Microeconomics Review
Positive Statement
A statement that can be tested and validated.Describes "what is"
Supply Schedule
A table representing the relationship between the price of a good and the quantity supplied
Demand Schedule
A table representing the relationship between the price of a good or service and the quantity demanded.
Direct Incentives
Easy to recognize incentives. Example: Do my micro homework and I'll give you my Ipad
When the Demand Curve shifts to the right and Supply stays constant
Equilibrium Price and Quantity increase
When the price of a complement good increases
Equilibrium Price decreases due to a demand shift
When Supply shifts right and Demand shifts left
Equilibrium Price decreases. Equilibrium Quantity is indeterminate
When taxes are placed on a good
Equilibrium Price increases
When the price of an input rises
Equilibrium Price increases and Equilibrium Quantity decreases
When Both Supply and Demand shift to the right
Equilibrium Quantity increases. Equilibrium Price is indeterminate
Monopoly
Exists when a single company supplies the entire market for a particular good or service
Competitive Market
Exists when there are so many buyers and sellers that each has only a small impact on the market price and output
Incentives
Factors that motivate a person to act or exert effort
Consumer goods
Goods produced for present consumption
Capital Goods
Goods that are produced today in order to make other valuable goods and services in the future
The Law of Increasing Relative Cost
The opportunity cost of producing a good rises as society produces more of it
Equilibrium
The point at which the supply and demand curves intersect
Investment
The process of using resources to create or buy new capital
Comparative Advantage
The situation where an individual, business or country can produce at a lower opportunity cost than a competitor can.
Economics
The study of how people allocate their limited resources to satisfy their nearly unlimited wants
Microeconomics
The study of the individual units that make up the economy
Macroeconomics
The study of the overall aspects and the working of the economy
Market Demand
The sum of all the individual quantities demanded by each buyer in the market at each price
Market Supply
The sum of quantities supplied by each seller in the market at each price
Trade
The voluntary exchange of goods and services between to or more parties
Inferior Good
A good that increases in demand when income decreases
Normal Good
A good that increases in demand when income increases
Normal Good
A good that increases in demand when income increases. The opposite of an inferior good.
Imperfect Market
A market in which either the buyer or the seller has an influence on the market price
Production Possibilities Frontier
A model that illustrates the combinations of outputs that a society can produce if all of its resources are being used efficiently.
Equilibrium Price
AKA: Market Clearing Price. The price at which the quantity supplied is equal to the quantity demanded
The Law of Demand
All other things being equal, quantity demanded falls when prices rise and quantity demanded rises when prices fall
Normative Statement
An opinion that cannot be tested or validated.Describes "what ought to be"
Negative Incentives
Incentives that encourage action with a negative consequence Example: Speeding tickets
Positive Incentives
Incentives that encourage action with a positive consequence Example:Extra credit for course evaluations
Indirect Incentives
Not so easy to recognize incentives Example: Welfare being a safety net for the unemployed may motivate them to stay unemployed if it pays more than a job
Shortage
Occurs whenever quantity supplied is less than quantity demanded. When this happens the Equilibrium Price rises
Surplus
Occurs whenever the quantity supplied is greater than the quantity demanded.When this happens the equilibrium price lowers
Absolute advantage
Refers to the ability of one producer to make more than another producer with the same quantity of resources.
Scarcity
Refers to the limited nature of society's resources, given society's unlimited wants and needs
Equilibrium Quantity
The amount at which the quantity supplied is equal to the quantity demanded
Quantity Demanded
The amount of a good or service that buyers are willing and able to purchase at the current price
Consumer Surplus
The area above the market price and below the demand curve
Producer Surplus
The area above the supply curve and below the market price
Ceteris Paribus
The concept under which economists examine a variable holding all else constant
Opportunity Cost
The highest valued alternative that must be sacrificed in order to get something else
The Law of Supply and Demand
The market price of any good will adjust to bring the quantity supplied and quantity demanded back into balance
Endogenous factors
Variables that can be controlled in a model
Exogenous Factors
Variables that cannot be controlled for in a model
Markets ____
bring buyers together to exchange goods and services
Economic Thinking __
requires a purposeful evaluation of the available opportunities to make the best decision possible
Marginal Thinking ___
requires decision makers to evaluate whether the benefit of one or more units of something is greater than its cost
In a market economy ________
resources are allocated among households and firms with little or no government interference
What can changes in population do?
shift the demand curve of a good or service in an area.