Parcial 1 - Economía II UFM

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Monopoly

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Monopoly

One seller. Organizations operating with the advantage of special privileges granted by the government.

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Price taker

a seller that cannot affect the price by his own actions.

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Price searcher

a seller that must choose a price.

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Competitive markets

markets in which all buyers and sellers are price takers.

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Optimal allocation of resources

no unit of the good is being produced whose marginal opportunity cost exceeds its marginal benefit. And every unit of the good whose marginal benefit exceeds its marginal cost is being produced.

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Characteristics of perfect competition

  • There is a large number of buyers and sellers so nobody possesses market power.

  • Market participants possess full and complete information of alternatives.

  • Sellers produce a homogenous product.

  • There is costless mobility of resources.

  • Economic actors are price takers.

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Mistakes with perfect competition

  • It has overlooked the entrepreneur, which is the driving force of real-world markets.

  • It also ignores the plan-adjustment process that characterizes real-world market activity.

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Fair competition

Open entry and exit

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Cartel

cooperative arrangement between companies intended to promote a mutual interest. Sellers agreeing not to compete with each other.

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Problems of cartels

  • How to prevent competition among its members, who will try to circumvent the agreement

  • How to keep new competitors from trying to enter the market

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Predatory price-cutting

reducing prices below cost in order to drive a rival out of business or prevent new rivals from entering with the intention of raising prices afterward to recoup all losses.

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Distribution of income

the product of the supply and demand for productive services.

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Capital

produced goods that can be used to produce future goods.

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Human capital

productive capabilities generated by investment and embodied in human beings, such as knowledge and skills.

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Three types of rights

Actual, legal, moral

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Unions

Groups of organized workers that claim to compete against corporations, but in reality they want to exclude other workers who would do the same work for less.

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Veil of ignorance

Imagine you would have to choose the laws of society, but before choosing, you forgot everything about yourself.

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Externalities

costs or benefits that fall on bystanders.

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Negative externalities

costs imposed on others that are not taken into account when making a decision.

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Externalities are also called

Spillover cost or external cost

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Positive externalities

benefits from an action that the decision-maker does not take into account.

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Internalizing an externality

when the actor finds out about the consequences of his actions, takes the externality into account and chooses to alter his behavior.

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We can reduce externalities through

Negotiation, adjudication, legislation, command and control, taxes, Coase theorem

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Negotiation

work it out for ourselves, it produces mutual gains from exchange.

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Adjudication

a process for discovering who has which rights. It aims at maintaining the continuity of expectations.

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Legislation

The creation of new rules

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Command and control

legislation of physical restrictions.

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Bubble concept

permit factories to exceed the limits at one point if they could make it up at another point.

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Rights to pollute

firms with more emissions can buy these rights, so the total amount of emissions stays the same.

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Coase theorem

a solution to externalities through the creation of new markets.

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Pigouvian tax

a tax on a good that produces negative externalities, in hopes to reduce it.

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Network externalities

The value of a good or service increases the more people use it.

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Externalities graph

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Structured individualism

el individuo carga con los beneficios y costos de sus acciones.

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Private or competitive sector

The market sector

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Public sector

Conformado por el gobierno

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Coerce

induce cooperation by threatening to violently reduce people's options.

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Persuade

induce cooperation by promising to expand people's options.

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Free-riders

people who accept benefits without paying their share of the cost of providing those benefits.

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Paternalistic argument

the widely held belief that the powerful will take advantage of the weak unless government regulates certain kinds of voluntary exchange.

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Prisoners dilemma

knowt flashcard image
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What the state is not

We are not the government

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What the state is

Provides a legal, orderly, systematic channel for the predation of private property. it is the monopoly of violence.

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Economic means of acquiring wealth

Production and exchange

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Political means of acquiring wealth

seizure of another's goods or services by the use of force and violence.

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Ways to raise government revenue

  • Taxation

  • Public borrowing or debt issue

  • Money creation

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Neutral tax

aquel impuesto que no cambia la conducta.

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Positive principles of taxation

analyze who bears the burden of taxes and what other economic effects can be expected to result from the imposition of taxes.

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Normative principles of taxation

how tax policy can be used to design as desirable a tax system as possible.

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Unit tax

a tax charged per unit of a good exchanged.

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Ad valorem tax

a tax based on the dollar value of the goods sold.

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Retail sales tax

taxes calculated as a percentage of retail sales, a type of ad valorem tax.

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Excise tax

taxes placed on particular types of goods, can be either unit or ad valorem.

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Tax incidence

the ultimate burden of the tax, after shifting has taken place.

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Welfare cost of taxation is also known as

Excess burden or deadweight loss

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Welfare cost of taxation

all the exchanges that could be made, but are not made, because of a tax.

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Lump sum tax

a tax that completely eliminates the excess burden of taxation.

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Ramsey rule

states that to minimize the excess burden of taxation, taxes should be placed on goods in inverse proportion to the elasticity of demand for the goods.

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Compliance costs

the costs imposed on taxpayers to comply with the tax laws, such as collecting and keeping records.

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Administrative costs

home by the government to collect taxes.

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Political cost

home by the taxpayers and the government as a result of taxpayers trying to influence tax laws.

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Earmarked tax

taxes whose revenues are designated to a particular spending activity.

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General fund financing

the tax revenues are placed in the general fund, from which government programs are financed. The alternative to earmarking.

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Benefit principle

states that the people who benefit from the government's expenditures should be the ones who pay for them.

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Ability-to-pay principle

states that individuals should pay taxes in proportion to their ability to pay.

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Horizontal equity

individuals with an equal ability to pay should pay equal amounts of taxes.

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Vertical equity

individuals with a greater ability to pay should pay more taxes.

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Proportional tax

a tax that is the same percentage of a taxpayer's income no matter what the level of income.

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Progressive tax

a tax that is a larger percentage of the taxpayer's income as income rises.

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Regressive tax

a tax that is a smaller percentage of the taxpayer's income as income lowers.

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Sumptuary tax

taxes designed to discourage the consumption of the taxed good.

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Revenue-neutral carbon tax

el gobierno "devuelve" parte del impuesto sobre la contaminación

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Tax graph

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Laffer curve

<p>belief that tax cuts generate additional revenue.</p>

belief that tax cuts generate additional revenue.

<p>belief that tax cuts generate additional revenue.</p>
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The old-time fiscal religion

Deficits emerged primarily during periods of war; budgets normally produced surpluses during peacetime, and these surpluses were used to retire the debt created during war emergencies.

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Fiscal constitution

rules guiding fiscal choices

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Multiplier effect

  • By creating jobs, governments would save money that would have been spent on unemployment benefits.

  • The increase in the number of emplyed people would create additional spending power and therefore boost the economy and tax receipts.

  • Increased tax receipts would pay off the initial debt.

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Public choice theory

the application of economic methods to the study of political processes.

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Market failure

There are certain areas where market forces do not opperate effectively and therefore we must have government corrective action.

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Bifurcated view of human action

We know that people in markets are driven by self-interest, but we must also accept that people in government are driven by the same thing.

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Public choice theory’s main question

What policy is likely to emerge from real-world democratic politics, and how does that compare to market alternatives?

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