ECON 528
Lerner Index
A measure of the difference between price and marginal cost as a fraction of the product's price
Producing on the production function
Aligning incentives to induce maximum worker effect. Labor hired to work with endowment of capital
More is better property
Bundles that have at least as much of every good and more of some good are preferred to other bundles
Quantity produced
Cobb-Douglas Q=K^.5 * L^.5
Diseconomies of scale
Cost is increasing, quantity is increasing
Economic surplus
ES= consumer surplus + producer surplus
Specific tariff
Fixed amount of money per physical unit of the imported product. Relatively easy to apply and administer. Provides domestic producers more protection
Budget expenditure share
Goods that comprise a small share of consumer's budgets tend to be more inelastic than goods for which consumers spend a large portion of their incomes. Pens vs Gas
How can they be considered complements?
Human capital. MBA makes you more attractive to your employer
Below zero
Inferior good
Cobb Douglas Isoquants
Inputs are not perfectly substitutable, nor are they complimentary
Cobb-Douglas production function
K is fixed in the short run. Q is a multiplier of labor.
Lerner index measures profitability
L=(P-MC)/P
Cost minimization
Marginal product per dollar spent should be equal for all inputs. Slope of isoquant=slope of isocost. This helps us find the cheapest way to produce a large amount of quantity
Average product of capital
Measures the output of an average unit of capital.
Marginal product of capital
Measures the output produced by the last unit of capital. When capital is allowed to vary in the short run. MPk is the slope of the production function
Zero
Necessity
Above zero
Normal good
Elasticity is less than 1 but greater than 0
Normal good
Cost complementary
One action reduces the costs of another. The marginal cost of producing good 1 declines as more of good two is produced. Ex. Cow hides and steaks
Which is more elastic...peas or vegetables?
Peas because vegetables are a very broad topic
Conduct
Pricing, advertising, research and development, and merger activity
Economic profits
Profit - Opportunity cost
Accounting profits
Profit = Revenue - cost
Production function
Q=F(K,L) capital and labor The maximum amount of output that can be produced with k units of capital and L units of labor
Inelastic E<1
Quantity is not very responsive to price. I will buy it whether or not the price is low (GAS)
How can labor and capital be considered substitutes?
Robotics or contracting
Monopolistic environment
The demand for a companys product is the entire demand because they are the only one operating in the area. They have total control over price
Employing the right level of inputs
When labor or capital vary in the short run, to maximize profit a manager will hire. Looking at value the worker brings
Crowding Out
You have too many people but not enough machines. It gives us diminishing returns
Manager
a decision maker: Labor and capital (inputs of production), Inventory (Supply)
Complementary goods
a decrease in good X leads to an increase in good Y ( Peanut butter and jelly)
Substitute goods
a decrease in price X leads to a decrease in the consumption of good Y (coffee vs tea)
Monopolistic competition
a few firms competing as price setters. Good for consumers because of lower prices and more variety. Bad for society and manager because there will be zero economic profits in the long run
Contracts
a legal document that creates an extended relationship between a buyer and a seller
Shutdown rule
a profit maximizing firm should continue to operate if its operating loss is less than its fixed costs.
Economics
a social science that examines conditions of scarcity and how individuals respond to scarcity. (Shortages; time and other resources)
Tariff
a tax levied on a product when it crosses national boundaries
Rothschild index is a value
between 0 (perfect competition) and 1 (monopoly)
Inferior good
buy less if you have more money
Normal good
buy more if you have more money
Leontief Isoquants (makes an L)
capital and labor are perfect complements. Used in fixed-proportions. There is no input substitutions along isoquants
Linear isoquants say
capital and labor are perfect substitutes
Elasticity equation
change in quantity/Quantity divided by change in supply/supply OR supply/quantity * change in quantity/ change in supply
Use supply and demand analysis to
clarify the big picture (the general impact of a current event on equilibrium prices and quantities) ; organize an action plan (needed changes in production, inventories, raw materials, human resources, marketing plans)
Compound tariff
combination of specific and ad valorem tariffs
Producer - producer rivalry
compete over market share
Consumer - producer rivalry
compete over price and value
consumer - consumer rivalry
compete over quantity
Completeness property
consumer is capable of expressing preferences between all possible bundles
Cost of production
cost=money spent=(wage * labor) + (rent * K) C=wL+rK
Economies of scale
costs are decreasing while quantity is increasing
Transaction costs
costs of acquiring an input over and above the amount paid to the input supplier. Everything above and beyond the w
Slope of isoquant
curved line
Time
demand tends to be more inelastic in the short term than in the long run. Time allows consumers to seek out available substitues. (looking for the cheapest gas prices in town because you aren't empty yet)
The structure-conduct-performance paradigm
each feature of the market impacts the next decision to be made
When an industry is composed of many firms,
each producing similar products, the Rothschild index will be close to zero
Anything above one is
elastic and luxury
Monopolies are not efficient in the long run but
encourage innovation
Negative marginal returns
fire people
Ad valorem tariff
fixed percentage of the value of the imported product. Distinguish among small differentials in product quality
Opportunity cost
foregone benefits from alternatives. What is the value of the best alternative?
Increasing marginal return
hire more people
Linear isoquants
imply that inputs are substituted at a constant rate, independent of the input levels employed. Choose the cheapest input
anything below one is
inelastic
Elasticity is less than 0
inferior good
Determinants of supply
input prices, number of firms entering and exiting, taxes, substitutions
Economies of scope
it is cheaper to produce the two outputs jointly instead of separately.
Accounting costs
labor, inventory, capital/assets, research and development, patents
Tariff avoidance
legal utilization of the tariff system to one's own advantage. Reduces the amount of tariff that is payable by means that are within the law
Above one
luxury
Elasticity is greater than 1
luxury good
Monopolies
many are local; the demand for the firm's product is the market demand curve; firm sets price when then affects the quantity demanded
The goal of managerial economics is to
maximize profit
Rothschild index
measures the elasticity of industry deman dfor a product relative to that of an individual firm. R=elasticity of demand for the total market divided by elasticity of demand for the product of an individual firm
Average product of labor
measures the output of an average worker. How can you maximize your productivity?
Marginal product of labor
measures the output produced by the last worker. The slope of the short-run production function
The feedback critique
no one-way casual link. Conduct can affect market structure. Market performance can affect conduct as well as market structure
Market structure
number of firms, industry concentration, technological and cost conditions, demand conditions, ease of entry and exit
"Steady state"
once we reach this equilibrium, the market should stop changing
Free entry
other firms enter, and their new brands steal market share. This reduces the demand for your product until economic profits are ulimately zero
Point of cost minimization
point where slope of isocost and slope of isoquant meet
Price as a function of quantity demanded
price = demand * quantity
Norminal tariff rate
published in the country's tariff schedule. Applies to the value of a finished product that is imported into a country
Elastic E>1
quantity is very responsive to price. I will buy more if the price is low
what is the shape of an isoquant
reflects the ease with which a producer can substitute among inputs while maintaining the same level of output. Goal: find the lowest cost point on isoquant
the role of government
regulations and arbitration
A lerner index closer to 1 indicates
relatively weak price competition; the firm has market power. Ex. Microsoft Office 2007
Transaction costs include
search costs, negotiation costs, other required investments or expenditures
Perfect competition
short run profits leads to entry; entry increases market supply and drives the market price down which increases the market quantity; long run economic profits are zero
Market supply curve
shows the amount of a good that will be produced at alternative prices
Market demand curve
shows the amount of a good that will be purchased at alternative prices, holding other factors constant
Slope of isocost
straight line
Effective tariff rate
takes into account the nominal tariff rate on a finished product
export tarif
tax imposed on an exported product, often used by developing nations
Import tariff
tax levied on an imported product
Measuring profitability
the ability of a firm to mark-up its prices above cost reflects that firm's power.
Isoquant
the combinations of inputs (K,L) that yield the producer the same level of output. This is the long run approach to production
The law of demand
the demand curve is downward sloping
Consumer surplus
the difference between the actual price and the price people are willing to pay (feeling like you got a good deal means that the consumer surplus was high)
Consumer equilibrium
the equilibrium consumption bundle is the affordable bundle that yields the highest level of satisfaction
Consumer preferences
the goods and services consumers actually consume
Price ceilings
the maximum legal price that can be charged (gasoline prices in the 1970's)
Price floors
the minimum legal price that can be charged (minimum wage)
Available substitues
the more substitutes available for the good, the more elastic the demand
Market equilibrium
the point where quantity demanded = quantity supplier
Consumer opportunities
the possible goods and services consumers can afford to consume
Slope of an isoquant
the rate at which two inputs are substituted while maintaining the same output level
Managerial economics
the study of how managers make decisions based off preferences shaped by scarce resources.
law of supply
the supply curve is upward sloping (measures the costs of production)
When the slope goes downward
there is an increase in quantity demanded
If price is too low
there will be a shortage
If price is too high
there will be a surplus
What is elasticity used for?
they are measures of the responsiveness of quantity to a given market change
Revenue tariff
to generate tax revenues. Placed one either exports or imports
Protective tariff
to reduce the amount of imports entering a country. Allows an increase in the output of import-competing producers
Elasticity
tools you can use to quantify the impact of changes in prices, income, and advertising on sales and revenues
Vertical integration
when a firm shuns other suppliers and chooses to produce an input internally. I do it myself
Spot exchange
when the buyer and seller of an input meet, exchange, and then go their separate ways