Chapter 3 (Skip 2) Flashcards
What is the difference between flow and stock variable?
Flow variables are variables that only make sense when it’s tied to a unit of time. For example, if i mention my income is 20k, is that over a month over a year? Stock variables on the other hand make sense when they are not attached to a time frame. For example, the money in my bank account.
How can flow variables be linked to stock variables?
For example, the amount of money in my bank account depends on the in flow and out of the account.
What is a supply curve?
The supply curve is a graphical representation of the
relationship between the price of a good and quantity
supplied (or produced).
What is the marginal cost curve?
The marginal cost curve is the opportunity cost of
producing one more unit and the number of unit produced.
What is quantity supplied?
The amount supplied depending on the price.
Why as a firm makes more products, eventually it looses money?
As a company expands it begins to cost more to manufacture more. Resources get more limited, building and equipment costs more, they need more factory workers.
What happens when the price of a good changes?
When the price of a good changes the firm is no longer producing the amount that they want to make because…
What are exogeneous factors that increase the supply?
– Increases the number of suppliers (More firms enter the market)!
– Decreases in the price of inputs (Labour or Oil for example).
– Technological Improvements
What direction does the supply curve go when there is an increase in supply?
The supply curve shifts right when there is an increase in supply.