Economics Unit 1 Definitions
Control economy
Resources state owned, centralised decisions of a planning authority determine allocation and use of resources. Cooperation. Eg North Korea.
Scarcity
Results from finite resources unable to produce enough to fulfil infinite wants
Economic models
Seek to derive verifiable implications about economic behaviour
XED
a measure of the responsiveness of the qd of a product to a change in the price of another product, in percentage terms
PPF
A curve showing the maximum possible alternative combinations , of 2 goods eg. Capital and consumer goods, that an economy can produce using all the available FOP efficiently. Moving from one point to another indicates the opportunity cost of increasing one items production in terms of the units of the other foregone.
Subsidy
A grant given that lowers the price of a good, usually designed to encourage production or consumption of a good. Positive shift in the supply curve.
PES
A measure of the responsiveness of the qs of a product to a change in its price, in percentage terms
Behavioural economics
A method of economic analysis that applies psychological insights into human behaviour to explain economic decision making.
Ad valorem tax
A method of taxation using the value of the product taxed to determine the amount of tax. VAT is an example of an ad valorem tax because it is charged at 20% of the value of product or service sold. Supply curve shift is nonparallel.
Specific (or unit) tax
A tax based on the volume of the product sold. An example would be tax of £1 per bottle of whisky, or 50p per litre of petrol. The supply curve shifts parallel to itself.
Indirect tax
A tax on the production or sale of s good or service. Indirect taxes are included in the price paid for the good or service by its final purchaser. Examples include VAT and beer duty. Negative shift in the supply curve.
Effective demand
Quantity of the good people are willing and able to buy at any given price over a period of time
Renewable resource
Replenished by natural resources at a rate comparable or faster than its rate of consumption by humans or other users
Rational economic behaviour
Aim to maximise their welfare
Long run
All factors are variable
Ceteris Paribus
All other things being equal
Mixed economy
An economic system which is a combination of market and command economic systems. Market forces control the allocation of some resources but also government's intervene in the allocation to try to correct market failures.
Transition economy
An economy which is changing from a planned economy to a free market. The economic change ( letting market forces set prices, lowering trade barriers, and moving from public to private ownership of resources) often leads to initial high inflation and may often lead to increased inequality of incomes and wealth.
Commodity
Any product of agriculture, fishing or mining that is produced to be traded or sold, such as cash crops. It can be a food, a fibre such as cotton, or tobacco, gold, and copper.
Diminishing Marginal Returns
As successive units of a variable factor are added to a fixed factor that each extra unit of the variable factor affairs less output than the one before it.
Short run
At least one factor of production is fixed
Competitive markets
Characterised by large numbers of buyers and sellers, freedom to enter and exit the market and a homogenous product.
Direct tax
Collected directly by the gov from the individuals or the companies on whom it is levied. Examples include income tax and corporate taxes. More likely to influence the demand curve
Substitutes
Compete for the same market. Positive XED
Market economy
Competition, private ownership of factors, little gov intervention, price mechanism determines the allocation of scarce resources through the market forces of supply and demand
Social science
Concerned w/ society + the relationships among individuals within society
Inferior goods
Demand decreases when income rises. YED is negative.
Normal goods
Demand increases as income increases. YED is positive.
Complements
Goods that are used in conjunction with each other. Negative XED
Consumer goods
Goods that directly satisfy wants
Labour
Mental or physical effort of humans in the production process for which they are paid. Reward is wages
Land
Natural resource any free gift of nature . It's reward is rent
Opportunity cost
Next best alternative foregone whenever an economic decision is made
Enterprise
Organises and controls the other factors and takes risks in the production process. It's reward is profit.
Capital
Producer goods that only indirectly satisfy wants eg. Machinery. Reward is interest
Allocative efficiency
Producing the correct value of goods to maximise welfare. For a firm it means producing where price= marginal cost.
Productive efficiency
Producing the greatest value output out of the least value inputs. Form a firm it means producing the lowest average total cost.
Normative
Subjective, non testable, value judgements
Producer surplus
The difference between a producer is paid for a quantity of a good and he lowest price he producer requires in order to supply that quantity . The area above the supply curve and below the price level.
Consumer surplus
The difference between what a person would be willing to pay and what they actually pay to buy a certain quantity of a good. This represents the extra utility that a consumer gains above the price that they pay for it. The area below the demand curve and above the price level.
Price mechanism
The method through which the market allocates scarce resources by responding to changes in the conditions of supply and demand. Prices create signals and incentives to determine what is produced, how it's produced and who receives the product.
Exchange rate
The price of one country's currency expressed in terms of another country's currency.
Supply
The quantity of the good firms are willing and able to offer for sale at any given price over a period of time
YED
The responsiveness of the qd of a product to a change in income, in percentage terms
PED
The responsiveness of the qd of product to a change in its price, in percentage terms
Division of labour
The separation of tasks in the production process and their allocation to different groups of workers.
Incidence of tax
The way in which the burden of tax eventually falls on the consumer and producer.
Positive
Value free, objective and testable
DMU
the satisfaction received from each extra unit consumed falls