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
production function 2 time frames
- short run (quantity of at least 1 factor of production is fixed -> capital = fixed, labour = variable =)
output is a function of L and K fixed capital - long run (can alter level of capital and labour to alter production - series of short run production processes
production in short run
3 factors/variables
- total product (TP)-> relationship between amount of labour used and output total amount produced
- marginal product (MP)-> change in total product resulting in 1 unit increase in variable factor all other factors are constant, MP to worker is extra output from hiring additional worker
- average product (AP) total product / quantity of input used - divide by units of labour = tells average productivity of workers
increasing marginal returns
initially marginal product rise
total product increase at increasing rate
due to specialisation (division of labour)
boost productivity of firm
law of diminishing returns
increasing amounts of variable factor used with given amount of fixed factor
point when additional unit of variable = less extra output than previous
MP of additional worker is less than MP of previous worker
average product vs marginal product
same relationship
marginal intersects average at highest point
marginal higher than average = average product increasing
output and costs concepts
- total costs
- marginal costs = change in total cost from 1 unit increase in output (labour - producing one extra unit) = change in TC/ change in output
- average cost
Costs
- AFC slope down output increase FC spread
- AVC = u shape, specialisation increasing marginal returns = increase due to law of diminishing marginal returns
- MC = u shaped specialisation then diminishing marginal returns
long run production
all costs variable
flatter = firm increase output by increasing capital rather than workers
minimise production costs
altering size of capital stock = achieve least cost means of production
EOS/increasing returns to scale
proportional increase in all inputs under control of firm = greater & proportional increase in production
costs per unit of output fall as production scale increase
constant returns to scale
proportional increase in inputs = equal proportional increase in production
disEOS/decreasing returns to scale
proportional increase in inputs = less than proportional increase in production
costs per unit of output increase as production scale increase
normal profits
assume average costs = include payment to entrepreneur reward for deploying factors of production
opportunity cost of providing the entrepreneurship factor of production
enough = persuade firms to stay not enough = new entries
min return owner make = prevent decision to close down
abnormal profit
economic profit
excess profit
supernormal
profits over level of normal profit
difference between revenue and costs
short run vs long run outcomes
short = increasing/diminishing marginal returns
long = returns to scale & EOS/dis EOS
accounting vs economic costs
accounting = monetary costs in books
economic = those costs plus opportunity costs
law of supply
higher price = greater quantity supplied (positive relationship)
upward sloping due to costs of production - shows higher price = cover production costs (higher price = more profit)
marginal costs increase = quantity produced increases
market competition levels
place of sale
competitive or anti-competitive
perfect competition - show equilibrium is generated and operations dye to extreme comp
highlight shortcomings of less competitive
more competitive = more efficient at allocating scarce resources
optimal production level = price and level to profit maximise
profits determined by structure
perfect comp -> monopoly = increasing profit
market equilibrium
equilibrium: opposing forces balance (supplied = demanded)
temporary disequilibrium too high or too low price
surplus (excess supply) & shortage (excess demand)
surplus
scaling back production
not sustainable price
firms drive down price to compete to sell excess
shortage
upward pressure on price
consumers compete against each other
increase production
interbank lending
bank only option
borrow from other banks during global financial crisis 2008
US sub prime lending
fears of rising bad debts = institutional lenders to withhold funds from wholesale markets
credit crunch
shortage of funds = raises London inter bank offered rate = raises cost of borrowing for banks
going short
borrowing financial asset e.g. share
assumption it will fall in price
pay for borrowing the share and then sell at current market value with assumption it will fall in price when share price falls
buy back share lower price and return to owner
credit crunch/squeeze/crisis
sudden reduction in general availability of loans or credit or a sudden tightening of conditions required to obtain a loan
price ceiling
if set above equilibrium price = not binding market attains equilibrium price & quantity as if no ceiling
if set below = binding quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied
price flow
minimum wage = price flaws only relevant if set above prevailing equilibrium market wage
min wage below equilibrium wage = not binding = no effect = market works = no minimum wage
min wage above equilibrium wage = binding quantity of labour supplied by workers exceeds the quantity demanded by employers = surplus of labour
surplus of labour
unemployment
quantity of labour hired at minimum wage is less than quantity that would be hired in an unregulated labour market
market structures
- perfect comp (infinite small firms, homogeneous, most efficient)
- monopolistic comp (lots small firm differentiated product)
- oligopoly (few large selling homo or differentiated)
- monopoly (1 firm supply whole market)
benchmarks
applicable to actual situations
qualitative predictions = aid decision making
understand how competition breeds efficiency
perfect competition
homogenous & fully informed
free entry and exit
all identical cost structures (no cost adv)
price takers
price takers
cant influence price
horizontal demand curve (perfectly elastic) at market price nothing above or below = no incentives
demand curve - MR price doesn’t change with output = constant mkt demand curve = downward = general demand
marginal revenue
MR
change in total revenue results from 1 unit increase in quantity
profit maximising rule
MR > MC profits rise is output expand = increase output = add more to total revenue than total cost (extra rev exceeds extra costs to produce, expand = profits increase
MR = MC profits maximised no incentive to expand or reduce
short run vs long run production and options for losses
- ceasing production (loss = fixed costs)
- continuing production at a loss (contributes to FC of production = minimise loss = optimal strategy)
short run - cant exit capital is fixed
long run - leave market
average firms revenue = average costs means ?
normal profit = zero economic profit but not zero accounting profit
costs curve include normal profit = opportunity cost of supplying entrepreneurship
fixed cost = combined yellow and grey if produce grey part is covered by revenue = producing is loss minimising
making a loss
fixed cost = costs if producing = indifferent to produce or not
shut down point
marginal cost curve = supply curve in perfect competition at any given price tells us what firm supplies
making a loss
fixed cost = costs if producing = indifferent to produce or not
shut down point
marginal cost curve = supply curve in perfect competition at any given price tells us what firm supplies
profit maximising vs loss
profit maximising level of output is where marginal costs = marginal revenue
loss -> average revenue is below average costs
long run = all costs are variable
average rev > average costs = abnormal profit
encourages entry into market in long run = increase supply
normal profit = demand curve touches bottom of long run average cost curve = no incentive
long run equilibrium
firms producing at most efficient output
price = MC (allocative efficiency)
production at bottom of AC (technical/productive efficiency)
economic efficiency
occurs when there is both technical and allocative
monopoly
inefficient & least competition
high prices
large barriers to entry
differentiated product = loyalty
steep inelastic demand curve = no subs
gain status by low price or gov legislation
natural barrier to entry
most efficient number of firms is 1
industry is governed by downward sloping average cost curve
EOS over all output levels
natural monopoly
industry most efficient for production to be concentrated in single firm
monopoly = barriers to stop entry/exit (no difference between short and long)
firm demand curve = industry curve
inelastic
abnormal profit
not efficient outcome, allocative supply = demand no
technical firm produce at bottom of average cost curve no
higher prices lower output
demand curve same as industry
monopoly marginal revenue curve
falls at twice the rate of demand
outcomes of monopolistic market
high price
low production
economic profit
redistribution of welfare - consumers lose out, monopolists gain abnormal profit
is a monopoly desirable ?
no direct competition- no incentive to reduce average costs
monopolistic set own price consumers cant compare
efficiency concerns:
price not equal marginal costs (allocative)
dont produce at bottom of long run average costs = capacity (productive)
consumer and producer surplus
consumer - total amount in excess of market price consumers would have been willing to pay (shown by demand curve)
producer - total amount of revenue in excess of marginal costs of production firm gets at market price
perfect comp = total surplus and total welfare = maximised
governments promote competition
anti bodies = seek out abuse of monopoly power
anti-competitive conduct (excessive, predatory pricing, collusion)
power to fine
prevent mergers = stop very concentrated market structures emerging
3 benefits of monopoly
- future resources for inv/innovation
- reward innovation (develop new products = widen consumer choice and aids economic growth) -
- innovation in new production process = lower AC of production
monopolistic competition
some degree of market and some discretion on price
product diff = quality, price, marketing
freedom of entry of new firms
combined perfect comp and monopoly
same conditions of perf comp but products are differentiated
only normal profit in long run due to free entry and exit
efficiency concerns
oligopoly
few firms share large proportion of industry
mutual interdependence
between firms means any independent actions 1 firm takes = impact performance of rival firms in market
must consider strategic decision making
oligopolists 2 directions
- interpedendence of firms = collude and act like monopoly = joint maximise industry profits
- mutual interdependence
3 oligopoly models
- kinked demand curve
- cournot model
- prisoners dilemma model associated with game theory
kinked demand curve model
-price increases from prevailing market price = not followed by competitors (no motivation to do so, competitors decide to keep as will gain customers, oligopolistic firm looses customers)
-price reductions from prevailing market price = matched by competitors = otherwise competitors lose market share, oligopolistic firm won’t gain significant customers
-leads to reduction in profits = demand curve not perfectly elastic = KINKED
kinked demand curve and marginal revenue
kinked demand = discontinuous at its kink and then marginal revenue curve is discontinuous too
-MR slopes away from demand curve as rev increases due to selling extra unit of output but falls as price attained is now lower for every unit sold