Econ plus dal micro notes year 1 in flashcards
What is the economic problem?
How to allocate scarce resources given unlimited wants
What choices have to be made based on the economic problems?
What to produce
How to produce it
Whom to produce it for
What are the FOP’s?
CELL
Capital - man made aids to production (machinery)
Enterprise - people who are risk takers to make profit
Land - natural land
Labour - human resources (workers)
What is opportunity cost?
It is the cost of the next best alternative foregone when a choice is made
What does the PPF / PPC show?
The maximum possible production of 2 goods/services with given factors of production
How can you see efficiency on a PPF curve?
Any point ton the curve is productively efficient.
Only 1 point is allocatively efficient
Pareto efficiency is where nobody can be made better off without making someone else worse off. Any point on the curve is pareto efficient.
How can you increase production on a PPF?
Use FOP better, if you are producing inside the curve.
If already on the curve, reallocate FOP to give more of one than the other
Shift PPF curve. You do this by increasing quality and quantity of FOP’s
What is the definition of demand?
It is the quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to buy at a given price in a given time period
What is the law of demand?
There is an inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded. As price increases, quantity demanded decreases and vice versa assuming ceteris paribus
What is the income effect?
As prices go up, our income doesn’t allow us to buy as much so demand contacts
What is the substitution effect?
As prices go up, other goods become more competitive so we switch consumption to those other goods
What factors cause a movement of the demand curve? (Pneumonic)
PASIFIC
Population
Advertising
Substitutes price
Income
Fashion/tastes
Interest rates
Compliment’s price
What is an inferior good?
As income goes up, demand for the good decreases
What is a normal good?
As income goes up, demand for the good increases
What is the definition of supply?
Supply is the quantity of a good or service producers are willing and able to produce at a given price in a given time period
What is the law of supply?
As price increases, Quantity supplied increases and vice versa assuming ceteris paribus
This is due to the profit motive, if price is higher, producers will want to make more profit
What factors cause a shift in the supply curve? (Pneumonic)
Price doesn’t shift the curve just moves along it
PINTSWC
Productivity
Indirect tax
No of firms
Technology
Subsidy
Weather
Costs of production - transport, labour, oil, raw material, utilities and regulation
What is the free market?
Any place where buyers meet suppliers to exchange goods and services, free from government intervention.
What is equilibrium?
It is when demand = supply (known as the market clearing position)
What does equilibrium in a free market represent?
It represents allocative efficiency, this is because at equilibrium, the resources that firms are using are used to make goods and services are perfectly following consumer demand
What are prices in the price mechanism? (pnemonic)
ARSI
Allocate scarce resources efficiently
Ration scarce resources by encouraging/discouraging consumption
Signal excess demand/supply and need for increase or decrease in resources
Incentivises producers to make more or less output for more profit
How can you see excess demand or supply?
Excess demand can be seen through long queues or waiting lists. Prices will naturally rise. Relate to ARSI
Excess supply can be seen through full stock, empty chairs. Prices will naturally fall.
These are both forms of disequilibrium
What are the 4 functions of the price mechanism?
Excess demand:
Signals to producers that price is too low
Incentive to increase price to make more profit / milk it.
Excess demand then gets rationed away.
New equilibrium where there is perfect allocation of scarce resources. (THE INVISIBLE HAND theory by Adam Smith suggests all this)
Excess supply:
Signal to producers that price is too high
Incentive to lower price to liquidate their excess stock
Excess supply gets rationed away
Perfect allocation of resources at new equilibrium
What is consumer surplus?
The difference between the price consumers are willing and able to pay for a good/service and the price they actually play
It is found below the demand curve and above the price line.
What is producer surplus?
The difference between the price producers are willing and able to supply a good or service for and the price they actually receive
Found above the supply curve and below the price line.
What is society surplus formula?
It is CS+PS
What are examples of compliment goods?
Printers and ink, coffee machines and coffee capsules, razors and blades
For example, f price of printers go up, demand for ink will go down as less people are buying them
What are substitutes?
Coke and Pepsi, Big mac and whopper, iPhone and Samsung
If price of iPhone increases then demand for Samsung will increase as people will move to them instead
What is derived demand?
It is derived from the demand of something else. For example, holidays and airline companies or cars and aluminium.
What is composite demand?
It is goods that require some input to make them.
For example bread and livestock need wheat and cheese and butter need milk
If more cheese is being produced, less butter will be produced as milk is being used for cheese
What is PED?
PED measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded given a change in price
PED = %change in quantity demanded / %change in price