ECON130 Ch 9 Decision Making by Individuals and Firms
marginal cost
cost of doing more of an activity; the additional cost of producing a good or service incurred by producing one more unit of that good or service
sunk cost
cost that has already been incurred and is nonrecoverable. A sunk cost should be ignored in decisions about future actions.
marginal benefit curve
shows how the benefit from producing one more unit depends on the quantity that has already been produced
marginal cost curve
shows how the cost of producing one more unit depends on that quantity that has already been produced
implicit cost of capital
the opportunity cost of the use of one's own capital- the income earned if the capital had been employed in its next best alternative use
optimal quantity
the quantity that generates the highest possible total profit
Status quo bias
the tendency to avoid making a decision and sticking with the status quo 1. find it hard to make a decision 2. due to loss aversion and fear of regret
capital
the total value of assets owned by an individual or firm- physical assets plus financial assets.
decreasing marginal cost
when each additional unit costs less to produce than the previous one
increasing marginal cost
when each additional unit costs more to produce than the previous one
constant marginal cost
when each additional unit costs the same to produce as the previous one
decreasing marginal benefit
when each additional unit yields less benefit than the previous unit
principle of "either-or" decision making
when faced with an "either-or" choice between two activities, choose the one with he positive economic profit
Risk Aversion
willingness to sacrifice some economic payoff in order to avoid a potential loss
Overconfidence
1. "finish thesis more time than they think" 2. think are in better financial shape than they actually are-->lead to bad investment and large spending decision without doing research on pros and cons 3. remember their successes and forget their failures
Misperceptions of opportunity costs
1. ignore nonmonetary costs (implicit costs) 2. count sunk costs in decision making
Counting dollars unequally
1. mental accounting- habit of assigning dollars to different accounts so that some dollars are more worth than others 2. credit card overuse (value dollars in wallet more than dollars on credit card balance) 3. overspending at sales 4. buying something that seemed like a bargain at that time but later regretted
Unrealistic expectations about future behavior
1. optimistic about your future behavior (e.g. tomorrow you'll study)
Three principal reasons why people might prefer a worse economic payoff:
Concerns About Fairness Bounded Rationality Risk Aversion
marginal analysis
comparing the benefit of doing more of an activity with the cost of doing more of that activity
Concerns About Fairness
Ex. Leave a tip (gift-giving: if you care about another person's welfare, it's rational for you to lower your own economic payoff in order to give that person a gift)
irrational behavior- six mistakes
Misperceptions of opportunity costs Overconfidence Unrealistic expectations about future behavior Counting dollars unequally Loss aversion Status quo bias
With large quantities on "how much" decision, the rule for choosing the optimal quantity is:
The optimal quantity is the quantity at which marginal benefit is equal to marginal cost
Total opportunity cost equals:
Total opportunity cost= Total explicit+Total implicit cost
profit-maximizing principle of marginal analysis
When making a profit-maximizing "how much" decision, the optimal quantity is the largest quantity at which the marginal benefit is greater than or equal to marginal cost
behavioral economics
a branch of economics that combines economic modeling with insights from human psychology
explicit cost
a cost that requires an outlay of money For example, the explicit cost of the additional year of schooling includes tuition (constant)
irrational behavior
choosing an option that leaves them worse off than other available options
irrational
decision maker chooses an option that leaves him or her worse off than choosing another available option
rational
decision maker chooses the available option that leads to the outcome he or she most prefers
implicit cost
does not require outlay of money; it is measured by the value, in dollar terms, of benefits that are forgone For example, the implicit cost of the year spent in school includes the income you would have earned if you had taken a job instead (changing)
incur
economic loss
economic profit
equal to revenue minus the opportunity cost of resources used. It is usually less than the accounting profit Revenue-Opportunity cost(explicit-implicit cost)
accounting profit
equals revenue minus explicit cost
With small quantities on "how much" decision, the rule for choosing the optimal quantity is:
increase the quantity as long as marginal benefit from one more unit is greater than the marginal cost, cut stop before the marginal benefit becomes less than the marginal cost
Bounded Rationality
makes a choice that is close to but not exactly the one that leads to the best possible economic outcome "good enough" decision
Loss aversion
oversensitivity to loss, leading to unwillingness to recognize a loss and move on
marginal benefit
the additional benefit of a good or service derived from producing one more unit of that good or service
marginal benefit
the benefit of doing more of an activity