Term
first principles of individual choice |
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Definition
1. Resources are scarce 2. The real coast of something is what you must give up to get it (oppurtunity cost) 3. "How Much?" is a decision at the margin 4. People usually exploit opportunities t make themselves better off |
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Term
Principles that underlie the interaction of individual choices |
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Definition
1. There are gains from trade 2. Markets move towards equilibrium 3. Resources should be used as effciently as possible to achieve society's goals 4. Markets usually lead to effciency 5. When markets dont achieve maximum efficiency, govenment intervention can improve society's welfare |
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Term
Principles that underlie economy wide interactions |
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Definition
1. One person's spending is another person's income 2. Overall spending sometimes gets out of line with the economy's productive capacity 3. Government policies can change spending |
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Term
Production Possibility Frontier |
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Definition
Helps deal with tradeoffs. Improves understanding of trade-offs by considering a simplified economy that produces only two goods. |
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Term
Comparative advantage vs. Absolute advantage |
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Definition
Comparative advantage is when opportunit cost of producing the good or service is lower for that individual than for other people. Absolute advantage is an activity that an individual can do better than other people. |
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Term
Determinants demand curves |
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Definition
1. Changes in prics of related goods or services 2. Changes in income 3. Changes in tastes 4. Changes in expectations 5. Changes in number of consumers |
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Term
Determinants of market supply curve |
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Definition
1. Changes in input prices 2. Changes in the prices of related goods or services 3. Changes in technology 4. Changes in expectations 5. Changes in the number of producers |
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Term
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Definition
an increase in price for a good or service leads people to demand a lower quantity |
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Term
change in supply (demand) vs. change in quantity supplied (demanded) |
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Definition
changge in supply shifts the curve,change in quantity supplied moves the point along the curve |
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Term
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Definition
legal restrictions on how high or how low a market price may go: 1. Price ceiling - max price sellers can charge, protects consumers 2. Price floor - minimum price buyers are required to pay, protects producers |
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Term
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Definition
an upper limit on the quantity of some good that can be bought or sold. Also known as quota. The total amount of the good that can be legally transacted is the quota limit. |
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Term
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Definition
Due to taxes: area under eq. point is fall in prooducer surplus. area above eq. point is fall in consumer surplus. Area of tax revenue is area between four points. Divide tax by 2 and add and subtract from eq. points to get new points |
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Term
price elasticity of demand |
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Definition
percent change in the quantity demanded divided by the percent chagne in the price (dropping the minus sign). Best to use midpoint method : (Q2-Q1/(Q1+Q2)/2)/(P2-P1/(P1+P2)/2) |
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Term
Price elasticity of demand on a downward sloping demand curve |
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Definition
Price effect: after price increases, each unit sold sell at a higher price, which tends to increase revenue Quantity effect: After price increases, few units are sold, lowers revenue. |
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Term
income elasticy of demand |
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Definition
% change in quantity demanded/% change in income |
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Term
cross-price elasticity of demand |
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Definition
% change in quantity of A demanded/ % change in price of B |
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Term
Price elasticty of supply |
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Definition
% change in quantity supplied/ % change in prie |
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Term
Inelastic, elastic, or unit elastic |
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Definition
Inelastic: between 0 and 1 Unit-elastic: exactly 1 Elastic: greater than 1 Vertical demand curve: Perfectly inelastic Horiztonal demand curve: Perfectly Elastic |
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Term
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Definition
Total Consumer: Add up all of the individual surplus (Willingness to pay - price paid).Also the area under the demand curve Producer Surplus: Price recieved - cost. Above supply curve under price. |
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Term
Explicit ad implicit cost |
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Definition
Explicit cost is a cost that requires and outlay of money. Implicit cot does not involve an outlay of money. It is mesurd in dollar terms of the benefits that are forgone. |
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Term
Accounting profit and economic profit |
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Definition
Accounting profit: business's revenue minus the explicit cost and depreciation Economic profit: businss revenue minus the opportunity cost of its resources (usually less than accounting profit) |
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Term
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Definition
the additional benefit derived from producing one more unit of that good or service. |
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Term
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Definition
the additional cost incurred by producing ne more unit of that good or service |
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Term
optimal quantity of an activity |
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Definition
As stated in the principle of marginal analysis: it is when marginal benefit = marginal cost |
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Term
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Definition
measureof the satisfaction the consumer derives from consumption of goods and services |
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Term
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Definition
change in total utility generated by consuming one additional unit of that good or service |
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Term
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Definition
Shows the consumption bundles available to a consumer who spends all of their income |
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Term
Optimal consumption bundle |
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Definition
maximizes total utility given the budget constraint |
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Term
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Definition
A line that shows all the consumptonbundles that yield the same amount of total utility fo an individual |
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Term
Marginal rate of substitution |
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Definition
the ratio of the marginal utility of one good to the margnal utility of another |
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Term
Perfect Substitutes vs. Perfect complements |
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Definition
Perfect substitutes when the marginal rate of substitution doesnot depend on the quantities cosumed, the indifference curve is straight. Perfect complements are when the consumer wants to consume the goods in the same ratio regardless of their price, they are the L shaped indifference curves |
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Term
How price changes affect the utility maximizing level of goods purchased |
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Definition
A change in a price of one good changes where the budget line intercepts a axis. A change in income shifts the budget line to the left or right |
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Term
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Definition
the relationship beween the quantity of inputs a firm uses and the quantity o output it produces. Fixed input: input whose quantity is fixed for a period of time and cannot be varied. Variable input: an input whose quantity the firm can vary at any time |
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Term
Marginal product of labor |
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Definition
change in quantity of outut/ change in quantity of labor |
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Term
diminishing marginal product |
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Definition
As the quantity of one product (labor) increases, the amount per worker decreases |
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Term
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Definition
curve which has a constant output. different combinations of labor and capital are shown. Isocost lines show all the combinations of labor and capital and firm can hire based off their budget |
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Term
basic concepts of production in the short run |
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Definition
It inovled the fixed cost (cost that does not depend on the quantity of output produced) and the average fixed cost (FC/Q). One input must be fixed |
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Term
basic concepts of production in the long run |
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Definition
All inputs can be varied. It involves the LRATC |
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Term
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Definition
what you must give up in order to get a product. |
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Term
fixed cost, variable cost, and total cost |
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Definition
fixed cost: does not depend on the quantity of output produced. It is the cost of the fixed input Variable cost: depends on the quantity of output produced. Cost of variable input. Total cost:Sum of fixed and variable costs |
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Term
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Definition
Change in total cost/ change in quantity of output
additional cost of each additional unit |
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Term
Average total cost, Average Fixed Cost, Average variable cost |
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Definition
ATC = TC/Q AFC = FC/Q AVC = VC/Q |
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Term
Perfectly competetive market |
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Definition
all market participants are price takers. A good is a standardized product. Free entry and exit. D = MC. Profit or loss = (ATC-MR)*Q |
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Term
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Definition
when market price falls below average variable cost (AVC) |
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Term
Perfect Competitive Firm's Profitability and Production Conditions |
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Definition
P> min ATC: firm profits. enter industry in the long run P= min ATC: firm breaks even P < ATC:no profit. Exit industry in long run P < AVC firm shuts down in the short run |
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Term
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Definition
When a monopolist (firm that is only producer of a good that has no close substitutes) controls and industry. Optimal point at MR = MC. |
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Term
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Definition
A small number of producers. imperfect competition. |
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Term
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Definition
when firms ignore the effets of thei actions on each others' profits |
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Term
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Definition
when firms cooperate to raise their joint profits |
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Term
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Definition
a game where each player has incentive to choose an action that benefits itself at the other playe's expense and when both players act in this way, both are worse off than if they had acted cooperatively |
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Term
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Definition
when it is a player's best action regardless of the action taken by the other player |
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Term
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Definition
result when each player in a game choose the action that maximizes his or her payoff given the actions of other players, ignoring the effects of their actin on the payoffs recieved by other players |
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Term
monopolistic competition in short run |
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Definition
If MC=MR and Pd > ATC a firm is profitable if they are not profitable, firms exit |
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Term
monopolistic competition in the long run |
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Definition
as more firms enter market, the demand goes down for producers lowering profit. Eventually industry ends up at zer-profit equilibrium |
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Term
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Definition
External costs and benefits. External costs are negative externalities. External benefits are positibe externalities |
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