
3) A wholesaler that sells computer monitors finds that
... 3) A wholesaler that sells computer monitors finds that selling price “p” is related to demand “q” by the relation p=280 - .02q where p is measured in dollars and q represents number of units sold a. Find the wholesaler’s Revenue function as a function of q, using Revenue = (price) (quantity) b. Fin ...
... 3) A wholesaler that sells computer monitors finds that selling price “p” is related to demand “q” by the relation p=280 - .02q where p is measured in dollars and q represents number of units sold a. Find the wholesaler’s Revenue function as a function of q, using Revenue = (price) (quantity) b. Fin ...
Marginal cost
... • Elastic- if a firm can adjust quickly to changes in prices (ie. Kites, candy other types of goods that can be made quickly without lots of capital or increase in skilled workers.) • Inelastic- adjustments take longer for the firm. (ie. Shale oil- takes lots of capital and many skilled workers to i ...
... • Elastic- if a firm can adjust quickly to changes in prices (ie. Kites, candy other types of goods that can be made quickly without lots of capital or increase in skilled workers.) • Inelastic- adjustments take longer for the firm. (ie. Shale oil- takes lots of capital and many skilled workers to i ...
Econ Unit 1 Fundamentals Notes
... transaction that affects someone other than the producer or buyer Negative Externality – negative effects experienced by people that had no part in the consumption of a good or service Ex: Cigarette smoker, chemical waste dumping, foreclosures & property values, etc. Positive Externality – Goo ...
... transaction that affects someone other than the producer or buyer Negative Externality – negative effects experienced by people that had no part in the consumption of a good or service Ex: Cigarette smoker, chemical waste dumping, foreclosures & property values, etc. Positive Externality – Goo ...
AP MACROECONOMICS - Ch. 1-4: Basic Economic Concepts
... making 10,000 robots and 0 pizzas. If they decide to increase pizza production to 100,000, they will have to decrease production of robots by 1,000. In other words they will move from point A to point B. This illustrates the concepts of trade-offs and opportunity costs. To produce more of one thing ...
... making 10,000 robots and 0 pizzas. If they decide to increase pizza production to 100,000, they will have to decrease production of robots by 1,000. In other words they will move from point A to point B. This illustrates the concepts of trade-offs and opportunity costs. To produce more of one thing ...
Economics Unit 2
... – is the level of production in which the marginal product of labor increases as the number of workers increase. ...
... – is the level of production in which the marginal product of labor increases as the number of workers increase. ...
Syllabus for EC311 - Widener University
... 15. Show how a minimum wage or a union-bargained wage affects the employment level in a monopsonistic labor market. 16. Analyze decision-making under uncertainty and under alternative criteria. 17. Determine the optimal level of a public good. TEXTBOOK: Microeconomics: Theory & Applications, 12th ed ...
... 15. Show how a minimum wage or a union-bargained wage affects the employment level in a monopsonistic labor market. 16. Analyze decision-making under uncertainty and under alternative criteria. 17. Determine the optimal level of a public good. TEXTBOOK: Microeconomics: Theory & Applications, 12th ed ...
Section 1 Notes
... Adam Smith recognized that a “Laissez Faire” policy by the Government still required the government to perform the following functions: 1. Police power – To protect from external disruption, and ensure internal stability 2. Standard system of weights & measures – To provide foundation for economic t ...
... Adam Smith recognized that a “Laissez Faire” policy by the Government still required the government to perform the following functions: 1. Police power – To protect from external disruption, and ensure internal stability 2. Standard system of weights & measures – To provide foundation for economic t ...
3 2015-3 Build it and they will come
... – “Disembodied Labor” Capital goods were made themselves by other workers in order for their impact on the economy to last indefinitely or until the capital wears out. [Marx] – “Management Legacy” Capital goods were available because of the set aside decision made by managers in the past who “set as ...
... – “Disembodied Labor” Capital goods were made themselves by other workers in order for their impact on the economy to last indefinitely or until the capital wears out. [Marx] – “Management Legacy” Capital goods were available because of the set aside decision made by managers in the past who “set as ...
Economics 2012: Review # 1
... Explain what happens to price when there is excess supply or excess demand. Explain the dynamic process by which supply and demand reach equilibrium. Distinguish between shifts in the curves from movements along the curve. Identify all of the factors that can shift supply and demand, and show the sh ...
... Explain what happens to price when there is excess supply or excess demand. Explain the dynamic process by which supply and demand reach equilibrium. Distinguish between shifts in the curves from movements along the curve. Identify all of the factors that can shift supply and demand, and show the sh ...
Notes2
... • Externalities: bystander affected by someone else’s actions • Arise because something with no market value has a value attached to it • Private decisions about production and consumption can lead to externalities • Free-Rider Problem: a person receives the benefit of a good but avoids paying for i ...
... • Externalities: bystander affected by someone else’s actions • Arise because something with no market value has a value attached to it • Private decisions about production and consumption can lead to externalities • Free-Rider Problem: a person receives the benefit of a good but avoids paying for i ...
ECON 160, Trial Exam
... SECTION II: Multiple Choice (9 points). For each of the following statements, indicate the BEST answer on your scantron form. ...
... SECTION II: Multiple Choice (9 points). For each of the following statements, indicate the BEST answer on your scantron form. ...
AP Economics Syllabus - Gilbert Public Schools
... In-class activities and homework assignments represent a significant portion of your grade, both with respect to raw points and as a preparatory framework for exams. Resultantly, they will be rigorous and thorough. If you miss any one of these assignments, your grade will drop. You are in AP therefo ...
... In-class activities and homework assignments represent a significant portion of your grade, both with respect to raw points and as a preparatory framework for exams. Resultantly, they will be rigorous and thorough. If you miss any one of these assignments, your grade will drop. You are in AP therefo ...
Externality

In economics, an externality is the cost or benefit that affects a party who did not choose to incur that cost or benefit.For example, manufacturing activities that cause air pollution impose health and clean-up costs on the whole society, whereas the neighbors of an individual who chooses to fire-proof his home may benefit from a reduced risk of a fire spreading to their own houses. If external costs exist, such as pollution, the producer may choose to produce more of the product than would be produced if the producer were required to pay all associated environmental costs. Because responsibility or consequence for self-directed action lies partly outside the self, an element of externalization is involved. If there are external benefits, such as in public safety, less of the good may be produced than would be the case if the producer were to receive payment for the external benefits to others. For the purpose of these statements, overall cost and benefit to society is defined as the sum of the imputed monetary value of benefits and costs to all parties involved. Thus, unregulated markets in goods or services with significant externalities generate prices that do not reflect the full social cost or benefit of their transactions; such markets are therefore inefficient.