HBX- Economics 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Market Outcome

A

Refers to the quantity demanded and accompanying price charged for a particular product or service.

(Below is a graph of the supply and demand of lawyers)
the downward sloping blue line is the demand curve, and
the upward sloping red line is the supply curve

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2
Q

How many law graduates would firms be willing to hire at a salary of $80,000?

A

Law firms will be willing to hire 90,000 new graduates.

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3
Q

Market Equilibrium

A

A stable market outcome at which there are no buyers willing to pay for a product that cannot get it (no excess demand) and no sellers who produce a product and cannot sell it (no excess supply); graphically, the market equilibrium occurs at the point where the supply and demand curve for a product or service intersect, denoting the equilibrium price and quantity sold.

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4
Q

total surplus to consumers

A

The difference between consumer willingness to pay and price, added up for all consumers who get to transact in the market.

For example, if the price were $60, then quantity demanded is 40 units and quantity supplied is 60 units, so the amount traded is determined by the demand curve (40 units). And even though every consumer who transacts pays the same price ($60), some end up better off than others—since they had a higher WTP for the product. So a consumer whose willingness to pay was $80 ends up with a surplus of $20.

the gray-shaded upper triangle or trapezoid

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5
Q

total surplus to producers

A

the difference between price and supplier marginal cost (or variable cost), added up for all suppliers who transact in the market. In this case, a firm that was willing to sell the good for $30 can now sell it for $60—and earn $30 in surplus (or profit).

he blue-shaded lower triangle or trapezoid

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6
Q

Total Surplus / Total Value Created

A

the consumer surplus and producer surplus combined.

(the blue and grey area combined)

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7
Q

Where is the total surplus the greatest?

A

It’s when we hit the market outcome—where the demand and supply curves intersect.

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8
Q

If a market is not at its equilibrium, and there is excess supply, what is likely to happen to the market over time?

A

Price will decrease to the point at which quantity supplied is equal to quantity demanded.

Price will return to equilibrium as producers adjust their price and quantity to match demand.

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9
Q

At the current price of $1.50 per dozen, producers are willing to produce 1 million pencils, and consumers want to purchase 1.2 million. What will happen to the market for pencils over time?

A

Producers will raise their prices until the point at which quantity supplied is equal to quantity demanded.

$1.50 is below the equilibrium price for a dozen pencils, and market forces will raise the price until the market is in equilibrium.

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10
Q

As we learnt in earlier modules, demand and supply curves are just abstractions: we never really see them. All we see are the _______

A

market outcomes – the “equilibrium prices,” if you will—but we never really see the trades that didn’t occur.

prices contain information that coordinates—and incentivizes—both sides. For example, if prices are too low, buyers who are willing to pay more than that price will search for (and reach) sellers who are willing to sell to them at a higher price—putting upward pressure on prices. If prices are very high, some sellers will be stuck with goods that no one is willing to purchase—and they’ll reduce prices to attract more buyers.

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11
Q

Are short-run indicators good predictors of long-run outcomes?

A

No. Sustaining performance is hard for firms—even for the most successful ones. And that’s why short-run indicators may not be good predictors of long-run outcomes.

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12
Q

What are examples of factors that slow or even reverse the dynamics of perfect competition?

A
  • Network effects,
  • scale,
  • regulation,
  • patents, and
  • innovative capabilities
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13
Q

Perfect Competition

A

A market condition in which firms in an industry cannot profit from selling a particular good or service due to the presence of other competitive firms resulting in the market price being equal to the firms’ marginal cost; a perfectly competitive market is characterized by consumer indifference between firms’ products and identical firm cost structures.

  • there are profits being made in an industry. More companies enter as a result. They piggyback on the learnings of existing businesses by mimicking either their technology, their business models, or other processes.
  • As more and more of such companies enter, their costs look more and more similar to each other. So that what was once the most efficient company, a company that commanded the lowest cost, now finds it hard to sustain that advantage in the face of competition.
  • The net result of this dynamic is the following: companies end up looking more or less similar,
  • *compete fiercely for customers and have the same costs.** In other words, the supply curve in the long run looks essentially flat. And in that case, no firm makes any profits.

This is what we typically call perfect competition.

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14
Q

A recent increase in the frequency of apartment fires has led many landlords to ban the use of candles. What effect will this have on the market for candles?

  • Equilibrium price and quantity will both increase.
  • Equilibrium price will increase and equilibrium quantity will decrease.
  • Equilibrium price will decrease and equilibrium quantity will increase.
  • Equilibrium price and quantity will both decrease.
A
  • Equilibrium price and quantity will both increase.
    • This would occur as a result of an increase in demand. See correct answer for a more detailed explanation.
  • Equilibrium price will increase and equilibrium quantity will decrease.
    • This would occur as a result of an decrease in supply. See correct answer for a more detailed explanation.
  • Equilibrium price will decrease and equilibrium quantity will increase.
    • This would occur as a result of an increase in supply. See correct answer for a more detailed explanation.
  • Equilibrium price and quantity will both decrease.
    • Since demand for candles has decreased, the market outcome will be at a lower price and quantity than before.
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15
Q

A mining company has discovered huge silver deposits in a previously unmined region. What impact will this have on the market for silver?

A

Price will decrease and quantity will increase.

The new discovery increases the supply of silver, which leads to a higher quantity and a lower price.

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16
Q

Manufacturers of a type of cable used to charge electronic devices have improved the production process, reducing their costs. Meanwhile, a popular new e-reader that is compatible with the charger has been released. What is the effect on the market for the chargers?

A

Quantity increases, and the effect on price cannot be determined.

The new manufacturing process increases the supply of the chargers, but the new e-reader increases the demand. Quantity will certainly increase, but the effect on price will depend on the magnitude of these two changes.

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17
Q

Assessing the impact of any “intervention” on a market—a change in technology, the effect of new substitutes or complements, the impact of a policy change, etc.—is a very common and useful exercise.
When you are analyzing the impact of any event or intervention like these on the market equilibrium price and quantity, you want to ask two simple questions….. What are they?

A
  1. Has demand changed? If the event affects consumers’ WTP, the demand curve will shift.
  2. Has supply changed? If the event affects suppliers’ costs, the supply curve will shift.
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18
Q
  • If Supply Increases….
  • If Supply Decreases ….
  • If Demand Increases….
  • If Demand Decreases….
A
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19
Q

If Supply INCREASES (curve shift to the right)

A

Quantity ↑ Price ↓

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20
Q

Supply DECREASES

A

Quantity ↓ Price ↑

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21
Q

Demand INCREASES (curve shift to the right)

A

Quantity ↑ Price ↑

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22
Q

If Demand DECREASES

A

Quantity ↓ Price ↓

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23
Q

Demand AND Supply Increase

A

Quantity increases, but price is undetermined.

  • Manufacturers of a type of cable used to charge electronic devices have improved the production process, reducing their costs. Meanwhile, a popular new e-reader that is compatible with the charger has been released. What is the effect on the market for the chargers?
  • A Mexican restaurant in Boston uses tomatillos in many of its dishes, but must pay to ship them from another state where they are grown. The restaurant has recently begun serving a popular green enchiladas dish that uses tomatillos. Meanwhile, fuel prices have decreased. What impact will these changes have on the market for tomatillos in Boston?
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24
Q

Supply increase Demand decrease

A

Price Up and Quanitity ? (Can’t be determined)

25
Q

Demand is up AND down

A

Neither price nor quantity can be determined.

26
Q

Increased Demand and Decreased Supply

A

Price goes up, but quantity is undetermined

27
Q

Decreased Demand and Decreased Supply

A

Quantity will decrease, but price cannot be determined.

28
Q
A
29
Q

Consider the market for print encyclopedias. In the last 10 years, the cost of producing encyclopedias has decreased substantially due to lower printing and information acquisition costs. At the same time, more and more people have started using the internet as their primary source of information. What can we infer about the change in the price and quantity in the encyclopedia market over the last 10 years?

A

With a greater number of alternative sources of information, demand for encyclopedias will decrease. This fall in demand will result in both lower prices and quantity. At the same time, the supply of encyclopedias will increase due to lower costs. This lowers the price and increases quantity. Thus, we can only say for certain that price decreases. The overall change in quantity will be determined by the relative magnitudes of the two effects.

30
Q

Computer prices in the last year have gone down due to technological advancements. At the same time, there has been a large decrease in the supply of new software developers, raising the costs of producing computer software. What will be the impact on the equilibrium price and quantity of computer software?

A

The price will increase and the impact on quantity cannot be determined.

Computers and computer software are complements. As a result of the fall in computer prices, demand for computer software will increase. The increased demand will cause both prices and quantity to rise. At the same time, the supply of software will fall due to the higher costs. This raises the price of software and causes quantity to fall. Thus we can only say for certain that price increases. The overall change in quantity will be determined by the relative magnitudes of the two shifts.

31
Q

Price Ceiling

A

A market intervention that sets a maximum price that can be charged for a product or service.

Bruce Springsteen Tickets

32
Q

A price ceiling setting the maximum price of bread below the equilibrium price will result in a:

A

shortage of bread.

At below-market prices, suppliers will not want to produce as much bread as consumers will want to purchase, leading to a shortage.

33
Q
A

D is producer surplus, and D+E+F is revenue.

Producer surplus is the difference between price and the supply curve. Revenue is the price multiplied by the quantity sold.

34
Q
A

A+B

Consumer surplus is the difference between the demand curve and price.

35
Q

Anti-gouging laws

A

restrictions or laws (typically enacted by states) against increasing prices in the face of an event like Hurricane Sandy.

36
Q

During a severe drought, a country passes a law to keep flour prices low. Which of the following would be the LEAST likely to result from this law?

  • Secondary markets will resell flour at higher prices
  • New suppliers will bring in additional flour from outside the country
  • Long lines will form where flour is being sold.
  • Flour will be available to consumers with willingness to pay lower than the “market outcome” or “equilibrium” price.
A

New suppliers will bring in additional flour from outside the country

  • Although suppliers might bring additional flour to the region, the law will actually decrease their motivation to do so.
37
Q

Price Floor

A

A market intervention that sets a minimum price that can be charged for a product or service.

Example- minimum wage

38
Q

A restaurant typically has a wait time of over one hour before diners can be seated. Which of the following must be true?

  • The restaurant serves the customers with the highest willingness to pay for its food.
  • The restaurant serves the customers with the lowest willingness to pay for its food.
  • The restaurant’s price is below the market equilibrium.
A

The restaurant’s price is below the market equilibrium.

A long queue implies that there are more customers who want to eat in the restaurant than the restaurant has the capacity to serve, or that there is a shortage of capacity in the restaurant. If the restaurant’s prices were at the market equilibrium for its product, quantity demanded and quantity supplied would be equal.

39
Q

A minimum wage is more likely to increase unemployment if the labor supply is:

  • elastic.
  • inelastic.
A

elastic.

  • An elastic labor supply would mean employees would want to work many more hours if wages increased slightly. This would make a price floor more likely to lead to a surplus of labor.

inelastic.

  • An inelastic supply of labor means that changing wages will not have much effect on the number of hours worked.
40
Q

Under which of the following circumstances would a minimum wage be least likely to lead to unemployment?

  • Demand for labor is very elastic
  • There is only one employer in the market
  • The minimum wage is set above the market equilibrium wage.
A
  • Demand for labor is very elastic
    • In this case, a higher wage would lead to a great decrease in quantity of labor demanded, making unemployment likely.
  • There is only one employer in the market
    • If one firm is the only employer in a market, it may be capable of paying lower wages than its top “willingness to pay,” since there are no other firms competing with it for employees. A minimum wage might increase wages while keeping them below the firms WTP, in which case it might not decrease the quantity of labor demanded.
  • The minimum wage is set above the market equilibrium wage.
    • A minimum wage above equilibrium would be a “binding” price floor.
41
Q

Which of the following would be least likely to increase unemployment?

  • A law setting a minimum wage below the market equilibrium wage.
  • A law requiring companies to give all employees 20 vacation days per year.
  • A law requiring companies to match employees’ contributions to their 401k plans.
A

A law setting a minimum wage below the market equilibrium wage.

  • Setting a price floor below equilibrium will have no impact on the market.

A law requiring companies to give all employees 20 vacation days per year.

  • Companies that did not formerly give this many vacation days would see this law as an added cost of labor, and if wages did not adjust to make up for it, unemployment could result.

A law requiring companies to match employees’ contributions to their 401k plans.

  • Companies that did not formerly match 401k contributions would see this law as an added cost of labor, and if wages did not adjust to make up for it, unemployment could result.
42
Q

What factors play a role in determining who captures how much value….?

A
  • Consumers’ “initial endowments” (or, their initial distribution of wealth) matter, as we’ve just seen, since higher incomes usually mean higher willingness to pay, and therefore greater consumer surplus.
  • Similarly, a firm’s innovativeness will determine how productive its technology is relative to that of other firms, which in turn affects their relative costs, and therefore their producer surplus.
  • On top of that, the allocation mechanism matters: as we saw earlier in this module, pricing and queuing are just two of many different mechanisms for allocating products in an economy, but they have different implications for whether or not there’s excess demand or supply, and for who benefits by how much.
  • And last, the slopes of demand and supply curves obviously matter in determining the division of value. A relatively inelastic supply curve implies that small demand shocks will result in large swings in prices for firms. But it also implies that the most efficient firms capture a lot of surplus, while others capture very little. Conversely, a relatively inelastic demand curve will result in large swings in prices with small changes in supply, but will also mean that some high-WTP buyers capture a lot of surplus.

This entire discussion centers around two aspects (or measures) of fairness:

  1. first, how is value distributed between the buyers and sellers that participate in the market.
  2. Second, there’s the pesky question of those who don’t get to transact at all in the market – those who are way down on the demand curve (like consumer B) or way up on the supply curve (like firm D). Here, again, our notions of fairness matter greatly, and depend on the context. Shutting out inefficient firms—or even consumers who can’t afford concert tickets—is one thing. Shutting out buyers who can’t afford food or health care due to high prices is another.
43
Q

What are several measures of fairness?

A
  • value division between consumers and firms,
  • value division across consumers, and
  • value division across firms.
  • the distinction between labor and capital.
44
Q

Debates over the attractiveness of markets often center around two different objectives: _______ and ______

A

efficiency and equity.

Markets—and market prices—are often an efficient way of allocating resources. But efficiency may have very little to do with equity or fairness.

45
Q

Which of the following laws would lead to a surplus (quantity supplied more than quantity demanded) of soybeans, if the market price is $14 per bushel?

  • A price floor at $10
  • A price floor at $20
  • A price ceiling at $10
  • A price ceiling at $20
A

A price floor at $10

Setting a price floor below the market price will have no impact on the market.

A price floor at $20

Soybean growers will want to supply more soybeans than consumers will want to purchase, leading to a surplus.

A price ceiling at $10

Consumers would want to purchase more soybeans than soybean farmers would want to grow, leading to a shortage.

A price ceiling at $20

Setting a price ceiling above the market price will have no impact on the market.

46
Q

Which of the following situations is most likely to result in an active resale or secondary market for iPads, if the equilibrium price is $500?

  • A price floor at $600
  • A price ceiling at $600
  • A price floor at $400
  • A price ceiling at $400
A

A price ceiling at $400

  • A price ceiling at $400 would lead to excess demand, motivating those who bought the iPads at the low list price to resell them at higher prices.
47
Q

Which of the following laws would result in the greatest consumer surplus + producer surplus?

  • A price floor set 10% below the equilibrium price of the product
  • A law limiting the quantity produced to a level 5% below equilibrium quantity.
  • A price ceiling set 5% below the equilibrium price of the product.
A

A price floor set 10% below the equilibrium price of the product

  • Since this price floor sets a minimum price below the equilibrium, it will have no effect on the market outcome, and will not decrease total surplus.
48
Q
A

D + E + F is the revenue earned by electricians and C is the deadweight loss.

The revenue electricians earn can be calculated by multiplying the quantity sold by price, which in this case gives the rectangle made by D + E + F. C is the deadweight loss because it represents the surplus (WTP - WTS) from additional transactions that would take place in equilibrium, but do not occur under the price ceiling.

49
Q

A price ceiling is set at 10% below the market equilibrium price. Which of the following must result from the price ceiling? Select all that apply.

Consumer surplus decreases

Producer surplus decreases

Total surplus decreases

Deadweight loss increases

There is no effect because the price ceiling is below the market equilibrium price.

A

A price ceiling is set at 10% below the market equilibrium price. Which of the following must result from the price ceiling? Select all that apply.

Consumer surplus decreases

Under the price ceiling, fewer consumers will be able to purchase the good than would have bought the good at the equilibrium price, decreasing consumer surplus. However, the consumers that do purchase the good are buying it at a lower price, which increases their own consumer surplus. Thus, total consumer surplus could increase or decrease, depending on the relative size of each effect.

Producer surplus decreases

Under the price ceiling, fewer consumers are purchasing the good and they are each buying it at a lower price. Both effects lower producer surplus.

Total surplus decreases

Total surplus is WTP – WTS for each item sold. Under the price ceiling, the WTP and the WTS are not changing, but the number of items sold has decreased. Thus, total surplus has decreased.

Deadweight loss increases

Deadweight loss is the amount of total surplus that would have been created at the equilibrium price but is not created due to the market intervention. If total surplus decreases, then deadweight loss must increase.

There is no effect because the price ceiling is below the market equilibrium price.

A price ceiling ABOVE the market equilibrium price would have no effect. A price ceiling below the market equilibrium price does have an impact on the market.

50
Q

Dead-weight loss (DWL)

A

The total lost value of trades that didn’t occur in a market, but would have occurred if the market was at its equilibrium point.

Deadweight loss is the amount of total surplus that would have been created at the equilibrium price but is not created due to the market intervention. If total surplus decreases, then deadweight loss must increase.

51
Q

What are three questions to ask when analyzing the market in terms of supply and demand:

A
  1. What are the sources of supply and demand in this market—who’s buying and who’s selling?
  2. What drives the shape (or elasticity) of the supply and demand curves? That is, how sensitive is each side of the market to changes in price and what factors drive this sensitivity?
  3. What forces could shift supply and demand in this market?
52
Q

Ultimately, a firm’s willingness to pay for an advertisement is influenced by the advertisement’s impact on sales and profits. And that’s usually driven by what three key metrics??

A
  1. The total number of viewers of the advertisement
  2. The share of “relevant” viewers (that is, those who would potentially buy the product). For a firm like Procter & Gamble, relevant viewers might be consumers who are in the market for products like diapers, hair color, laundry detergent, and beauty products. (You can immediately see why the number of “relevant viewers” is so large!). Similarly, for General Motors, relevant viewers are those people looking to purchase a car.
  3. The probability that the advertisement convinces the relevant viewer to actually buy the product. This, of course, depends on the effectiveness of the advertisement.
53
Q

When you think about the impact of any change in a market,
any new technology, be sure to consider its impact
on both ____ and _____, not just one side of the market.

A

demand and supply

54
Q

What is the effect of a $1/pack excise tax on the marginal cost curve for cigarettes?

A

It increases costs by $1/pack.

If cigarette producers will have to pay a $1 tax on each pack, that effectively increases their costs per pack by $1.

55
Q

Consumers bear more of the incidence of a tax when demand is:

  • more elastic
  • less elastic
A

less elastic

When the demand curve is steeper, or more “inelastic,” consumers will bear large price increases, and will end up “paying” a greater portion of the tax.

56
Q

Firms bear more of the incidence of a tax when supply is:

  • more elastic
  • less elastic
A

less elastic

When the supply curve is steeper, or more “inelastic,” suppliers will end up “paying” a greater portion of the tax.

57
Q

What determines the true incidence of any tax?

A

the elasticity of the demand and supply curves!

58
Q

Which of the following firms would want to purchase RMB?

  • A company based in China hoping to sell its products to US buyers
  • A company based in China hoping to purchase inputs for its products from suppliers in the US
  • A company based in the US hoping to sell its products to Chinese buyers
  • A company based in the US hoping to purchase inputs for its products from suppliers in China
A
  • A company based in China hoping to sell its products to US buyers
    • This company will not need to purchase any currency. The buyers purchasing its products will need to pay in RMB.
  • A company based in China hoping to purchase inputs for its products from suppliers in the US
    • This company will need USD, not RMB, in order to pay for the inputs.
  • A company based in the US hoping to sell its products to Chinese buyers
    • This company will not need to purchase any currency. The buyers purchasing its products will need to pay in USD.
  • A company based in the US hoping to purchase inputs for its products from suppliers in China
    • This company will need RMB in order to pay for the inputs.