econ
determinants of supply elasticity
flexibility of inputs mobility of inputs ability to produce substitute inputs time
microeconomic
focuses on individual decisions
cost benefit principle
an individual, firm, or society should take an action if and only if the extra benefits from taking the action are at least as great as the extra costs
efficient point
any combination of goods for which currently available resources do not allow an increase in the production of one good without a reduction in the production of the other
inefficient point
any combination of goods for which currently available resources enable an increase in the production of one good without a reduction in the production of the other
attainable point
any combination of goods that can be produced using currently available resources
barrier to entry
any factor that makes it difficult for a new firm to enter a market
example of inferior good
apartment in sketchy neighborhood-- having more money would make you buy less of it
income effect
change in quantity demanded of a good that results because a change in the price of a good changes the buyer's purchasing power
substitution effect of a price change
change in quantity demanded of a good that results because buyers switch to or from substitutes when the price of a good changes
macroeconomics
focuses on overall national economic growth and factors that affect the overall economy such as the impact of changing interest rates on total spending in the economy
allocative function of price
directs resources away from overcrowded markets and toward markets that are undeserved
rationing function of price
distributes scarce goods to those consumers who value them most highly
what is required for the invisible hand to hold
free entry and exit
market equilibrium may not maximize total economic surplus because
goods entail costs and benefits that do not fall on buyers and sellers.
supply curve
graph or schedule showing the quantity of a good that sellers wish to sell at each price
production possibilities curve
graph that describes the maximum amount of one good that can be produced for every possible level of production of the other good
goods with more substitutes have a ___ price elasticity of demand
greater
if marginal cost of producing an additional output is less than average cost, then average cost will ___ as output increases
fall
demand curve statement : all else constant, consumers will purchase more of a good as the price___
falls
price elasticity of supply
percentage change in quantity supplied that occurs in response to a 1 percent change in price will always be 1 in any point along a straight line curve that passes through the origin
price elasticity of demand
percentage change in the quantity demanded of a good or service that results from a 1 percent change in its price
efficiency conditions
perfectly competitive markets, no costs or benefits shifted
as price changes and demand stays the same, the demand is
perfectly inelastic
elasticity is 0
perfectly inelastic
short run
period of time sufficiently short that at least one factor of production is fixed
if the percentage change in price is negative(price falls), then the percentage change in quantity demanded is typically
positive
normal good has a ___ income elasticity
positive
positive/descriptive economic principle
predicts how people will behave
causes for shifts in demand
price of complementary goods price of substitute goods income preferences number of buyers in the market expectations about the future
when demand decreases, both the equilibrium ___ and ___ will fall
price, quantity
Assume that the production technology required to produce goods X and Y is very similar. If a firm that is producing good X notices that the market price of good Y is rising, it will
produce good Y
economics
study of how people make choices under conditions of scarcity and of the results of those choices for society
average total cost
sum of all payments made to a firms fixed and variable factors of production divided by total output
If the firms in a market have negative economic profits, then, in the long run, the market ______ curve will shift to the ______.
supply, left
if the firms in a market are earning an economic profit, then in the long run the market ___ curve will shift to the ____
supply, right
invisible hand
term economists use to describe the self-regulating nature of the marketplace
economic rent
that part of the payment for a factor of production that exceeds the owner's reservation price, the price below which the owner would not supply the factor
nominal price
the absolute price of a good in dollar terms
optimal combination
the affordable combination that yields the highest total utility
economic surplus
the benefit of taking an action minus its cost
substitution effect
the change in the quantity demanded of a good that results from buyers switching to or from substitutes when the price of a good changes
buyer's surplus
the difference between the buyer's reservation price and the price he or she actually pays
seller's surplus
the difference between the price received by the seller and his or her reservation price
real price
the dollar price of a good relative to the average dollar price of all other goods
profit motive
the force that encourages people and organizations to improve their material well-being
price elasticity of demand for a good tends to be lower if
the good has few close substitutes
marginal benefit
the increase in total benefit that results from carrying out one additional unit of an activity
marginal cost
the increase in total cost that results from carrying out one additional unit of an activity
market equilibrium occurs when
the quantity buyers demand at the market price is exactly the same as the quantity that sellers offer. T
inferior good
demands decreases when income increases
normal profit
difference between accounting profit and economic profit
total surplus
difference between buyer's and seller's reservation price
increase in price a firm receives for its output will lead form to
expand output
total revenue
explicit costs + accounting profit
price elasticity of demand at a given point
(P/Q) * (1 / slope)
price elasticity of demand when price vs quantity graph
(P/Q) x (1/slope)
markets work best when
-Buyer's marginal benefits = seller's marginal costs -Society's marginal benefits = society's marginal costs
opportunity cost for someone making a calculator if they make 100 calculators per hour and 10 computers per hour
.1 computers
factors that increase supply
1. A decrease in the cost of materials, labor, or other inputs used in the production of the good or service. 2. An improvement in technology that reduces the cost of producing the good or service. 3. An improvement in the weather (especially for agricultural products). 4. An increase in the number of suppliers. 5. An expectation of lower prices in the future.
factors that increase demand
1. A decrease in the price of complements to the good or service. 2. An increase in the price of substitutes for the good or service. 3. An increase in income (for a normal good). 4. An increased preference by demanders for the good or service. 5. An increase in the population of potential buyers. 6. An expectation of higher prices in the future
decision pitfalls
1. Measuring costs or benefits proportionally 2. ignoring implicit costs 3. failing to think at the margin
three ways to earn a big payoff
1. Work exceptionally hard 2. Have some unique skill or talent 3. Be lucky
characteristics of perfectly competitive market
1. all firms sell the same standardized product 2. the market has many buyers and sellers, each of which buys or sells only a small fraction of the total quantity exchanged 3. productive resources are mobile 4. buyers and sellers are well informed
decreasing productivity
1. start with resources with lowest opportunity cost, then move to next highest, and still higher.
slope of Tom is 1/2... coffee vs nuts. this means that the opportunity cost of an additional pound of nuts is ____
1/2 pound of coffee
Assume point A on a linear production possibilities curve represents the combination of 12 coffees and 3 cappuccinos, and point B represents 3 coffees and 6 cappuccinos. Suppose coffees are on the vertical axis and cappuccinos are on the horizontal axis. The opportunity cost of a cup of coffee is
1/3 of a cappuccino
diminishing marginal utility
Decreasing satisfaction or usefulness as additional units of a product are acquired
efficiency principle
Efficiency is an important social goal because when the economic pie grows larger, everyone can have a larger slice.
comparative advantage
One person has a comparatave advantage over another if his or her opportunity cost of performing a task is lower than the other person's opportunity cost
total expenditure = total revenue
The dollar amount consumers spend on a product is equal to the dollar amount sellers receive
unattainable point
a combination that cannot be produced using current resources
economic efficiency
a condition that occurs when all goods and services are produced and consumed at their respective socially optimal levels
excess supply or surplus
amount by which quantity supplies exceeds quantity demanded when the price of a good exceeds equilibrium price
profit maximizing firm
a firm whose primary goal is to maximize the difference between its total revenues and total costs
unit elastic
a given change in price causes a proportional change in quantity demanded
inferior good
a good that consumers demand less of when their incomes increase
normal good
a good that consumers demand more of when their incomes increase
equilibrium principle
a market in equilibrium leaves no unexploited opportunities for individuals but may not exploit all gains achievable through collective action
perfectly competitive market
a market in which no individual supplier has significant influence on the market price of the product
incentive principle
a person is more likely to take an action if its benefit rises, and less likely to take it if its cost rises
incentive principle is an example of ____
a positive economic principle.
a change in demand
a shift of the demand curve, which changes the quantity demanded at any given price
outsourcing
a term increasingly used to connote having services performed by low-wage workers overseas
specialization
an economic concept that refers to separating tasks in which people in a factory or company work at one kind of job and learn to do it well
normative economic principle
an economic principle that says how people should behave
consumer surplus is the area
above price and below the demand curve
normal profit + economic profit=
accounting profit
marginal utility
additional utility gained from consuming an additional unit of a good
efficient points lie
along the curve
producer surplus
area below price and above supply curve
consumer surplus on a graph
area of triangle below demand curve and above the price.
government says only sell 1$ companies dont sell too cheap, sellers are willing to pay more bc limited supply, buyers say okay
artificially increased demand and supply
points that lie beneath the production possibilities curve are ____ but ____
attainable, inefficient
markets maximize the difference between
benefits and cost
the market
buyers and sellers signal wants and cost
causes for shift in supply
change in price of input change in technology weather number of sellers in the market expectation of future price changes
is govmt decides to pay childcare, this would incraese ___ in the market for childcare
consumer surplus
subsidies cause ____ to grow, and ___ to shrink
consumer surplus, total economic surplus
if a person takes an action if and only if the extra benefits from taking that action are at least as great as the extra costs, then that person is following the___
cost benefit principle
sunk cost
cost that is beyond recovery at the moment a decision must be made
central planning
decisions made my individuals or small groups
if cross price elasticity between two goods is negative, then the two goods are complements. so, an increase in price of one, will leads to a ___ in demand for the other
decrease
two good are complements if an increase in the price of one good leads to a _____ in demand for the other
decrease
when supply decreases, there will be a
decrease in the quantity demanded
increase in wages paid to workers who make jeans will
decrease price of jeans
when income increases, demand for an inferior good___
decreases
normal good
demand increases as income increases
elastic
demand is elastic with respect to price if its price elasticity of demand is greater than 1
increase in the quantity demanded
downward movement along the demand curve as price falls.
fundamental property of the demand curve
downward sloping with respect to price
in the long run a perfectly competitive industry
economic profit and loss are driven to zero by entry and exit.
goal as an economic decision maker is to generate the largest possible_____
economic surplus
a cut in price will increase total spending on a good if demand is _____, but reduce it if demand is ______
elastic, inelastic
the price at which a good will sell
equilibrium price
quantity of a good that will be sold
equilibrium quantity
principle of comparative advantage
everyone does best when each person concentrates on the activities for which their opportunity cost is lowest
with trade, each persons consumption can be
greater than production
rational person
has well defined goals and tries to fulfill those goals as best as they can
If a linear, two-good production possibilities curve has a slope of −2, then
having an additional unit of the good measured on the vertical axis means giving up 1/2 unit of the good measured on the horizontal axis
market demand curve is obtained by
horizontal addition, add quantities of individual demand curves.
substitute goods
if increase in price of of one causes a rightward shift in the demand curve for the other.
inelastic
if its price elasticity is less than one
perfectly elastic
if price elasticity of demand is infinite, a horizontal line
how do i know if i should do something
if the marginal benefit is greater than the marginal cost.
Principle of Increasing Opportunity Cost
in expanding the production of any good, first employ those resources with lowest opportunity cost, and only afterward turn to resources with higher opportunity costs
a rightward shift in the entire demand curve represents an_____ in demand
increase
two goods are substitutes if an increase in the price of one good leads to an ____ in demand for the other
increase
Suppose farmers in a given market can either grow soybeans or corn on their land. In addition, suppose an increase in the demand for corn causes the price of corn to increase. In the long run, this increase in the demand for corn is likely to ______ the price of soybeans.
increase because supply would go down, leading to increase in price.
complementary goods are
increase in price of one causes a leftward shift in the demand curve for the other... ex: as tennis courts price of rental becomes less expensive, shift in demand curve for tennis balls will be rightward , more tennis balls demanded.
factors that shift the PPC curve/factors of economic growth
increase in the amount of productive resources available, population increase, improvements in knowledge about technology
if each firm earns a positive economic profit, what will happen to number of firms in the market
increase, because firms will enter the market
normal goods: increase in price leads to ____ in consumption, decrease in price leads to ___ in consumption
increase, decrease
increase in price of variable factor will ___ marginal cost, thereby ___ its supply
increase, reducing
a bow shaped PPC means that opportunity cost of producing something ____ as the economy produces more of them
increases
when income increases, demand for a normal good ___
increases
equilibrium leaves no opportunities for
individuals to gain
if it is possible to make a change that will help some people without harming others, then the situation is
inefficient
if percent change in quantity demand (numerator) is less than percent change in price(denom), tje price elasticity of demand would be less than one, so the demand is
inelastic.
if demand decreases as income increases, then the good is
inferior
Inferior good has a ____ income elasticity
negative
price elasticity of demand is ALWAYS____
negative, because price changes are always in opp direction from change in quantity demanded
buyer's reservation price
largest dollar amount the buyer would be willing to pay for a good
the buyer's reservation price is
largest price the buyer would be willing to pay for it
if economic profit is negative, what will you do in the long run
leave
supply decreases when sellers are willing to offer
less for sale at each possible price
average cost declines when marginal cost is ____ average cost
less than
cost benefit principle is a model... if costs increase, the action is ___ likely. If benefits increase, the action is ___ likely
less, more
principle of increasing opportunity cost is also called the
low hanging fruit principle
for inferior goods, an increase in income leads to a decrease in consumption... this implies that the income elasticity of demand is ___ for inferior goods
negative
seller's reservation price
lowest price a seller would go
you should perform an action if ____ exceeds its ____
marginal benefit, marginal cost
efficiency
marginal cost equals marginal benefit
price ceiling
maximum allowable price specified by law
price ceilings
maximum allowable price specified by law
unlike economic profit, economic rent
may not be driven to zero by competition
subsidies
meant to assist low income consumers, governmental funding of essential goods and service
the long run equilibrium price occurs at the
minimum of the ATC curve
marginal cost curve must intersect both average cost and average total cost at their respective
minimums
why is the slope of the production possibilities curve negative?
more of one good thing means less of another.
changes in choices occur due to
more resources, investment in capital, population growth, improvement in tech, more specialization
change in quantity supplies
movement along the supply curve
scarcity principle is also called the
no free lunch principle
if the demand for cucumbers and tomatoes both rise when income falls, we know they are ___ goods
normal
economic profit= accounting profit -
normal profit
cost benefit principle is an example of ___
normative economic principle
market equilibrium
occurs in a market when all buyers and sellers are satisfied with their respective quantities at the market price
absolute advantage
one person has an absolute advantage over another if he or she takes fewer hours to perform a task than the other person
a profit maximizing competitive firm must decide
only how much to produce, taking price as fixed.
if you have a comparative advantage in something, you should
only make those
firms that earn normal profit recover only their
opportunity cost
slope of PPC
opportunity cost
implicit cost of starting a business
opportunity cost of the time you spend working at the business
implicit costs
opportunity costs of the resources supplied by the firms owners
increase in demand
outward shift of demand curve
explicit costs are
payments firms make to purhcase- resources, land, labor
law of demand
people do less of what they want to do as the cost of doing it rises
formula for price elasticity of demand
percent change in quantity demanded/ percent change in unit price
income elasticity of demand
percentage by which a good's quantity demanded changes in response to a 1 percent change in income
cross price elasticity of demand
percentage by which the quantity demanded on the first good changes in response to a 1 percent change in the price of the second
a change in price leads to change in
quantity demanded
socially optimal quantity
quantity of a good that results in the maximum possible economic surplus from producing and consuming the good
if there is an excess supply, then
quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded
rational spending rule
ratio of marginal utility to price should be equal for all goods
demand will be more elastic with respect to price for goods in which close substitutes are
readily available
a decrease in the price of a firm receives for its output will lead firm to
reduce output
environmental damage is a
relevant cost of production
buyers will purchase an item if its price is less than or equal to their _____
reservation price
equilibrium price and quantity are efficient if:
sellers pay all the costs of production buyers receive all the benefits of their purchase
change in supply
shift of entire supply curve
an increase in an economy's productive resources will lead the production possibilities curve to
shift outward
invisible hand theory
states that the actions of independent, self-interested buyers and sellers will often result in the most efficient allocation of resources
if economic profit is positive, you should
stay
implicit costs are the opportunity costs of
the resources supplied by the owner of the firm
utility
the satisfaction people derive from consumption
principle of increasing opportunity cost tells us what about the slope?
the slope of the production possibilities curve becomes stepper as we move downward to the right.
law of diminishing marginal utility
the tendency for the additional utility gained from consuming an additional unit of a good to diminish as consumption increases beyond some point
average benefit
the total benefit of undertaking n units of an activity divided by n
average cost
the total cost of undertaking n units of an activity divided by n
economic surplus =
total benefits - total costs
average fixed cost
total fixed cost per unit of output
accounting profit + explicit costs =
total revenue
accounting profit =
total revenue - explicit costs
accounting profit is equal to
total revenue - explicit costs
economic profit
total revenue- explicit costs - implicit costs
measuring costs or benefits proprtionally
treating a change in cost or benefit as insignificant if it constitutes only a small proportion of the original amount.. absolute dollar amounts should be employed, not proportions
economic rent is earned by factors of production that are
unique
opportunity cost
value of what must be forgone to undertake an activity
scarcity principle
we have boundless needs and wants, but the resources available to us are limited. So having more of one good thing means having less of another
when would the demand curve be a stairstep shape
when a product can be sold only in whole number amounts.
the pitfall of failing to think at the margin
when deciding whether to perform an action, the only costs and benefits that are relevant are those that would result from taking the action. ignore sunk costs
economic efficiency relating to change
when no change could be made to benefit one party without harming the other
pitfall of ignoring implicit costs
when performing a cost benefit analysis of an action, it is important to account for all relevant costs, including the implicit value of alternatives that must be forgone in order to carry out the activity
substitution effect
when prices go up, substitutes become more attractive, causing consumers to abandon the good for its substitutes
no cash on the table
when surplus is maximized, no opportunity to gain from additional sales or purchases
demand has decreased if buyers are
willing to buy less at each price
supply increases when sellers are
willing to offer more for sale at each price