Unit 1 (Economic Methodology; Demand & Supply; Elasticities & Price Determination) Flashcards
(23 cards)
Allocative efficiency
Allocative efficiency occurs when the value that consumers place on a good or service equals the cost of the resources used up in production.
opportunity cost
measures the cost of a choice made in terms of the next best alternative foregone or sacrificed e.g. work leisure choices, gov spending priorities, use of scare farm land.
Capital goods
Goods that are used to make consumer goods and services capital inputs include fixed plant and machinery.
Consumer goods and services
Goods and services which satisfy our needs and wants directly
Consumer durable
Products that provide a steady flow of satisfaction / utility over their working life (e.g. a washing machine)
Consumer non-durables
Products that are used up in the act of consumption e.g. drinking a coffee
(PPFs)
depict the maximum productive potential of an economy, using a combination of two goods or services, when resources are fully and efficiently employed.
Causes of Shifts in the Production Possibility Frontier
1.Better management of factor inputs.
2.Increase in the stock of capital and labour supply.
3. Innovation and invention of new products and resources *Higher productivity / efficiency of factor inputs.
4.Discovery / extraction of new natural resources (land).
5.Higher productivity / efficiency of factor inputs.
Ceteris Paribus
economists isolate the relationship between two variables by assuming ceteris
paribus – i.e. all other influencing factors are held constant.
Factors of production
-Land
-Labour
-Capital
-Enterprise
Choice architecture
refers to the way choices are presented to consumers. The
different designs affect the choice consumers make.
Framing
is the way by which consumers are influenced by the context of how a
choice is presented. The context is made includes word choices and it affects the
choice consumers make
Nudges
aims to change the behaviour of consumers without taking away their
freedom of choice. It comes under the category of choice architecture e.g. promoting healthy vs banning junk food.
Default choice
A default choice is when a consumer is automatically enrolled into a system, such as
a pension scheme
Restricted Choice
The choice
of the consumer is restricted,
Mandated choice
A mandated choice is when consumers are required to state whether they wish to
participate in an action.
Symmetric information
means that consumers and producers have perfect market
information to make their decision= efficient allocative of resource
Asymmetric information
leads to market failure. This is when there is unequal
knowledge between consumers and producers. e.g. customer and car dealer
Anchoring
This is a type of bias created by the human tendency to rely on the first piece of
information they are given.
Availability
This is a form of bias towards events that were recent, personal or memorable. This
is because they are overestimated and cause emotional responses
Altruism
The selfless and disinterested concern towards the well-being of others.
Bounded rationality
the inability to make rational economic decisions due to imperfect info, time constraints etc.
Utility
the benefit/wellbeing/satisfaction gained from the consumption of a good or service