Microeconomics
The study of individual choice under scarcity and its implications for the behavior of prices and quantities in individual markets.
Macroeconomics
The study of the performance of national economies, and of the policies that governments use to try to improve that performance.
Resource
anything that can be used to produce something else.
Scarce
situation when there is not enough of the resource available to satisfy all the various ways a society wants to use it.
Opportunity cost
what you must give up in order to get something
Trade-off
comparison of the costs and the benefits of doing something.
Marginal decision
decision made at the margin of an activity about whether to do a bit more or a bit less of that activity
Marginal analysis
the study of marginal decisions.
Incentive
anything that offers rewards to people who change their behavior
Economic Surplus
the benefit of taking any action minus its cost
Corn Laws
high tariffs on imported grain that protected British landowners.
Specialization
situation in which each person/countries specializes in the task that he or she is good at performing
factors of production (increase of it causes economic growth)
resources used to produce goods and services
technology (increase of it causes economic growth)
the technical means for producing goods and services
Land
natural resources, such as mineral deposits, oil, natural gas, water, and actual land acreage
Labor
the mental and physical abilities of the workforce
Physical capital
manufactured items used to produce other goods and services
Human capital
the educational achievements and skills of the labor force (which increase labor productivity)
Equilibrium
an economic situation in which no individual would be better off doing something different
Efficient
taking all opportunities to make some people better off without making other people worse off
Equity
a condition in which everyone gets his or her “fair share.”
competitive market
many buyers and sellers of the same good or service, none of whom can influence the price
supply and demand model
model of how a competitive market behaves
demand curve
shows the quantity demanded at various prices
Demand
represents the behavior of buyers.
quantity demanded
the quantity that buyers are willing (and able) to purchase at a particular price.
The Law of demand
a higher price for a good or service leads people to demand a smaller quantity
substitutes
a decrease in Pa leads to a decrease in demand of b
complements
a decrease in Pa that leads to an increase in demand of product b
Changes in income and nature of goods — Normal
an increase in income leads to an increase in demand
Changes in income and nature of goods — Inferior
an increase in income leads to a decrease in demand
supply curve
shows the quantity supplied at various prices
quantity supplied
the quantity that producers are willing and able to sell at a particular price.
qs = qd
equilibrium
surplus
when the quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded.
shortage
The quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied. It occur when the price is below its equilibrium level.
A demand curve is elastic
when an increase in price reduces the quantity demanded a lot (and vice versa).
A demand curve is inelastic
when an increase in price reduces the quantity demanded just a little
Price elasticity of demand
the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price.
if |Ed| < 1
the demand curve is inelastic
If the |Ed| > 1
the demand curve is elastic
If the |Ed| = 1
the demand curve is unit elastic.
Perfectly inelastic supply
price elasticity of supply = 0
Perfectly elastic supply
price elasticity of supply = ∞
A supply curve is elastic
if a rise in price increases the quantity supplied a lot
A supply curve is inelastic
if a rise in price increases the quantity supplied just a little
Consumer surplus
the difference between market price and what consumers (as individuals or the market) would be willing to pay
willingness to pay for a good
the maximum price at which he or she would buy that good
Producer surplus
the difference between market price and the price at which firms are willing to supply the product.
Inefficient
Opportunities are missed. Some people could be made better off without making other people worse off.
Price controls
legal restrictions on how high or low a market price may go.
Price ceiling
a maximum price sellers are allowed to charge for a good or service (usually set BELOW equilibrium).
Price floor
a minimum price buyers are required to pay for a good or service (usually set ABOVE equilibrium).
Deadweight loss
the loss in total surplus that occurs whenever an action or a policy reduces the quantity transacted below the efficient market equilibrium quantity.
Quota
an upper limit, set by the government, on the quantity of some good that can be bought or sold; also referred to as a quantity control
Quota limit
the total amount of a good under a quota or quantity control that can be legally transacted
License
the right, conferred by the government, to supply a good.
The benefits principle
Those who benefit from public spending should bear the burden of the tax that pays for that spending.
The ability-to-pay principle (principles of tax fairness)
Non excludable
if the supplier of that good can not prevent people who do not pay from consuming it. People who don’t pay cannot be easily prevented from using a good.
Excludable
situation where the supplier of a good can prevent people who do not pay from consuming it. In other words, People who don’t pay can be easily prevented from using a good.
Non rival
More than one person can consume the same unit of the good at the same time
Rival
The same unit of the good cannot be consumed by more than one person at a time (or at all)
Private goods
excludable and rival in consumption
Public goods
non excludable and non rival in consumption
Artificially scarce goods
are excludable but non rival in consumption
Common resources
goods that are non excludable but rival in consumption
free-rider problem
Many individuals are unwilling to pay for their own consumption and instead will take a free ride on anyone who does pay.
Externalities (spillovers)
the impact on third parties of a transaction between others
Market failure
free-market equilibrium that is not providing the socially optimal amount of a good
The marginal social cost
the total cost society pays for the production of another unit or for taking further action in the economy.
The marginal social benefit
the satisfaction experienced by consumers of a specific good plus or minus the overall environmental and social costs or benefits
The socially optimal quantity
The amount of production that optimizes society's overall benefit
Transaction costs
all of the costs to individuals of making a deal
A Pigouvian subsidy
a payment designed to encourage activities that yield external benefits
a payment designed to encourage activities that yield external benefits (equal to the marginal social benefit at the optimal quantity.)
Pigouvian subsidy
External benefit
a benefit received by people other than the consumers or producers trading in the market
Utility
value or satisfaction from consumption
Marginal utility (MU)
the change in utility from consuming an additional unit.
Diminishing marginal utility
Each additional unit of a good adds less to utility than the previous unit
The budget constraint
all of the consumption bundles that a consumer can afford given his or her income and the prices.
The substitution effect
the change in the quantity consumed of that good as the consumer substitutes the good that has become relatively cheaper for the good that has become relatively more expensive.
The income effect
The change in the quantity consumed of a good that results from a change in the consumer’s purchasing power due to the change in the price of the good.
The income effect — Normal goods
Decrease in income causes consumers’ purchasing power to drop and reduces consumption (and vice versa).
The income effect — Inferior goods
Decrease in income causes consumers’ purchasing power to drop and increases consumption (and vice versa).