macro econ exam 1
Allocative efficiency
"right amount", producing right mix of goods most highly valued by society
Net domestic product
(NDP) = GDP - CFC
O - a change in prices of other goods in production
-*substitutes in production. Ex. if price of mini vans increases with no change in price of SUV, supply of SUV will decrease -Supply of mini vans will increase because price acts as incentive, more profitable because can sell at higher price
I - change in income
-As income increases, demand for normal goods increases -As income increases, demand for inferior goods decreases
changes in demand
-At every price, people are willing to buy more of a good
Expenditure approach
-Count sum of money spent buying the final goods -Consumption by households (C) + gross private investment (Ig) + government purchases (G) + net exports (Xn (X-M))
Economic effect of protective tariffs
-Direct effects: -Decline in consumption, increase in domestic production, decline in imports, tariff revenue -These tariffs make imported products expensive. Therefore, consumers are likely to opt for locally produced goods available at a lower price
Gross domestic product: transactions
-Exclude financial transactions: public transfer payments, private transfer payments, stock market transactions -Exclude secondhand sales
nominal GDP
-GDP is a dollar measure of production, -Nominal GDP: based on prices that prevailed when output was produced, shows inflation
Four categories of economic resources
-Land: includes all natural resources used in the production process -Labor: physical actions and mental activities that people contribute to production -Capital (investment): all manufactured aids used in production -Entrepreneaurial ability: special human resource distinct from labor
law of supply
-Other things equal, as the price rises, the quantity supplied rises and as the price falls, the quantity supplied falls -Price acts as an incentive to producers
GDP Price Index
-Price index in given year: (price of market basket in specific year/price of same basket in base year) x 100 -Real GDP = nominal GDP/price index (in hundredths)
Price floor
-Prices are set above the market price, lowest price one can legally charge for a good/service -Chronic surpluses -Ex. minimum wage law
price ceiling
-Set below equilibrium price -Rationing problem - creates a shortage -Black markets (underground economy) - producers that sell consumers products at prices higher than the price ceiling
Production possibilities model
-an economic model that shows different combinations of two goods that an economy can produce -Assumptions: Full employment, fixed resources, fixed technology, two goods: consumer goods, capital goods
Market equilibrium
-occurs where the demand and supply curve intersect -Equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity: amount people willing and able to buy = amount producers are willing and able to supply
Law of demand
-other things equal, as price falls, the quantity demanded rises, and as price rises, the quantity demanded falls -Price acts as an obstacle to buyers -
Gross domestic product
-total amount of goods and services produced in an economy in a given year -To avoid multiple counting of goods, GDP includes only the market value of final goods and ignores intermediate goods -Count only value added at each stage
absolute advantage vs comparative advantage
Absolute advantage - produce more overall vs Comparative advantage - other countries can produce goods relatively cheaper
demand
Amount consumers are willing and able to purchase at a given price assuming Other things equal, Individual demand, Market demand
supply
Amount producers are willing and able to sell at a given price
S - change in prices of substitute goods
An increase in the price of a good will increase demand for the substitute good
N - change in the number of sellers
As number of sellers increases, the supply increases, shifting curve to the right
Economic impact of quotas
Decline in consumption, increase in domestic production, decline in imports, quotas do not provide any government revenue but instead transfer it to foreign producers
World price < domestic price
Domestic shortage Import demand curve
World price > domestic price
Domestic surplus Export supply curve
Function of entrepreneurs
Employ the other factors of production, take initiative, make strategic business decisions, innovate, take risk
T - change in technology
Ex. if a new oven is created, capital more productive, so willing to supply more at every price
R - change in resource prices
Ex. if price of labor increases, supply decreases because it costs more to produce
E - change in producer expectations
Ex. supply decreases today because better to wait and sell at higher price in future
T - change in taxes
Ex. tax on pizza, supply decreases
Law of diminishing marginal utility
Falling extra satisfaction, Willing to buy more as price falls. As price falls, more units have higher satisfaction
E - change in consumer expectations
Future prices, future income Buy today at lower price
GDP with national income
GDP = NI - NFF + Stat + CFC
C - change in prices of complementary goods
Goods you consume at same time - as price increases, demand for complementary goods decreases
Determinants of demand
INSECT I - change in income N - change in the number of buyers S - change in prices of substitute goods E - change in consumer expectations C - change in prices of complementary goods T - changes in consumer tastes and preferences
money
Makes trade easier, Medium of exchange
imports
Qd-Qs
Surplus
Quantity supplied greater than quantity demanded, too much being produced, price too high (above equilibrium)
shortage
Quantity supplied lower than quantity demanded, not enough being produced, price too low (below equilibrium)
real GDP
Real GDP: reflects changes in the price level, uses base year price Deflated or inflated to reflect changes in price levels Base year must be selected and then current year prices adjusted accordingly Inflate before base year and deflate after base year
The fact that international specialization and trade based on comparative advantage can increase world output is demonstrated by the reality
a nation's trading possibilities line lies to the right of its production possibilities line
Rationing function of prices
ability of competitive forces of demand and supply to establish a price at which selling and buying decisions are consistent
Embargo
absolute, no more trade
Law of increasing opportunity costs
as more of a particular good is produced, its marginal opportunity costs increase
Income effect
as price decreases, your limited income can buy more (income stays the same)
Substitution effect
as price falls, people substitute towards that good because other goods are relatively more expensive
In order for mutually beneficial trade to occur between two otherwise isolated nations:
each nation must be able to produce at least one good relatively cheaper than the other
Positive economics
economic statements that are factual
Normative economics
economic systems that involve value judgements
N - change in the number of buyers
if N increases, demand increases and curve shifts out
markets
interaction between buyers and sellers and price is discovered
Import quota
limit amount of imports
Economizing problem
limited income and unlimited
Change in quantity demanded
movement along the curve, price change
determinants of supply ROTTENS
non-price factors that shift supply ROTTENS R - change in resource prices O - a change in prices of other goods in production T - change in technology T - change in taxes E - change in producer expectations N - change in the number of sellers
Export subsidy
opposite of tariff, government pays companies to produce so it is cheaper
Productive efficiency
produced in least costly way, using best technology, using right mix of resources
if nominal GDP rises
real GDP may either rise or fall because we do not know if output has gone up or down
"No free lunch"
schools could be using labor to do something else, what could have been produced instead, there are always hidden costs to something
Trade bariers/things that impeded free trade
tariffs - excise tax on imports, Import quota - limit amount of imports, Nontariff barrier (NTB), Voluntary export restriction, Export subsidy, Embargo
Tariffs
tax on imports
voluntary export restriction
when a nation agrees to restrict the number of goods it exports ex. sets upper limit to the total amount of a product that is exported