Economics key terms/definitions Flashcards
utility
consumer satisfaction/happiness
useful to obtain predictions on behaviour
Neo-classical economics
assume believe in human rationality
-unbounded rationality - rationality = no bounds
rationality assumption
more is always better
consumer choice theory
how make consumption decisions
theory behind economic demand curve
reactions to changes in price
aim = see rational consumers chose combination of goods = maximise utility
indifference curve & 4 features
-all possible combinations of 2 goods yield levels of satisfaction (combination of goods consumers are indifferent) - constant utility along curve
- slope downward (one increase other reduce preserve utility assume more is better)
- convex to origin - law of diminishing marginal utility
- more always better (further from origin = higher utility)
- curves cant intersect (2 lines = different utility levels - break law of transitive preferences)
marginal rate of substitution
magnitude of slope of indifference curve
rate at which person give up good measured on y-axis to gain additional unit of good on x-axis
remaining indifferent (total utility constant throughout curve)
marginal utility
incremental increase in utility that results from the consumption of one additional unit.
law of diminishing marginal utility
all else equal, as consumption increases, the marginal utility derived from each additional unit declines.
-extra consumption adds to utility but at diminishing rate
(assumption of utility theory)
budget constraint & adjustments
show combination of goods consumers afford (income & price) range of choices affordable
(outside = unaffordable)
income = PARALLEL SHIFT
price = PIVOT
budget lines
quantity of 1 good on vertical axis
quantity of another on horizontal
shows consumption possibilities at given income and price
income types
- nominal (stays same)
- real (accounting for inflation = real wage)
consumer equilibrium
maximising utility given income and price of goods and services
types of goods
- inferior (demand drop income rise)
- normal (demand increase income rise)
optimal level of consumption
indifference curve os tangential to budget constraint
law of demand
quantity demand negative related to price
ceteris paribus - other influences = constant
-explain downward sloping demand curve
creative destruction
taste change over time
businesses shut and new emerge
libertarian paternalism
liberal - sense we think we are making choices
paternalistic - sense somebody already made choice
PED
responsiveness of QD to change in price
nature of relationship between price and quantity
% change in QD / % change in P
marginal revenue
change in total revenue resulting from 1 unit increase
total rev max = selling 1 unit = rev falls & selling 1 less = leaves revenue
cross price elasticity of demand
responsiveness of demand for 1 product to change in price of another
% change in quantity of good X demanded / % change in price of good Y
complements = -ve
substitutes = +ve
income elasticity of demand
responsiveness of demand to change in incomes
% change in quantity of good X demanded / by % change in income
normal = +ve
inferior = -ve
theory of producer choice
theory behind supply curve
-beyond certain output = costs rise more rapidly = producers need to be paid higher price = produce extra output = upward sloping
factors of production
land
labour
capital (physical - machines or human - training)
entrepreneurship
fixed = input cant be altered in quantity within given time period
variable = altered within given time period
technical efficiency
optimum combination of factor inputs to produce good
linked to productive