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AP Microeconomics Unit Review

Unit 1 : Introduction to Economics

1.1 : Scarcity

  • Economics : study of scarcity and choice

  • Individual choice : given scarcity, individuals make decisions about what to do and not to do

  • Scarcity : unlimited wants, limited resources (example : land)

  • Positive statement : true statement (what is)

  • Normative statement : opinionated statement  (what should be)

1.2: Resource Allocation and Economic Systems

  • Market economy : individual producers and consumers decide what/how/and for whom to produce (limited government intervention)

  • Command economy : publicly owned, a central authority will make decisions for production and consumption (has government intervention)

  • Property rights : establish ownership and grants individuals the right to trade goods/services with each other

  • Resources : anything that can be used to produce something else

  • Factors of production :

    • land (natural resources),

    • labor (the effort of workers),

    • capital (all manufactured resources),

    • entrepreneurship (risk taking, innovation, and organization)

  • Opportunity cost : value of the next-best alternative that you give up to make another choice

  • Microeconomics : individuals/households/firms making decisions and how those decisions interact (ex : college vs. a job)

  • Macroeconomics : behavior of the economy as a whole (ex: employment)

1.3: Production Possibilities Curve

  • Production possibilities curve (PPC) : illustrates the trade-offs that faces an economy, compares only two goods

  • Trade-offs : giving up something for something else

  • If the PPC is linear, it has a constant opportunity cost, if it is curved, it has increasing opportunity costs

  • Economic growth : a sustained rise in aggregate output and an increase in standard of living (causes are developments in technology, or an increase in resources)

  • Productive efficiency : lowest cost possible on the PPC

  • Allocative efficiency : the economy allocates resources so consumers are well off as possible, producing what is demanded

1.4: Comparative Advantage and Trade

  • Trade : people split up the work, and provide each other with a good in return for another

  • Comparative advantage : lower opportunity cost in the production of a good (you cannot have a comparative advantage in both goods)

  • Absolute advantage : higher output

1.5: Cost-Benefit Analysis

  • Terms of Trade : the rate at which one good can be exchanged for another (if the price of a good obtained from trade is less than the opportunity cost of producing it, trade is beneficial)

  • Capital goods: goods that make consumer goods (ex. machinery)

  • Consumer goods : goods that are consumed (ex. food)

1.6: Marginal Analysis and Consumer Choice

  • Utility : the measure of personal satisfaction (util is a unit of utility)

  • Marginal utility : the change in total utility by consumer one additional unit of that good/service

  • Principle of diminishing marginal utility : additional units of a good/service add less total utility than the previous units do

  • Marginal utility per dollar : MUgood/Pgood (marginal utility of one unit of the good / price of one unit of the good)

  • Optimal consumption rule : to maximize utility, marginal utility per dollar spend on each good = service in consumption bundle, MUc/Pc = MUt/Pt

Unit 2  : Supply and Demand

2.1: Demand

  • Demand is downwards sloping

  • Law of demand : As price increases, demand decreases, and as price decreases, demand increases

  • Movement along the curve : change in price

  • Shifters of demand :

    • Tastes,

    • related goods (substitutes + complements),

    • income (normal + inferior goods),

    • (# of) buyers,

    • expectation of future prices

    • (TRIBE)

  • Substitution effect : as the price of a good increases, consumers substitute the good with another that is cheaper

  • Substitutes : good/service that can be used in place of another, when price of one increases, consumers will buy more of the other (ex. coffee and tea)

  • Complements : goods/services that are consumed together (ex. hamburgers and buns)

  • Income effect : as income increases, people will buy more of normal goods, and less of inferior goods

  • Normal good : increase in demand when consumer’s income increases (ex. oreos)

  • Inferior good : increase in demand when consumer’s income decreases (ex. off brand oreos)

2.2 : Supply

  • Supply is upwards sloping

  • Law of supply : as price increases, quantity supplied also increases

  • Movement along the curve : change in price

  • Shifters of supply :

    • input prices,

    • (price of) related goods/services,

    • (producer) expectations

    • , number of producers

    • , technology

    • (I-RENT)

2.3: Price Elasticity of Demand

  • Equation : %∆Qd/%∆P

    • 0 = perfectly elastic, <1 = inelastic, =1 unit elastic, >1 = elastic

  • Midpoint formula : Qd2-Qd1/(Q2d+Qd1)/2 , replace with Qd with price for price

  • Inelastic demand : TR correlates direct with price

  • Elastic demand = TR correlates inversely with price

2.4: Price Elasticity of Supply

  • Equation : %∆Qs/%∆P

  • 0 = perfectly elastic, <1 = inelastic, =1 unit elastic, >1 = elastic

  • Inelastic : unable to respond to price change

  • Elastic : short run

  • Extremely elastic : long run

2.5: Other Elasticities

  • Cross price elasticity of demand : %∆Qd of Good A/%∆P of good B

  • negative = compliments, positive = substitutes

  • Income elasticity of demand : %∆Qd/%∆income

  • 1 = income elastic, <1 = income inelastic, negative = inferior, positive = normal

2.6: Market Equilibrium and Consumer and Producer Surplus

  • Equilibrium : occurs when no one is better off doing something else

  • Equilibrium = Qs=Qd

  • Price below the equilibrium is shortage

  • Consumer surplus : price consumers are willing to pay - actual price

  • Producer surplus : actual price -price the producer is willing to sell for

  • Demand increase : price and quantity increase

  • Demand decrease : price and quantity decrease

  • Supply increase : price decreases, quantity increases

  • Supply decrease : price increases, quantity decreases

  • Double shift : either price or quantity will be unknown

  • Deadweight loss (DWL) : transactions that should occur, but don’t because of government intervention (calculate the area = triangle formula, ½(base x height)

2.7: Market Disequilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium + 2.8: The Effects of Government Intervention in Markets

  • Shortage : Qs < Qd, price is lower than equilibrium

  • Surplus : Qs > Qd, price is above equilibrium

  • Price floor : minimum price a supplier can charge, price is set above equilibrium (causes shortage)

  • Price ceiling : maximum price a supplier can charge, price is set below equilibrium (causes surplus)

  • Double shift rule : when supply and demand both shift, either price or quantity will be unknown

  • Quota : upper limit of a quantity that can be bought or sold (known as quantity control)

  • License : gives an owner the right to supply a good/service

  • Demand price : the price at which consumers will demand that quantity

  • Supply price : the price at which producers will supply that quantity

  • Quota rent : difference between demand price and supply price

2.9: International Trade and Public Policy

  • Tariffs : tax placed on a good that is imported or exported

  • Import quota : restriction on the quantity of a good that can be imported

Unit 3: Production, Cost, and the Perfect Competition Model

3.1: The Production Function

  • Production function : relation between the quantity of inputs a firm uses and the quantity of output it produces

  • Fixed input : an input whose quantity doesn’t change

  • Variable input : an input whose quantity can change

  • Long run : time period in which all inputs can be variable

  • Short run : time period in which at least 1 input is fixed

  • Marginal product : change in overall output when input changes

  • Marginal product of labor (MPL) : ∆Q/∆L

  • Diminishing marginal returns : as input increases, the output of each input will be less than the previous input

  • Output : quantity produced

  • Rental rate : price of capital

  • Capital : goods that are used to produce goods/services

3.2: Short-Run Production Costs

  • Fixed cost : cost that doesn’t change with amount of output produced (ex. oven)

  • Variable cost : cost that changes with amount of output produced

  • Total cost : fixed cost + variable cost

  • Marginal cost : cost difference of one additional unit of output (∆TC/∆Q)

  • Average fixed cost (AFC) : FC/Q

  • Average variable cost (AVC) : VC/Q

  • Average total cost (ATC) : TC/Q

3.3: Long-Run Production Costs

  • Long run average total cost (LRATC) : same as short run ATC, but bigger

  • Economies of scale : LRATC declines as output increases

  • Diseconomies of scale : LRATC increaess as output increases

  • Constant returns to scale : output increase directly in proportion to an increase in all inputs (ex. input doubles, output also doubles)

3.4: Types of Profit

  • Economic profit : revenue - explicit cost - implicit cost, or accounting profit - implicit cost

  • Accounting profit : revenue - explicit cost

  • Implicit cost : not an actual cost, a cost that you could’ve been earning (ex. if you own a restaurant, the implicit cost would be the salary you would have earned as being a chef working in a different restaurant)

3.5: Profit Maximization

  • MR = MC

  • If you cannot have MR=MC, MR>MC

3.6: Firms’ Short-Run Decisions to Produce and Long-Run Decisions to Enter or Exit a Market

Short Run:

  • Shutdown rule : as long as P > AVC, continue to produce

  • If AVC > P : shutdown

  • Firms can make profit or losses

Long Run :

  • Exit rule : if P < ATC, exit the market

  • Firms make normal profit ($0), unless monopoly or oligopoly

3.7: Perfect Competition

  • Many firms, identical products, low/no barriers to advertisement

  • Price takers

  • Long run will have normal profit

  • Short run can have either profit or loss

Unit 4: Imperfect Competition

4.1: Introduction to Imperfectly Competitive Markets

Perfect Competition

Monopolistic Competition

Monopoly

Oligopoly

# of firms

Many

Many

1

Few

Type of product

Standard

Differentiated

Unique

Standard or different

Price control

None

Little

Yes

Some

Barriers to entry

None

None (few)

High

High

  • Common barriers to entry : control of scarce resources, legal barriers, high startup costs

4.2: Monopoly

  • Only producer of a good, has no close substitutes

  • Downwards sloping demand curve

  • Quantity is produced : @ MR = MC

  • Price is : MR=MC, up to demand

  • Supply curve : where MC > AVC

  • Allocatively efficient due to them producing at MR=MC

  • Productively inefficient because they don’t produce at the minimum of the ATC

  • Natural monopoly : has large fixed costs, and long economies of scale, has downward sloping ATC curve

  • Natural monopoly production point : MR=MC

  • Government will correct by forcing them to set price : @ ATC=D

4.3: Price Discrmination

  • To be able to price discriminate, you need market power

  • Imperfect price discrimination : chargine consumers different prices based on the buyer’s willingness to pay

  • Perfect price discrimnation : charges all consumers the maximum they are willing to pay, no deadweight loss, produce @ P=MC

  • Example : resellers, coupons, bulk buying (costco), etc.

4.4: Monopolistic Competition

Characteristics

  • Combines features of both a monopoly and perfect competition

  • Many sellers and differentiated products

  • Will use advertising to make demand more inelastic + differentiate product

  • Makes profit in short run, normal profit in long run

  • Allocatively inefficient (P does not equal MC)

  • Productively inefficient (does not produce @ minimum of ATC, until long run)

  • Downwards sloping demand curve

  • Produce at MR = MC, price is MR = MC up to demand

Long Run

  • Normal profit in long run

  • Short run profits will attract new firms to join, which decreases the demand until the demand Curve is tangent to ATC, causing normal profits in long run

  • In long run, they produce in region where economies of scales exist, because they produce in declining portion of ATC

4.5: Oligopoly and Game Theory

Oligopoly Characteristics

  • Small number of firms, standard or differentiated product

  • Interdependent : all the actions that a firm takes will affect the other firms in the oligopoly (if They ask why the market is an oligopoly, say it’s because they’re interdependent)

  • Cartels : a group that agrees to control the price and output of a product (often form in oligopoly)

  • Collusion : working together to maximize profit

  • Graph is almost identical to monopoly (you will never be asked to draw them)

  • Also produce same quantity and price of monopoly

Game Theory

  • Payoff matrix : represents the payoff to each player to show combinations of given strategies

Player B

Choice 1

Choice 2

Player A

Choice 1

A1,B1

A2,B2

Choice 2

A3,B3

A4,B4

  • Dominant strategy : the strategy that has a better payoff regardless of what strategy the opponent chooses

  • Nash equilibrium : point where both players can do no better than the other given the choice of their opponent

Unit 5: Factor Markets

5.1: Introduction of Factor Markets

  • Derived demand : the demand from a resource is derived by product demand

  • Marginal revenue product (MRP) : the additional revenue that is generated by an additional resource/worker

  • Marginal factor cost (MFC) : the additional cost of an additional resource/worker

  • Least cost rule : marginal product of labor/price of labor = marginal product of capital/price of capital (MPL/PL=MPK/PK)

  • Buy more of the one with a higher sum, and less of the one with a smaller sum (to explain, as you increase, diminishing marginal returns kicks in)

5.2: Changes in Factor Demand and Factor Supply

  • Shifters of demand for labor

    • Change in demand for the product

    • Change in the productivity of the resource

    • Change in price of substitutes and complements

  • Shifters of supply for labor

    • # of qualified workers (ex. immigrants)

    • Government regulation

    • Leisure (causes supply to shift to left)

5.3: Profit-Maximizing Behavior in Perfectly Competitive Factor Markets

  • Market curve : standard supply and demand curve

  • Equilibrium wage in the market : establishes the wage that firms will pay workers

  • MRP=MRC!!!!

  • will not hire if MRC>MRP

5.4: Monopsonistic Markets

  • Many sellers, one buyer

  • Monopsonies pay a lower wage and hire less than perfect competition

  • MRP=MFC

  • MFC > supply

  • example of imperfect competition

Unit 6: Market Failure and the Role of Government

6.1: Socially Efficient and Inefficient Market Outcomes

  • Socially efficiency is when resources are allocated effectively

  • MSB=MSC !!

  • Allocatively Efficient Points

    • Perfectly competitive market : S=D, MB=MC

    • Perfectly competitive firm : P=MC

    • Perfectly competitive labor market : W=MRP (total economic surplus : MSC=MSB)

  • Causes of Market Failure

    • Market power (imperfectly competitive markets)

    • Asymmetric information (lack of info provided by buyers and sellers)

    • Positive and negative externalities

    • Insufficient production of public goods

  • Government policies used to get rid of DWL

    • Taxes

    • Subsidies

    • Reguations

    • Public prodivions

  • Market failure : exists when firms produce @ MPC=MPC, S=D

  • The government tries to get them to produce @ MSC =MSB

6.2: Externalities

  • Externality : when external cost/benefit is placed on members of society who did not pay for them

  • MSB does not equal MSC

  • Negative externality : when someone uses a product, it decreases the benefit of others (ex. smoking), MSC > MPC (correct with per unit tax)

  • Positive externality : when one uses a product, others benefit  (ex. education) MSC < MPC (correct with subsidy)

6.3: Public and Private Goods

  • Rivalrous good : if someone consumers a product, others cannot

    • Rivalrous : food, shoes, etc

    • Nonrivalrous : national defense, fireworks, etc

    • Somewhere in middle : schools, roads, etc

  • Excludable good : non payers can be prevented from enjoying the benefits

    • Excludable : food, school, etc

    • Nonexcludable : national defense, air, etc

  • Public goods : underproduced due to freeloader problem

  • Examples : national defense, law enforcement, etc

  • Freeloader problem : people can enjoy the benefit of a good/service without paying

  • Government will provide subsidies to producers

  • Private goods : goods produced by private markets, can be excludable

6.4: The Effects of Government Intervention in Different Market Structures

  • Causes of inefficient markets

    • Market power

    • Externalities

    • Nonrival and nonexcludable goods (public goods)

  • Forms of government intervention

    • Taxes

    • Subsidies

    • Price floors/ceilings

    • Regulation

  • Per unit subsidy : gives benefits per unit

    • Perfect competition : MC, ATC, AVC decreases, price doesn’t change (price taker)

    • Monopolistic competition : MC, ATC, price decreases (price maker @ MR=MC)

  • Lump sum subsidy : gives benefit no matter how many units

  • Taxes will always shift supply curve to the left in long run, profits decrease

  • Per unit tax : increase MC, ATC, and AVC

    • Perfect competition : MC, ATC, AVC increases, price doesn’t change (price taker)

    • Monopolistic competition : MC, ATC, price increases (price maker @ MR=MC)

  • Lump sum tax : only increase ATC

  • won’t change output level

  • Non price regulation : works like taxes, they ensure competition/environmental protection/health and safety

  • Antitrust policy : promote competition and prevents monopolies

  • Antitrust laws

    • Lawsuits

    • Price controls

    • Subsidies

  • Price ceiling : sets minimum price

    • Perfect competition : causes shortage

    • Monopolistic competition : becomes MR curve, price and output decreases

  • Price floor : sets maximum price

    • Perfect competition : leads to surplus

    • Monopsony : wages go up and workers go up

6.5: Inequality

  • Income distribution : measures % of income that goes to individuals in different percentiles/brackets

  • In a system with perfectly equality : everyone would receive equal shares of income

  • Income : wages, rent, interest, profit

  • Lorenz curve : measures the distribution of income equality  (you want to be as close of possible to the perfect equality line as possible)

  • Gini coefficient : A/(A+B)

    • Closer to 0, more equality

    • Closer to 1, the more inequality

  • Causes of income inequality

    • Supply + demand in labor market

    • Human capital

    • Discrimination

    • Inheritance

    • Bargaining power

    • Etc

  • Policies to address inequality

    • Taxes + transfers

    • Minimum wage laws

    • Anti-poverty program

    • Income protection program

    • Scholarships

  • Taxes :

    • Proportional : everyone pays the same percentage of their income (no impact on income distribution)

    • Progressive : taxes are higher % on people earning a higher income (reduces income inequality)

    • Regressive : taxes are lower % on people earning a higher income (increases income inequality)

S

AP Microeconomics Unit Review

Unit 1 : Introduction to Economics

1.1 : Scarcity

  • Economics : study of scarcity and choice

  • Individual choice : given scarcity, individuals make decisions about what to do and not to do

  • Scarcity : unlimited wants, limited resources (example : land)

  • Positive statement : true statement (what is)

  • Normative statement : opinionated statement  (what should be)

1.2: Resource Allocation and Economic Systems

  • Market economy : individual producers and consumers decide what/how/and for whom to produce (limited government intervention)

  • Command economy : publicly owned, a central authority will make decisions for production and consumption (has government intervention)

  • Property rights : establish ownership and grants individuals the right to trade goods/services with each other

  • Resources : anything that can be used to produce something else

  • Factors of production :

    • land (natural resources),

    • labor (the effort of workers),

    • capital (all manufactured resources),

    • entrepreneurship (risk taking, innovation, and organization)

  • Opportunity cost : value of the next-best alternative that you give up to make another choice

  • Microeconomics : individuals/households/firms making decisions and how those decisions interact (ex : college vs. a job)

  • Macroeconomics : behavior of the economy as a whole (ex: employment)

1.3: Production Possibilities Curve

  • Production possibilities curve (PPC) : illustrates the trade-offs that faces an economy, compares only two goods

  • Trade-offs : giving up something for something else

  • If the PPC is linear, it has a constant opportunity cost, if it is curved, it has increasing opportunity costs

  • Economic growth : a sustained rise in aggregate output and an increase in standard of living (causes are developments in technology, or an increase in resources)

  • Productive efficiency : lowest cost possible on the PPC

  • Allocative efficiency : the economy allocates resources so consumers are well off as possible, producing what is demanded

1.4: Comparative Advantage and Trade

  • Trade : people split up the work, and provide each other with a good in return for another

  • Comparative advantage : lower opportunity cost in the production of a good (you cannot have a comparative advantage in both goods)

  • Absolute advantage : higher output

1.5: Cost-Benefit Analysis

  • Terms of Trade : the rate at which one good can be exchanged for another (if the price of a good obtained from trade is less than the opportunity cost of producing it, trade is beneficial)

  • Capital goods: goods that make consumer goods (ex. machinery)

  • Consumer goods : goods that are consumed (ex. food)

1.6: Marginal Analysis and Consumer Choice

  • Utility : the measure of personal satisfaction (util is a unit of utility)

  • Marginal utility : the change in total utility by consumer one additional unit of that good/service

  • Principle of diminishing marginal utility : additional units of a good/service add less total utility than the previous units do

  • Marginal utility per dollar : MUgood/Pgood (marginal utility of one unit of the good / price of one unit of the good)

  • Optimal consumption rule : to maximize utility, marginal utility per dollar spend on each good = service in consumption bundle, MUc/Pc = MUt/Pt

Unit 2  : Supply and Demand

2.1: Demand

  • Demand is downwards sloping

  • Law of demand : As price increases, demand decreases, and as price decreases, demand increases

  • Movement along the curve : change in price

  • Shifters of demand :

    • Tastes,

    • related goods (substitutes + complements),

    • income (normal + inferior goods),

    • (# of) buyers,

    • expectation of future prices

    • (TRIBE)

  • Substitution effect : as the price of a good increases, consumers substitute the good with another that is cheaper

  • Substitutes : good/service that can be used in place of another, when price of one increases, consumers will buy more of the other (ex. coffee and tea)

  • Complements : goods/services that are consumed together (ex. hamburgers and buns)

  • Income effect : as income increases, people will buy more of normal goods, and less of inferior goods

  • Normal good : increase in demand when consumer’s income increases (ex. oreos)

  • Inferior good : increase in demand when consumer’s income decreases (ex. off brand oreos)

2.2 : Supply

  • Supply is upwards sloping

  • Law of supply : as price increases, quantity supplied also increases

  • Movement along the curve : change in price

  • Shifters of supply :

    • input prices,

    • (price of) related goods/services,

    • (producer) expectations

    • , number of producers

    • , technology

    • (I-RENT)

2.3: Price Elasticity of Demand

  • Equation : %∆Qd/%∆P

    • 0 = perfectly elastic, <1 = inelastic, =1 unit elastic, >1 = elastic

  • Midpoint formula : Qd2-Qd1/(Q2d+Qd1)/2 , replace with Qd with price for price

  • Inelastic demand : TR correlates direct with price

  • Elastic demand = TR correlates inversely with price

2.4: Price Elasticity of Supply

  • Equation : %∆Qs/%∆P

  • 0 = perfectly elastic, <1 = inelastic, =1 unit elastic, >1 = elastic

  • Inelastic : unable to respond to price change

  • Elastic : short run

  • Extremely elastic : long run

2.5: Other Elasticities

  • Cross price elasticity of demand : %∆Qd of Good A/%∆P of good B

  • negative = compliments, positive = substitutes

  • Income elasticity of demand : %∆Qd/%∆income

  • 1 = income elastic, <1 = income inelastic, negative = inferior, positive = normal

2.6: Market Equilibrium and Consumer and Producer Surplus

  • Equilibrium : occurs when no one is better off doing something else

  • Equilibrium = Qs=Qd

  • Price below the equilibrium is shortage

  • Consumer surplus : price consumers are willing to pay - actual price

  • Producer surplus : actual price -price the producer is willing to sell for

  • Demand increase : price and quantity increase

  • Demand decrease : price and quantity decrease

  • Supply increase : price decreases, quantity increases

  • Supply decrease : price increases, quantity decreases

  • Double shift : either price or quantity will be unknown

  • Deadweight loss (DWL) : transactions that should occur, but don’t because of government intervention (calculate the area = triangle formula, ½(base x height)

2.7: Market Disequilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium + 2.8: The Effects of Government Intervention in Markets

  • Shortage : Qs < Qd, price is lower than equilibrium

  • Surplus : Qs > Qd, price is above equilibrium

  • Price floor : minimum price a supplier can charge, price is set above equilibrium (causes shortage)

  • Price ceiling : maximum price a supplier can charge, price is set below equilibrium (causes surplus)

  • Double shift rule : when supply and demand both shift, either price or quantity will be unknown

  • Quota : upper limit of a quantity that can be bought or sold (known as quantity control)

  • License : gives an owner the right to supply a good/service

  • Demand price : the price at which consumers will demand that quantity

  • Supply price : the price at which producers will supply that quantity

  • Quota rent : difference between demand price and supply price

2.9: International Trade and Public Policy

  • Tariffs : tax placed on a good that is imported or exported

  • Import quota : restriction on the quantity of a good that can be imported

Unit 3: Production, Cost, and the Perfect Competition Model

3.1: The Production Function

  • Production function : relation between the quantity of inputs a firm uses and the quantity of output it produces

  • Fixed input : an input whose quantity doesn’t change

  • Variable input : an input whose quantity can change

  • Long run : time period in which all inputs can be variable

  • Short run : time period in which at least 1 input is fixed

  • Marginal product : change in overall output when input changes

  • Marginal product of labor (MPL) : ∆Q/∆L

  • Diminishing marginal returns : as input increases, the output of each input will be less than the previous input

  • Output : quantity produced

  • Rental rate : price of capital

  • Capital : goods that are used to produce goods/services

3.2: Short-Run Production Costs

  • Fixed cost : cost that doesn’t change with amount of output produced (ex. oven)

  • Variable cost : cost that changes with amount of output produced

  • Total cost : fixed cost + variable cost

  • Marginal cost : cost difference of one additional unit of output (∆TC/∆Q)

  • Average fixed cost (AFC) : FC/Q

  • Average variable cost (AVC) : VC/Q

  • Average total cost (ATC) : TC/Q

3.3: Long-Run Production Costs

  • Long run average total cost (LRATC) : same as short run ATC, but bigger

  • Economies of scale : LRATC declines as output increases

  • Diseconomies of scale : LRATC increaess as output increases

  • Constant returns to scale : output increase directly in proportion to an increase in all inputs (ex. input doubles, output also doubles)

3.4: Types of Profit

  • Economic profit : revenue - explicit cost - implicit cost, or accounting profit - implicit cost

  • Accounting profit : revenue - explicit cost

  • Implicit cost : not an actual cost, a cost that you could’ve been earning (ex. if you own a restaurant, the implicit cost would be the salary you would have earned as being a chef working in a different restaurant)

3.5: Profit Maximization

  • MR = MC

  • If you cannot have MR=MC, MR>MC

3.6: Firms’ Short-Run Decisions to Produce and Long-Run Decisions to Enter or Exit a Market

Short Run:

  • Shutdown rule : as long as P > AVC, continue to produce

  • If AVC > P : shutdown

  • Firms can make profit or losses

Long Run :

  • Exit rule : if P < ATC, exit the market

  • Firms make normal profit ($0), unless monopoly or oligopoly

3.7: Perfect Competition

  • Many firms, identical products, low/no barriers to advertisement

  • Price takers

  • Long run will have normal profit

  • Short run can have either profit or loss

Unit 4: Imperfect Competition

4.1: Introduction to Imperfectly Competitive Markets

Perfect Competition

Monopolistic Competition

Monopoly

Oligopoly

# of firms

Many

Many

1

Few

Type of product

Standard

Differentiated

Unique

Standard or different

Price control

None

Little

Yes

Some

Barriers to entry

None

None (few)

High

High

  • Common barriers to entry : control of scarce resources, legal barriers, high startup costs

4.2: Monopoly

  • Only producer of a good, has no close substitutes

  • Downwards sloping demand curve

  • Quantity is produced : @ MR = MC

  • Price is : MR=MC, up to demand

  • Supply curve : where MC > AVC

  • Allocatively efficient due to them producing at MR=MC

  • Productively inefficient because they don’t produce at the minimum of the ATC

  • Natural monopoly : has large fixed costs, and long economies of scale, has downward sloping ATC curve

  • Natural monopoly production point : MR=MC

  • Government will correct by forcing them to set price : @ ATC=D

4.3: Price Discrmination

  • To be able to price discriminate, you need market power

  • Imperfect price discrimination : chargine consumers different prices based on the buyer’s willingness to pay

  • Perfect price discrimnation : charges all consumers the maximum they are willing to pay, no deadweight loss, produce @ P=MC

  • Example : resellers, coupons, bulk buying (costco), etc.

4.4: Monopolistic Competition

Characteristics

  • Combines features of both a monopoly and perfect competition

  • Many sellers and differentiated products

  • Will use advertising to make demand more inelastic + differentiate product

  • Makes profit in short run, normal profit in long run

  • Allocatively inefficient (P does not equal MC)

  • Productively inefficient (does not produce @ minimum of ATC, until long run)

  • Downwards sloping demand curve

  • Produce at MR = MC, price is MR = MC up to demand

Long Run

  • Normal profit in long run

  • Short run profits will attract new firms to join, which decreases the demand until the demand Curve is tangent to ATC, causing normal profits in long run

  • In long run, they produce in region where economies of scales exist, because they produce in declining portion of ATC

4.5: Oligopoly and Game Theory

Oligopoly Characteristics

  • Small number of firms, standard or differentiated product

  • Interdependent : all the actions that a firm takes will affect the other firms in the oligopoly (if They ask why the market is an oligopoly, say it’s because they’re interdependent)

  • Cartels : a group that agrees to control the price and output of a product (often form in oligopoly)

  • Collusion : working together to maximize profit

  • Graph is almost identical to monopoly (you will never be asked to draw them)

  • Also produce same quantity and price of monopoly

Game Theory

  • Payoff matrix : represents the payoff to each player to show combinations of given strategies

Player B

Choice 1

Choice 2

Player A

Choice 1

A1,B1

A2,B2

Choice 2

A3,B3

A4,B4

  • Dominant strategy : the strategy that has a better payoff regardless of what strategy the opponent chooses

  • Nash equilibrium : point where both players can do no better than the other given the choice of their opponent

Unit 5: Factor Markets

5.1: Introduction of Factor Markets

  • Derived demand : the demand from a resource is derived by product demand

  • Marginal revenue product (MRP) : the additional revenue that is generated by an additional resource/worker

  • Marginal factor cost (MFC) : the additional cost of an additional resource/worker

  • Least cost rule : marginal product of labor/price of labor = marginal product of capital/price of capital (MPL/PL=MPK/PK)

  • Buy more of the one with a higher sum, and less of the one with a smaller sum (to explain, as you increase, diminishing marginal returns kicks in)

5.2: Changes in Factor Demand and Factor Supply

  • Shifters of demand for labor

    • Change in demand for the product

    • Change in the productivity of the resource

    • Change in price of substitutes and complements

  • Shifters of supply for labor

    • # of qualified workers (ex. immigrants)

    • Government regulation

    • Leisure (causes supply to shift to left)

5.3: Profit-Maximizing Behavior in Perfectly Competitive Factor Markets

  • Market curve : standard supply and demand curve

  • Equilibrium wage in the market : establishes the wage that firms will pay workers

  • MRP=MRC!!!!

  • will not hire if MRC>MRP

5.4: Monopsonistic Markets

  • Many sellers, one buyer

  • Monopsonies pay a lower wage and hire less than perfect competition

  • MRP=MFC

  • MFC > supply

  • example of imperfect competition

Unit 6: Market Failure and the Role of Government

6.1: Socially Efficient and Inefficient Market Outcomes

  • Socially efficiency is when resources are allocated effectively

  • MSB=MSC !!

  • Allocatively Efficient Points

    • Perfectly competitive market : S=D, MB=MC

    • Perfectly competitive firm : P=MC

    • Perfectly competitive labor market : W=MRP (total economic surplus : MSC=MSB)

  • Causes of Market Failure

    • Market power (imperfectly competitive markets)

    • Asymmetric information (lack of info provided by buyers and sellers)

    • Positive and negative externalities

    • Insufficient production of public goods

  • Government policies used to get rid of DWL

    • Taxes

    • Subsidies

    • Reguations

    • Public prodivions

  • Market failure : exists when firms produce @ MPC=MPC, S=D

  • The government tries to get them to produce @ MSC =MSB

6.2: Externalities

  • Externality : when external cost/benefit is placed on members of society who did not pay for them

  • MSB does not equal MSC

  • Negative externality : when someone uses a product, it decreases the benefit of others (ex. smoking), MSC > MPC (correct with per unit tax)

  • Positive externality : when one uses a product, others benefit  (ex. education) MSC < MPC (correct with subsidy)

6.3: Public and Private Goods

  • Rivalrous good : if someone consumers a product, others cannot

    • Rivalrous : food, shoes, etc

    • Nonrivalrous : national defense, fireworks, etc

    • Somewhere in middle : schools, roads, etc

  • Excludable good : non payers can be prevented from enjoying the benefits

    • Excludable : food, school, etc

    • Nonexcludable : national defense, air, etc

  • Public goods : underproduced due to freeloader problem

  • Examples : national defense, law enforcement, etc

  • Freeloader problem : people can enjoy the benefit of a good/service without paying

  • Government will provide subsidies to producers

  • Private goods : goods produced by private markets, can be excludable

6.4: The Effects of Government Intervention in Different Market Structures

  • Causes of inefficient markets

    • Market power

    • Externalities

    • Nonrival and nonexcludable goods (public goods)

  • Forms of government intervention

    • Taxes

    • Subsidies

    • Price floors/ceilings

    • Regulation

  • Per unit subsidy : gives benefits per unit

    • Perfect competition : MC, ATC, AVC decreases, price doesn’t change (price taker)

    • Monopolistic competition : MC, ATC, price decreases (price maker @ MR=MC)

  • Lump sum subsidy : gives benefit no matter how many units

  • Taxes will always shift supply curve to the left in long run, profits decrease

  • Per unit tax : increase MC, ATC, and AVC

    • Perfect competition : MC, ATC, AVC increases, price doesn’t change (price taker)

    • Monopolistic competition : MC, ATC, price increases (price maker @ MR=MC)

  • Lump sum tax : only increase ATC

  • won’t change output level

  • Non price regulation : works like taxes, they ensure competition/environmental protection/health and safety

  • Antitrust policy : promote competition and prevents monopolies

  • Antitrust laws

    • Lawsuits

    • Price controls

    • Subsidies

  • Price ceiling : sets minimum price

    • Perfect competition : causes shortage

    • Monopolistic competition : becomes MR curve, price and output decreases

  • Price floor : sets maximum price

    • Perfect competition : leads to surplus

    • Monopsony : wages go up and workers go up

6.5: Inequality

  • Income distribution : measures % of income that goes to individuals in different percentiles/brackets

  • In a system with perfectly equality : everyone would receive equal shares of income

  • Income : wages, rent, interest, profit

  • Lorenz curve : measures the distribution of income equality  (you want to be as close of possible to the perfect equality line as possible)

  • Gini coefficient : A/(A+B)

    • Closer to 0, more equality

    • Closer to 1, the more inequality

  • Causes of income inequality

    • Supply + demand in labor market

    • Human capital

    • Discrimination

    • Inheritance

    • Bargaining power

    • Etc

  • Policies to address inequality

    • Taxes + transfers

    • Minimum wage laws

    • Anti-poverty program

    • Income protection program

    • Scholarships

  • Taxes :

    • Proportional : everyone pays the same percentage of their income (no impact on income distribution)

    • Progressive : taxes are higher % on people earning a higher income (reduces income inequality)

    • Regressive : taxes are lower % on people earning a higher income (increases income inequality)