Econ Unit 2
Factors affecting elasticity
1) Availability of Substitutes 2) Relative Importance 3) Necessities Versus Luxeries 4) Change over Time
Related Goods
1) Complements 2) Substitutes
Production Costs
1) fixed costs a. does not change regardless of production (rent) 2) Variable Costs a. costs that rise or fall depending on the quantity produced (raq materials and some labor) 3) Total Cost (fixed + variable costs)
subsidies
government payment that supports a business market (pay a producer a set subsidy for each unit of a good produced)
regulation
raise production cost (ex remove lead from gasoline to prevent health hazards but this is more expensive)
governments influence on supply
raising/lowering cost of producing goods a gov can encourage or discourage an entrepreneur or an industry
example of price ceiling and price floor
rent control
Two behavior patterns that affect the law of demand
substitution and income effect
supply shock
sudden shortage of good
excise taz
tax on the production or sale of a good thus increasing production costs
marginal costs
the additional cost of producing one more unit
Marginal product of Labor
the change in output at the margin from hiring one more worker. How much output a new worker will increase
marginal cost includes
the cost of the inputs that go into production (labor or raw materials)
Factors of elasticity of supply
TIME - short term: a firm cannot easily change its output level, so supply is inelastic (agriculture / haircuts). long term: firms are more flexible so supply is more elastic.
increase in cost of input
decrease in supply at all price levels because more expensive to produce (higher marginal cost)
what do you do with excess demand
raise prices
Diminishing marginal returns
After the firm hires its first three workers, one for each task, the benefits of specialization end. Adding more workers increase total output but at a decreasing rate. A firm with diminishing marginal returns of labor will produce less and less output from eacha dditional unit of labor added to the mix. 3 stations but 5 workers
What can cause shifts in demand curve?
Ceteris Paribus is not true 1) Income a. normal goods b. inferior goods 2) Consumer Expectations a. suspected future circumstances that affect demand 3) Population 4) Consumer Tastes and Advertising
if no control over price only option is to
change production and raise/lower marginal cost until it equals out with constant price
law of supply
Goal: profit. As the price of a good rises, existing firms will produce more in order to earn additional revenue; new firms will enter the market to earn a profit for themselves. If prices of a good falls, some firms will produce less, and others might drop out of the market.
example of LOS
If a firm is already earning a profit by selling a good, then an increase in price -cteris paribus- will increase the firms profit. They want to produce and sell more to take advantage of the higher prices.
The factory is producing at a level of output at which marginal revenue is equal to marginal cost, but the market price is so low that the factory's total revenue is still less than its total cost, and the firm is losing money. Should they close the factory down?
The firm should keep the factory open if the total revenue from the goods and services of the factory produces is greater than the cost of keeping it open.
(% change in quantity of demand) / (% change in price) = 1
Unitary elastic
Increasing marginal returns (and example)
a level of production which the marginal product of labor increases as the # of workers increases Ex: marginal returns increase when additional workers leads to specialization of tasks like a production line. If each worker focuses on only one part oof the process, she will waste less time switching between tasks and will become more skillful at her assigned tasks.
in an uncontrolled market, the price of a good and quantity sold will settle at
a point where the quantity supplied equals the quantity demanded
search costs
a result of excess demand. Searching from store to store looking for a product. It is fthe financial and opportunity cost consumers pay in searching for a good or service
capital
any human-made resource that is used to produce other goods
government regulation on max and min price can lead to imbalance
between supply and demand
all other things held constant
ceteris paribus
Elasticity of Supply
how firms will respond to changes in the price of a good
influence on supply
i. future expectations of prices ii. number of suppliers the larger producers of a good the more supply and the supply curve will shift right
market entry
if pizza selling is doing well, more people are likely to join into that business market
technology causes
input costs to lessen
Most profitable level of output
look for the biggest gap between total revenue and total cost or when marginal income meets marginal cost
low price is a sign of
overproduction
Profit
total revenue - total production cost
Prices communicate to both buyers and sellers
whether goods are in short supply or readily available
negative marginal returns
workers decrease output by getting in each others way and disrupting production process