Title: SSC 220 Closing Comments
1SSC 220Closing Comments
- Classifying Goods and Resources
- The Stock Market
- Measuring Economic Inequality
- The Economic Theory of Government
2Classifying Goods and Resources
- What is the essential difference between
- A city police department and Brinks security
- Fish in the Atlantic Ocean and fish in a fish
farm - A live concert and a concert on television
- These and all goods and services can be
classified according to whether they are
excludable or nonexcludable and rival or nonrival.
3Classifying Goods and Resources
- Excludable
- A good is excludable if only the people who pay
for it are able to enjoy its benefits. - Brinkss security services, East Point Seafoods
fish, and a Coldplay concert are examples. - Nonexcludable
- A good is nonexcludable if everyone benefits from
it regardless of whether they pay for it. - The services of the LAPD, fish in the Pacific
Ocean, and a concert on network television are
examples.
4Classifying Goods and Resources
- Rival
- A good is rival if one persons use of it
decreases the quantity available for someone
else. - A Brinkss truck cant deliver cash to two banks
at the same time. A fish can be consumed only
once. - Nonrival
- A good is nonrival if one persons use of it does
not decrease the quantity available for someone
else. - The services of the LAPD and a concert on network
television are nonrival.
5Classifying Goods and Resources
- Figure 16.1 shows this four-fold classification
of goods and services.
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7Classifying Goods and Resources
- Two Problems
- Public goods create a free-rider problemthe
absence of an incentive for people to pay for
what they consume. - Common resources create a problem called the
tragedy of the commonsthe absence of incentives
to prevent the overuse and depletion of a
resource.
8Managing Risk in Financial Markets
- The Stock Market
- The prices of the stocks are determined by demand
and supply. - Demand and supply in the stock market are
dominated by the expected future price. - If the price of a stock today is higher than the
expected price tomorrow, people will sell the
stock today. - If the price of a stock today is less than its
expected price tomorrow, people will buy the
stock today.
9Managing Risk in Financial Markets
- Todays price equals tomorrows expected price.
- Todays price embodies all the information that
is available about the stock. - A market in which the actual price embodies all
currently available relevant information is
called an efficient market. - In an efficient market, it is impossible to
forecast changes in price.
10Managing Risk in Financial Markets
11Managing Risk in Financial Markets
- So an efficient market has two features
- 1. Its price equals the expected future price and
embodies all the available information. - 2. No forecastable profit opportunities are
available. - The key thing to understand about an efficient
market is that - If something can be anticipated, it will be, and
the anticipation of a future event will affect
the current price.
12Measuring Economic Inequality
- In 2005
- The poorest 20 of households received only 3.4
of the total income. - The middle 20 received 14.6 of total income.
- The richest 20 received 50.4 of total income.
13Measuring Economic Inequality
- The Income Lorenz Curve
- The income Lorenz curve graphs the cumulative
percentage of income earned against the
cumulative percentage of households. - Figure 18.3 shows the income Lorenz curve for the
income shares in Figure 18.2.
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15Measuring Economic Inequality
- If everyone has the same income,
- the income Lorenz curve is a 45 degree line from
the lower left corner to the upper right corner.
This line is called the line of equality. - The Lorenz curve shows the cumulative
distribution of income.
16Measuring Economic Inequality
- The Distribution of Wealth
- A households wealth is the value of all the
things that it owns at a point in time. - The distribution of wealth is another way of
examining the degree of economic inequality.
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18Measuring Economic Inequality
- A wealth Lorenz curve measures the distribution
of wealth in the same way an income Lorenz curve
measures the distribution of income. - The distribution of wealth is even more unequally
distributed than income.
19Measuring Economic Inequality
- Wealth Versus Income
- Wealth is a stock of assets and income is a flow
of earnings that result from a given stock of
wealth. - The reason that wealth is more unequally
distributed than income is that wealth does not
measure the quantity of human capitalonly income
reflects the quantity of human capital. - Because wealth does not reflect potential for
income from human capital, income is a more
accurate measure of economic inequality.
20Measuring Economic Inequality
- Annual or Lifetime Income and Wealth?
- A households income and wealth change over time.
- A household headed by a young person starts out
with moderate income and accumulates wealth for
retirement years. - A middle-age headed household is in its highest
earning years and enjoys the highest level of
wealth. - A households headed by an older, retired person
has lower earning and is consuming, rather than
accumulating, its wealth.
21Measuring Economic Inequality
- Trends in Inequality
- To measure inequality as an index number, we use
the Gini ratio, which equals the ratio of blue
area to the red area in the two figures below.
22Measuring Economic Inequality
- With perfect equality, the Lorenz curve is the
line of equality and the Gini ratio is zero.
23Measuring Economic Inequality
- With the most extreme inequalityone person has
all the incomethe Lorenz curve runs along the
axes and the Gini ratio is one.
24Measuring Economic Inequality
- The closer the Gini ratio is to one, the more
unequal is the distribution of income. In 2005,
the U.S. Gini ratio was 0.47.
25Measuring Economic Inequality
- Figure 18.5 shows the U.S. Gini ratio from 1970
to 2005. - The Gini ratio shows that the distribution of
income in the United States has become more
unequal. - Despite the change in the definition in 1992, the
trend is still visible.
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27Measuring Economic Inequality
- Who Are the Rich and the Poor?
- Figure 18.6 on the next slide identifies the five
characteristics that appear to influence the
amount of income earned by a household. - These characteristics are
- Education
- Type of household
- Age of householder
- Race
28Measuring Economic Inequality
29The Economic Theory of Government
- The economic theory of government explains the
purpose of governments, the economic choices that
governments make, and the consequences of those
choices. - Governments exist for two main economic reasons
- 1. To establish property rights and set the rules
for the redistribution of income and wealth. - 2. To provide a nonmarket mechanism for
allocating scarce resources when the market
economy results in inefficiencya situation
called a market failure.
30The Economic Theory of Government
- Governments and public choices deal with five
economic problems - Monopoly and oligopoly regulation
- Externalities regulation
- The provision of public goods
- The use of common resources
- Income redistribution
31The Economic Theory of Government
- Externalities Regulation
- External costs and external benefits are
consequences of an economic transaction between
two parties that are borne or enjoyed by a third
party. - A chemical factory that dumps waste into a river
that kills the fish downstream imposes an
external cost. - A bank that builds a beautiful office building
creates an external benefit. - External costs and external benefits prevent the
market allocation of resources from being
efficient.
32Externalities in Our Lives
- An externality is a cost or benefit that arises
from production and falls on someone other than
the producer, or a cost or benefit that arises
from consumption and falls on someone other than
the consumer. - A negative externality imposes a cost and a
positive externality creates a benefit.
33The Economic Theory of Government
- Provision of Public Goods
- A public good is a good that is consumed by
everyone and from which no one can be excluded - Examples are national defense, law and order, and
sewage and waste disposal services. - The market economy underproduces these goods
because it is impossible to exclude those who
choose not to pay from enjoying themcalled the
free-rider problem.
34The Economic Theory of Government
- The Use of Common Resources
- Some resources are owned by no one and used by
everyone. - Examples are fish in the ocean and the lakes and
rivers. - The market economy overuses these resources
because no one has an incentive to conserve
themcalled the tragedy of the commons.
35The Economic Theory of Government
- Income Redistribution
- The market economy delivers an unequal
distribution of income and wealth. - Progressive income taxes pay for public goods and
redistribute income.
36The Economic Theory of Government
- Public Choice and the Political Marketplace
- Public choice theory applies the economic way of
thinking to the choices that people and
governments make in a political marketplace. - The actors in the political marketplace are
- Voters
- Firms
- Politicians
- Bureaucrats
37The Economic Theory of Government
- Figure 14.1 illustrates the political market
place. - Voters and firms are the consumers in the
political marketplace. - Politicians are the entrepreneurs of the
political marketplace. - Bureaucrats are the producers, or firms, of the
political marketplace.
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39The Economic Theory of Government
- The objective of politicians is to get elected to
office and remain in office. - Votes to a politician are like profits to a firm,
so they propose policies that they expect to
attract enough votes to get elected. - Bureaucrats produce the public goods and services.
40The Economic Theory of Government
- Political Equilibrium
- A political equilibrium is the outcome of the
choices of voters, firms, politicians, and
bureaucrats. - It is a situation in which the choices of the
three groups are compatible and no group can
improve its own situation by making a different
choice.