookies and no hamburgers Bella can produce 6 hamburgers and no cookies or 2 cookies and no hamburgers. _______ has a comparative advantage at producing hamburgers and _______ has a comparative advantage at producing cookies

Bella; Ariel

Opportunity Cost of an Orange: Clara: Alex:

Clara: 1 apple Alex: 1/3 apple

Opportunity Cost of an Apple Clara: Alex:

Clara: 1 orange Alex: 3 oranges

Alex's opportunity costs

Constant Opportunity Costs 1->2 or 2->3: Give up 150 to gain 50 Give up 3 to gain 1 Opportunity cost of an apple is always 3 oranges

Which of the 3 reasons for demand to slope down is the following example: the price of airplane tickets goes up. I decide to fly home for Christmas but not for Thanksgiving, because I like to get presents but my grandma's cooking is just okay.

Diminishing Marginal Benefit

Demand curves are Downward sloping

Downward sloping means: When P increases, Q decreases When P decreases, Q increase

Expectations (factors of)

Future income Future availability Future prices

Substitutes:

Goods that are viewed as replacements for one another. coke vs pepsi

what is true about adding square feet to a house in regards to money and marginal benefit

I kept making my house bigger as long as marginal benefit was greater than marginal cost

2nd house example, now how many feet will you chose to build

I will choose to build a 1,500 square-foot house

Substitution Effect example

If the price of pizza goes up, I may choose to have a slice of pizza and a bagel instead of two slices of pizza

Which of the 3 reasons for demand to slope down is the following example: I cannot afford to fly home as frequently

Income effect

TOP HAT: In the example at right, the opportunity cost of producing small jets _________ as the number of small jets produced increases

Increases

do something less if

Increasing marginal costs

Decrease in Demand due to change in non-price determinants

Inward shift of the Demand Curve

optimal point on a graph is where...

Marginal Benefit(MB) = Marginal Cost(MC)

diminishing marginal benefits

Most activities have decreasing marginal benefits

Increase in Quantity Demanded due to lower price

Movement to down and to the right on the demand curve

Decrease in Quantity Demanded due to higher price

Movement up and to the left on the Demand Curve

Suppose you are watching the nightly news and you hear a reporter say this: "In the wake of Hurricane Dorian, gas prices increased by almost 50 cents per gallon, and consumers have responded by significantly decreasing their demand for gas." Is the news reporter using the word "demand" the same way an economist would?

No - demand did not decrease. There was movement along the demand curve. At a given price, people are still willing to purchase the same quantity of gasoline.

Economic Scientific Method

Observe something Try to explain it Test (if possible) ex(Professional football players hire movers)

optimization

Optimization means finding the point where MB = MC This is where you are best off Combines two of our principles: Self interest Marginal decision making

Increase in Demand due to non-price determinant

Outward shift of the Demand Curve

Principles of rational decision making

Principle 1: The true cost of something is what you give up for it Principle 2: People act in their own self interest Principle 3: People think and act "a little bit at a time"

Which of the 3 reasons for demand to slope down is the following example: I get a ride home from a friend for my mom's birthday instead of flying home

Substitution effect

income Effect example

Suppose you have $20 to spend on gasoline each week. If the price of gasoline is $2 per gallon, you buy 10 gallons If the price goes up to $5 per gallon, you buy 4 gallons When price increased by $3, your consumption went down 6 gallons

Comparative Advantage:

The ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer.

Marginal Benefit

The additional benefit associated with one more unit of an activity.. how much you like each bite of icecream

Marginal Cost

The additional cost associated with one more unit of an activity

Substitutes - Example (Coke v Pepsi) suppose the price for Pepsi increases The demand curve for Pepsi____ The demand curve for Coke____

The demand curve for Pepsi____ (shifts up bc price increase, and curve shifts in bc substitutes) The demand curve for Coke____ Shifts out)

Substitutes: what happens to the demand for object #2 if the price of object #1 increases

The demand for object #2 increases

2)income Effect

The effect that a change in the price of a good has on the purchasing power of income.

3)Substitution Effect

The effect that a change in the price of one good has on the demand for another good.

Decreasing Marginal Benefit

The negative relationship between quantity consumed and marginal benefit

Increasing Marginal Cost

The positive relationship between quantity produced and marginal cost Most activities have increasing marginal costs (you ate and then went running The first 100 yards was not nearly as unpleasant as the last 100 yards.)

How Prices are Determined (Jefs car example) no one will buy if he sells for $80,000 and he wont sell for $800

The price of my car is the "sweet spot" where I am willing to sell it and someone is willing to buy it.

marginal decision making

The process of making choices in increments by evaluating the additional, or marginal, benefit against the additional, or marginal, cost of an action. -The benefit of studying for one more hour (or even one more minute) The benefit of an extra cubic foot of cargo space in my vehicle

Economics

The study of how individuals and societies allocate scare resources among many competing uses

Opportunity Cost

The value of the best option not chosen The value of the opportunity that you gave up when you chose one opportunity instead of another

Top hat study ex: Suppose that, for studying economics, you have decreasing marginal benefits (in terms of your grade) and increasing marginal costs (in terms of how much you dislike studying). When you go to bed the night before your midterm, you note that, for the last hour you spent studying, the marginal benefit of studying was less than the marginal cost. Which of the following is true)

You should have studied more

A Production Possibilities Frontier is a graphical representation of

a Production Possibilities Schedule

Scarcity

a condition that results from the inability of limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants.

Movement vs Shift: If consumers' willingness to pay at every possible price changes, that is

a shift in demand.

A resource is

anything used to satisfy someone's wants Land Labor Stuff

unattainable

area of production possibilities curve above the demand curve

possible and inefficient

area of production possibilities curve below the demand curve

possible and efficient

basically the demand curve

Whenever there are two individuals and two goods, unless they have exactly the same production schedules, each person will have a ________

comparative advantage in one good.

Usually, marginal benefits gradually__ and marginal costs slowly __

decrease increase

Normal Good: as income decreases, demand____

decrease (ability to buy a new phone)

Inferior Good: as income increases, demand____

decreases (amount of romen noodles bought)

Purchasing Power is

how much power your money has to purchase goods

The demand curve shows

how quantity purchased changes when price changes, all else equal

Normal Good: as income increases, demand____

increases (ability to buy a new phone)

Inferior Good: as income decreases, demand____

increases (amount of romen noodles bought)

Number of Buyers increase in the number of buyers

increases quantity demanded (shifts to the right)

Tastes and Preferences increased preference for the good or service

increases quantity demanded (shifts to the right)

Change in price:

movement along the curve. Change in something else: movement of the curve (shifts up of down)

Movement vs Shift: If a storm destroys the lettuce crop, leading to a price increase, that will be

movement along the demand curve No change in how much people like lettuce

Even though Clara is better at producing everything than Alex Alex has to give up only 1/3 of an apple to get an orange Alex has a comparative advantage in producing

oranges

Opportunity costs exist because of

scarcity

Movement vs Shift: If more people decide to become vegetarians, there will be a

shift in demand for lettuce

Self interest does not imply that people always act selfishly Self interest does not imply that people never make mistakes

smoking.. illegal drugs

If quantity purchased changes due to anything other than a price change

the demand curve itself moves (shifts right of left)

Micro economics

the study of how households and firms make decisions and how they interact in markets -Our desires are unlimited -Resources are scarce How we use scarce resources is what economics is all about

The model is not designed to show every detail of running a farm The model is designed to show there are ___ in production.

trade-offs

The true cost of something is

what you give up

TOP HAT: What is the opportunity cost of 1 small jet for Boeing?

¾ Dreamliner


संबंधित स्टडी सेट्स

A & P II EXAM 3 practice questions

View Set

chapter 12: Current Liabilities and Employer Obligations

View Set

Chapter 2 Review Personal Finance

View Set

Chapter 4 Administrative Use of the Electronic Health Record

View Set

Chapter 12 (Quiz), Principles of Marketing Chapter 12 Quiz

View Set

Anatomy and Physiology Honors Exam,

View Set

Music Industry Contract Law Exam #1

View Set