Econ T1, T2, T3
Opportunity cost of good on vertical (y) axis
1 divided by the absolute value of PPC slope
Supply curves are upward sloping in part because as prices rise: A. Firms with a higher opportunity cost of producing the product will be willing to start supplying the product. B. Individuals suppliers already in the market will be willing to turn to more costly production techniques to supply more of the product. C. Marginal benefit to consumers of consuming the product increases as price increases.
A & B
Sunk cost
A cost that has already been committed and cannot be recovered, ignore it
Explicit cost
A cost that involves spending money
Which of the following would shift the supply curve for a good rightward? - An increase in population (buyers) - A cost-saving technological advancement in producing the good - A rise in the price of an input used in producing the good - A rise in the price of a complement
A cost-saving technological advancement in producing the good
Supply curve
A curve that shows the relationship between the price of a product and the quantity of the product supplied Upward sloping with respect to price
Which of the following would cause an increase in the equilibrium price and decrease in the equilibrium quantity of watermelon? - A decrease in supply - An increase in demand and an increase in supply - An increase in demand and an increase in supply greater than the increase in demand - A decrease in demand and an increase in supply
A decrease in supply
Production Possibilities Curve
A graph that describes the maximum amount of one good that can be produced for every possible level of production of the other good.
Which of the following event will shift a nation's production possibilities curve inward, assuming that only two goods are produced (airplane and houses)? - A hurricane that devastates population and infrastructure - An increase in human capital - A decrease in the quantity of lumber - A technological advancement that affects the output of airplanes
A hurricane that devastates population and infrastructure
Implicit costs
A non-monetary opportunity cost
Trade-off
An alternative that we sacrifice when we make a decision
Which of the following would cause a rightward shift of the demand curve in the market for fresh eggs in San Diego? - A technological advancement in the egg-producing industry - An increase in the number of firms in the egg-producing industry - An increase in the price of powdered eggs, a substitute for fresh eggs - An increase in the price of chicken feed
An increase in the price of powdered eggs, a substitute for fresh eggs
Cost-Benefit Principle
An individual (or a firm or a 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.
Efficient point
Any combination of goods for which currently available resources do not allow an increase in the production of one good without a reduction in the production of the other along the PPC
Inefficient point
Any combination of goods for which currently available resources enable an increase in the production of one good without a reduction in the production of the other lies within the PPC
Normative Economics
Based on value and judgements
Opportunity Cost
Cost of the next best alternative use of money, time, or resources when one choice is made rather than another
Factors that affect a country's comparative advantage
Culture, institutions, climate, natural resources
Downsides of free trade
Does not guarantee each individual will be better off
Outsourcing
Hiring workers in other countries to do a set of jobs
Principle of Increasing Opportunity Cost
In expanding the production of any good, first employ those resources with the lowest opportunity cost, and only afterward turn to resources with higher opportunity costs.
How are increasing opportunity costs reflected?
In the outward bow of the PPC
As population increases, specialization ___
Increases
Which of the following is correct as it applies to pollution mitigation and recycling programs? - Reaching zero pollution increases MC above MB in most cases - Reaching zero pollution increases MB above MC in most cases - The optimal level of pollution is 0 bc that's where MB = MC for all pollutants - Optimal pollution levels are always less than zero
Reaching zero pollution increases MC above MB in most cases
Supply will increase as the number of _____.
Sellers in the market increases
Comparative advantage
The ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer
Benefit
The absolute dollar amount you save not the proportion
Marginal Benefit (MB)
The additional benefit received from the consumption of the next unit of a good or service
Optimal combination of goods
The affordable combination that yields the highest total utility
Marginal Cost (MC)
The change in total costs that results from 1 extra unit of activity
Which of the following is a normative economic statement? - When the price of gasoline rises, transportation costs rise - When the price of gasoline rises, the quantity of gasoline purchased falls - The price of gasoline is too high - The current high price of gasoline is the result of strong worldwide demand
The price of gasoline is too high
Equilibrium price
The price that balances quantity supplied and quantity demanded
Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
The principle that as a consumer increases the consumption of a good or service, the marginal utility obtained from each additional unit of the good or service decreases.
Utility Maximization
The proposal that people make decisions by selecting the option that has the greatest utility.
Seller's reservation price
The smallest dollar amount for which a seller would be willing to sell an additional unit of a good, generally equal to marginal cost
Economics
The study of how people make choices under conditions of scarcity and the results of these choices for society
Which of the following is NOT correct? - Trade is based on absolute advantage - There are potential gains from trade for nations - Trade allows individuals to consume outside of their individual production possibilities frontier - Trade allows for specialization
Trade is based on absolute advantage
Substitutes
Two goods for which an increase in the price of one leads to an increase in the demand for the other
Economic models
Useful in predicting behavior regardless of if costs and benefits are weighed
Which of the following is a macroeconomics question? - What determines the wage of auto workers? - What determines the production of tablets? - What factors determine the price of diamonds? - What impacts the national unemployment rate?
What impacts the national unemployment rate?
Which of the following would not cause a shift in the demand curve? - change in population - change in price of the good - change in consumer expectations about future prices - change in tastes
a change in price of good
Economic efficiency
a condition that occurs when all goods and services are produced and consumed at their respective socially optimal levels MB = MC
Demand curve
a curve that shows the relationship between the price of a product and the quantity of the product demanded downward-sloping with respect to price
Decrease in demand
a decrease in both equilibrium price and quantity a leftward shift of the demand curve
Increase in supply
a decrease in equilibrium price and an increase in equilibrium quantity a rightward shift of the supply curve
A decrease in the demand for eggs due to changes in consumer tastes, accompanied by a decrease in the supply of eggs as a result of an outbreak of salmonella, will result in: - a decrease in the equilibrium price of eggs and no change in the equilibrium quantity - a decrease in the equilibrium quantity of eggs; the equilibrium price may increase or decrease - a decrease in the equilibrium price of egg; the equilibrium quantity may increase or decrease - a decrease in the equilibrium quantity of eggs and no change in the equilibrium price
a decrease in the equilibrium quantity of eggs; the equilibrium price may increase or decrease
If pasta is a normal good, and the price of pasta increases, then the income effect will lead to
a decrease in the quantity of pasta demanded.
A movement along a production possibilities curve would suggest that - capital has become more efficient - there has been a technological change - a different combination of goods has been chosen - the labor force has grown
a different combination of goods has been chosen
An increase in the demand for bananas will NOT be caused by: - a drop in the market price of bananas - news that bananas help relieve stress in people - a rise in the price of apples - buyers switching to a healthier diet
a drop in the market price of bananas
Inferior good
a good for which, other things equal, an increase in income leads to a decrease in demand
Normal good
a good that consumers demand more of when their incomes increase
Change in quantity demanded
a movement along the demand curve that shows a change in the quantity of the product purchased in response to a change in price
Change in quantity supplied
a movement along the supply curve that occurs in response to a change in price
Change in demand
a shift of the demand curve, which changes the quantity demanded at any given price
Change in supply
a shift of the supply curve, which changes the quantity supplied at any given price
Opportunity cost of good on horizontal (x) axis
absolute value of PPC slope
Cash on the table
an economic metaphor for unexploited gains from exchange
Technological innovations that decrease a firm's marginal cost lead to - an increase in supply - a decrease in supply - no change in supply
an increase in supply
Decrease in supply
an increase in the equilibrium price and a decrease in the equilibrium quantity a leftward shift of the supply curve
An outward shift of a nation's production possibilities curve can occur due to: - an increase in the labor force - a natural disaster like a hurricane or bad earthquake - a change in the amounts of one good desired - a reduction in unemployment
an increase in the labor force
If tires and gasoline are complements, then - an increase in the price of gasoline will reduce the consumption of tires - an increase in the price of gasoline will increase the consumption of tires - tires and gasoline consumption are normal goods - an increase in the price of tires will increase the consumption of gasoline
an increase in the price of gasoline will reduce the consumption of tires
Attainable point
any combination of goods that can be produced using currently available resources along or within the PPC
Unattainable point
any combination of goods that cannot be produced using currently available resources outside the PPC
If we observe there are more people willing to buy tickets to a popular sporting event than there are tickets, we would conclude that for this event, the existing price is - above the market equilibrium - unable to determine - at the market equilibrium - below the market equilibrium
below the market equilibrium
Assume that both the demand curve and the supply curve for monitors shift to the right but the demand curve shifts more than the supply curve. As a result: - the equilibrium price of monitors will decrease; the equilibrium quantity may - the equilibrium price of monitors may increase or decrease; the equilibrium quantity will increase - the equilibrium price of monitors will increase; the equilibrium quantity may increase or decrease - both the equilibrium price and quantity of monitors will increase
both the equilibrium price and quantity of monitors will increase
Law of Demand
consumers buy more of a good when its price decreases and less when its price increases
Technological innovations in the production process tend to increase supply because they: - increase marginal cost - decrease marginal cost
decrease marginal cost
If the dollar price of a bus ticket falls and the average dollar price of other goods falls by less, then the nominal price of bus tickets will ____ and the real price of bus tickets will _____. - increase; decrease - decrease; decrease - decrease; increase - increase; increase
decrease; decrease
Positive Economics
focuses on facts and cause-and-effect relationships
If the dollar price of a good increases relative to the average dollar price of all other goods, then the real price of a good will _______. increase or decrease?
increase
If the dollar price of gold doesn't change, but the average dollar price of all other goods decreases, then the real price of gold will - stay the same - increase - decrease
increase
Increase in demand
increase in both equilibrium price and quantity a rightward shift of the demand curve
Suppose Elsa owns an ice cream shop. If she expects the price of ice cream to fall next month, then this should ______. - lead her current supply of ice cream to increase - lead her current supply of ice cream to decrease - have no effect on her current supply of ice cream - lead her future supply of ice cream to increase
lead her current supply of ice cream to increase
Regardless of its truth or falsehood, the statement "an income tax cut will cause faster growth in the GDP than an increase in government spending" is an example of: - positive microeconomics - normative microeconomics - normative macroeconomics - positive macroeconomics
positive macroeconomics
Normative economic principle
predicts how people should behave
Positive economic principle
predicts how people will behave
If input prices decrease, supply will shift _____. - leftward - rightward
rightward
As prices _____, individual suppliers already in the market will be willing to turn to more costly production techniques to supply more of the product. - stabilize - fall - rise
rise
Marginal utility
satisfaction or usefulness obtained from acquiring one more unit of a product
The Rational Spending Rule
spending should be allocated across goods so that the marginal utility per dollar is the same for each good
Absolute advantage
the ability to produce more of a given product or in less time
Nominal price
the absolute price of a good in dollar terms
Income effect
the change in consumption that results when a price increase causes real income to decline
Substitution effect
the change in the quantity demanded of a good that results from a change in price, making the good more or less expensive relative to other goods that are substitutes
If the price of automobiles was to increase, then - the demand for gasoline would decrease - the supply of gasoline would increase - the demand for gasoline would increase - the quantity demanded of gasoline would decrease
the demand for gasoline would decrease
Buyer's surplus
the difference between the buyer's reservation price and the price he or she actually pays
Real price
the dollar price of a good relative to the average dollar price of all other goods
Buyer's reservation price
the largest dollar amount the buyer would be willing to pay for a good
Total utility
the total amount of satisfaction obtained from consumption of a good or service
Average Benefit
the total benefit of undertaking n units of an activity divided by n
If marginal utility is positive
total utility is increasing
Complements
two goods are complements in consumption if an increase in the price of one causes a leftward shift in the demand curve for the other (or if a decrease causes a rightward shift)