Title: In the beginning
1(No Transcript)
2In the beginning
- Economics
- How to allocate scarce resources with unlimited
wants or desires. - Resources
- Labor
- Land/Natural Resources
- Capital
- Entrepreneurship
3Opportunity Costs Marginal Analysis
- Opportunity Costs
- The cost of doing the next best option.
- Marginal
- The cost or benefit of the next one
- EX If one candy bar costs 2 and two bars cost
3, the Marginal Costs of 1st bar is 2 and the
MC of the 2nd bar is 1. - Basis of economic study.
4Production Possibility Frontier
Measures different combinations of production
Good A
Z is beyond capacity, borrowing or running a
deficit
Y
Z
X Y are equally efficient, on the PPF curve
W
X
W is inefficient, Not all resources In use a
recession
Good B
5Trade Advantages
- Example
- Country A
- 60 Pizzas
- 80 Hot Dogs
- Country B
- 40 Pizzas
- 20 Hot Dogs
6Absolute Advantage
- Who can produce the most?
- Pizzas
- Country A 60
- Country B 40
- Hot Dogs
- Country A 80
- Country B 20
Country A b/c 60 gt 40.
Country A b/c 80 gt 20.
7Comparative Advantage
- Who gives up the least to produce?
- (items produced/items no longer produced)
- Pizzas
- Country A (60 Pizzas/80 HD) 0.75
- Country B (40 Pizzas/20 HD) 1.50
- Hot Dogs
- Country A (80 HD/60 Pizzas) 1.33
- Country B (20 HD/40 Pizzas) 0.50
Country B b/c 2.00 gt 0.75.
Country A b/c 1.33 gt 0.50
NB There is always comparative advantages for
both countries even when one country has an
absolute advantage in both products
8Supply and Demand
Price
S
P
D
Quantity
Q
9Demand
- Movement along the curve
- Change in Price
- Curve Shift
- Change in Determinants
- Income
- Substitutes
- Complements
- Number Consumers
- Consumer Tastes
- Consumer Expectations
10Supply
- Movement along the curve
- Change in price
- Curve shift
- Change in Determinants
- Costs of inputs
- Number sellers
- Change in technology
- Taxes
- Producer expectations
11Supply Demand
- Substitutes
- Complements
- Normal goods
- Inferior goods
12Equilibrium
Price
S
surplus
P1
P
P-1
shortage
D
Quantity
Q
13Price Floors Ceilings
Price
Price Floor
S
Pf
Deadweight Loss (DWL)
Price Ceiling
Pc
D
Quantity
QD
QS
14Equilibrium
Consumer Surplus
Price
S
P
Producer Surplus
D
Quantity
Q
Total Welfare is the sum of Consumer Producer
Surpluses
15Elasticity
- Measures change in QUANTITY caused by small
changes in PRICE - ?Q / ?P
- Midpoint Formula
- (Q1-Q2)/((Q1Q2)/2)
- (P1-P2)/((P1P2)/2)
16Elasticity
- Perfectly Elastic
- ED 8
- Elastic
- 1 lt ED lt 8
- Unit Elastic
- ED 1
- Inelastic
- 0 lt ED lt 1
- Perfectly Inelastic
- ED 0
17Determinants of Elasticity
18Total Revenue (TR) Method
- Elastic
- Price TR move in opposite direction
- P ? TR ?
- P ? TR ?
- Inelastic
- Price TR move in the same direction
- P ? TR ?
- P ? TR ?
- TR P Q .do not compare P Q !!!
19Types of Elasticity
- Income elasticity
- ?Q / ? Income
- Negative number for Inferior Goods
- Cross elasticity
- ? Q Good A / ? P Good B
- Negative number for Complementary Goods
20Elasticity Taxes
Government Revenue Consumption Taxes paid By Consumer Taxes Paid by Supplier
Perfectly Elastic Least Most 0 100
Elastic
Inelastic
Perfectly Inelastic Most Zero 100 0
21Changing Elasticities
Price
Inelastic A large change in price
leads to a small change in quantity
13
10
Elastic A small change in price
leads to a large change in quantity
3
2
4
5
Quantity
11
14
22Graphing Tax Revenue
ST
Price
Tax shifts supply Curve Price up Quantity
down
S
PT
Tax Revenue
P
D
Quantity
Q
QT
23Firms, Markets Costs
- Accounting p TR Explicit Costs
- Economic p Acct p Implicit Costs
- Implicit Costs are Opportunity costs
- Long-run has no fixed costs
- Sunk Costs
- Economies of Scale
- TC TFC TVC
24Total Average Cost Graphs
ATC
TC
P
MC
AVC
VC
FC
AFC
Q
Q
25Profits
? determined by MC MR
P
MC
ATC
? (P-ATC)Q
P1
MR
Q
Q1
NB Shut down price for business If Price lt
Minimum AVC
26Perfect Competition (profits)
Firm
Industry
Price
Price
Profits
MC
S
S2
ATC
P1
DMRARP
P1
P2
D2
D
Q1
q1
Q2
q2
Quantity
Quantity
New firms enter b/c profits, Results in P?,
Industry Q?, Firm q?, p 0
27Perfect Competition (losses)
Industry
Firm
Price
ATC
Price
S2
S
MC
Losses
P2
D2
P1
P1
DPMRAR
D
Q1
q1
Q2
q2
Quantity
Quantity
Firms leave b/c losses, results in P ?, Industry
Q ?, Firm q ?, p 0
28Monopoly
Monopoly P set by demand Curve point above MCMR
Price
Socially optimal allocation or allocative
efficiency at MC D
MC
ATC
P
Fair return Price ATCP (0 economic profit)
Deadweight loss (DWL) Difference between
Monopoly P Socially optimal P
D
Quantity
Q
?max set by MCMR
MR
29Monopolistic Competition
MC
P
ATC
ATC tangent to D
P
Equilibrium at zero economic profits
MR
Q
Q
Excess Capacity
30Monopolistic Competition
MC
P
ATC
ATC lt D
P
Economic profit will cause firms to enter, with
more firms in the market, consumers have more
choice demand for the company decrease
P2
MR
D
D2
Q
Q
31Monopolistic Competition
MC
ATC
ATC gt D
P
P2
Economic losses will cause firms to exit which
will increase demand for companies still in
business
P
D2
MR
D
Q
Q
32Oligopoly
Jack
Confess
Dont Confess
- Barriers to entry
- May or may not have differentiation
- 4 Firm ratio
- Prisoners dilemma
- Dominant Strategy
- One choice is always better
- Nash Equilibrium
- Each player know options of opponent no need to
change
10 year
20 years
Confess
Free
10 year
Jill
1 years
Dont Confess
Free
20 years
1 years
33Oligopoly Incentive to Collude
- Game theory applied
- Oligopolists have a strong incentive to collude
and raise their prices. - However, each firm also has an incentive to cheat
by lowering price because the demand curve facing
each firm is more elastic than the market demand
curve. - This conflict makes collusive agreements
difficult to maintain.
34Factor Economics
- Demand for inputs
- Labor
- Resources
- MRP Marginal Revenue Product
- MR for factor markets
- ?TR / ?Q
- MRC Marginal Revenue Cost
- MC for factor markets
- ?TC / ?Q
35Factor Economics
- If MRP gt MRC
- Increase Production
- If MRP MRC
- Max profits
- Stop (ideal) Production
- If MRP lt MRC
- Decrease production
36Factor Economics
- Marginal Productivity / Least Cost
- MPA / PA MPB / PB
- Firms produce at a level where all costs are
minimized - Derived Demand
- Demand for products creates or affects the demand
for resources such as labor
37Factors Distribution
- Marginal Productivity Theory of Income
Distribution - Income allocated by how much production is
created - Theory may lead to
- Income inequality
- Market Imperfections
38Types of Goods
Rivals in Consumption
Yes
No
Private Goods
Natural Monopoly
Yes
Excludable
No
Common Resources
Public Goods
39Negative Externalities
Externality Cost
- Supply Failure
- Suppliers do not have to pay the full value
- Will supply more b/c costs paid by others
- Costs affect supply
- Taxes raise price to public equilibrium
Social Cost
P
Private Cost
P2
P1
Private Value
Q1
Q2
Q
40Positive Externalities
- Demand Failure
- Public not willing to pay full value
- Benefits or subsidies needed to induce suppliers
to supply at lower price levels - Benefits affect demand
- Subsidies absorb costs creating public
equilibrium
External Benefit
Private Cost
P
Public Cost
P1
P2
Private Value
Q1
Q2
Q
41Income Inequality
- Lorenz Curve
- Measures ratio between richest poorest
quintiles. - Gini Index
- Measures among of distribution
- Increasing numbers (ranges from 0.0 to 1.0) means
less equality
42Miscellaneous
- Taxes
- Progressive
- Increasing Marginal Rates
- Proportional
- Regressive
- Decreasing Marginal Rates
- Moral Hazard
- Taking higher risks b/c of insurance or
government bail-outs - Adverse Selection
- Signaling
- Only those who need product would buy it
(insurance)