ECON 2A Chapters 8-21
how to find %change in real value
%change in nominal value - % change in price
inflation rate
(price level this year - price level last year)/price level last year * 100
Ways to measure GDP
-Add up every dollar of spending -Adding up every dollars worth of output produced -Adding every dollar of income earned GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government Purchases + Net exports GDP = C + I + G + NX
Monopolistic Competition
-Many businesses, each selling slightly differentiated product
Sources of Comparative Advantage for Countries
1) Abundant Inputs 2) Develop a specialized skill 3) Exploit Benefits of Mass Production
Why is redistribution costy?
1) Administrative costs 2) Reduction of incentives to work 3) Tax avoidance, evasion, and fraud
Policies that encourage competition
1) Anti-collusion laws 2) Merger laws 3) Illegal to attempt to monopolize 4) Encourage international trade
What does market power lead to
1) Charge a higher price 2) Sell a smaller quantity 3) Earn larger profit
Setting prices when you have market power
1) Choose quantity to produce (Where Marginal Revenue and Marginal Cost are equal) 2) Choose price by looking at demand curve
3 step formula to evaluate exports effect on market
1) Determine new price 2) Determine Supply + Demand at new price 3) Assess quantity demanded that will be traded *Exports make up the gap between the quantity supplied by domestic sellers and the quantity demanded by domestic buyers.
Creating consumer price index and measuring inflation
1) Find out what people typically buy 2) Collect prices from stores where people do their shopping 3) Tally up price of basket of goods and services 4) Calculate inflation rate
Other things to keep in mind about market power
1) Having more competitors decreases market power 2) Allows for independent pricing strategies 3) Product differentiation increases market power 4) Imperfect competition among buyers gives them market power 5) Your best choice depends on choices of other businesses
How to allocate tasks
1) Measure cost of producing each good 2) Calculate opportunity cost of producing each good 3) Evaluate who has comparative advantage by assessing who has the lowest opportunity cost for each task
Limits of GDP
1) Prices are not values 2) Nonmarket activities-including household production not included 3)Shadow economy missing 4) Environmental degradation not counted 5) Leisure does not count (omits costs of output - less leisure)
Solutions to Externalities
1) Private Bargaining (Coase Theorem) 2) Corrective Taxes + Subsides 3) Cap and Trade 4) Laws, Rules, Regulations 5) Gov't support for public goods 6) Assign ownership rights to solve tragedy of the commons
Challenges of measuring true cost of living
1) Quality improvements 2) New products can make you better off, decreasing cost of living 3) People save money by changing what they buy
Negative effects of inequality
1) less trust, tolerance, community involvement, more crime 2) concentration of political power
Costs of inflation
1. menu costs 2. shoe leather costs (forces people to take costly measures to keep wealth in assets that'll maintain their value) 3. distort signals 4. inflation redistributes (borrowers gain more, because they pack back less then the real value they borrowed)
Market Power
Ability to increase price w/o losing sales to competing businesses
Permanent Income
Average Lifetime income, less inequality in permanent income due to temporary ups and downs, better measure of living standards
Marginal Revenue
Change in total revenue
Relative Poverty
Compares Resources relative to material living standards in contemporary society
Rule of 70
Doubling time (in years) = 70/(percentage annual growth rate).
Club goods
Excludable and Nonrival -Internet -Cable TV -Satellite
Private Goods
Excludable and Rival -cars -cupcakes -can of coke
free rider problem
For a group, the problem of people not joining because they can benefit from the group's activities without joining. (not paying the cost)
PCE deflator
Includes items consumed you don't pay for directly, ie. medical care paid by employer used for monetary policy
Oligopoly
Market dominated by handful of large sellers
Nominal GDP
Measured in today's prices, useful for RIGHT NOW
Perfectly competitive market
No market power, be a price taker -take market price
Public Goods
Non excludable and Nonribal -National Defnese -Public Edu
Common Resources
Nonexcludable and Rival -Fish in ocean Highways (to extent)
Non rival
One person's enjoyment doesn't subtract from another
Monopoly
Only one seller in market, lots of power, can increase price w/o losing customers
Externality
Side effect on bystanders whose interests aren't fully taken into account, (both positive and negative externatilities) -Price change is not an externality
Higher market power demand curve
Steeper (less elastic)
Tariffs
Tax on imported goods
World Demand
Total Quantity demanded in world
World Supply
Total Quantity supploed by all sellers in world
Real GDP
Using constant prices
Chained CPI
a measure of the CPI in which the typical consumer's "basket" of goods considered is updated monthly, reduces bias
Indexation clauses
adjusts wages in line w/ CPI
marginal utlity
boost in overall wellbeing from extra dollar, (remember diminishing returns)
Perfect Competition firm demand curve
completely flat (it's completely elastic so this makes sense)
Intergenerational mobility
extent to which economic cirumstances independent from parents
Output effect
higher output raises revenue
Opportunity cost of a task
hours task takes/ hours required to produce alternative output
Absolute poverty
measure of adequacy of resources relative to absolute/unchanging standard
Consumer Price Index (CPI)
measure of average prices people pay over time for goods and services
Utility
measure of wellbeing *Remember: person with low income receives higher utility from same amount of $ than someone with high income*
How to find real interest rate
nominal interest rate - inflation rate
Non-excludable
other people aren't easily excluded from using it
Consumption spending
private spending on final goods and services -living standards largely determined by what you buy -Less inequality in spending than income -top quintile spends 4x as bottom quintile
Money illusion
tendency to focus on nominal dollar amounts instead of inflation-adjusted amounts
Comparative Advantage
the ability of an individual, a firm, or a country to produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than competitors *What you are least bad at*
Absolute Advantage
the ability to produce a good using fewer inputs than another producer
World Price
the price at which a good can be bought or sold abroad
Progressive taxes
those with higher income tend to pay higher share of income
Discount effect
to sell one more unit, you have to lower the price on all units sold.
GDP
total of all goods and service produced
When do people import?
when foreign products are a better deal than their U.S.-made equivalents. lead to lower prices, less domestic production, and more domestic consumption.
When do people export?
when they can make more money than they would if they just sold them in the United States