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Mr. Syroney AP Microeconomics Review Day 1: I. Fundamentals of Economic Analysis Scarce Resources Production Possibilities Functions of Economic Systems II. Supply, Demand, Market Equilibrium & Welfare Analysis Demand Supply Market Equilibrium & Welfare Analysis I. Fundamentals of Economic Analysis Scarce Resources Economic Resources Economics Defined Land, Labor, Capital & Entrepreneurship Scarcity Trade-offs Opportunity Cost Marginal Analysis Marginal Marginal Benefit Marginal Cost Production Possibilities Production Possibilities Frontier (Curve) Resource Substitutability Law of Increasing Opportunity Cost Comparative Advantage & Specialization Absolute Advantage Comparative Advantage Specialization Efficiency Productive efficiency (anywhere on the PPF) Allocative efficiency (one point on PPF where MB=MC) Economic Growth -increased resources -increase in quality of resources -technological innovation Economic Growth on the PPF Economic Systems Market System Private Property Freedom Self-Interest Competition Prices II. Demand, Supply, Market Equilibrium, & Welfare Analysis Demand Law of Demand Income Effect Substitution Effect Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility The Demand Curve Quantity Demanded v. Demand Determinants of Demand Consumer Income Price of Substitute Goods Price of Complementary Goods Tastes and Preferences Consumer Expectations # of Buyers Supply Law of Supply Law of Increasing Marginal Costs The Supply Curve Quantity Supplied v. Supply Determinants of Supply Cost of inputs Technology and productivity Taxes or subsidies Producer expectations Price of related outputs # of sellers Market Equilibrium Equilibrium Shortage Surplus Change in Demand Increase in demand Decrease in demand Change in Supply Increase in supply Decrease in supply Simultaneous Changes in Supply & Demand Welfare Analysis Total Welfare = Consumer Surplus + Producer Surplus Consumer Surplus Producer Surplus MICRO Mr. Syroney AP Microeconomics Review Day 2: IIII. Elasticity, Microeconomic Policy, and Consumer Theory Elasticity Microeconomic Policy and Applications of Elasticity Consumer Choice IV. The Firm, Profit, and the Costs of Production Firms, Opportunity Costs, and Profits Production and Cost IIII. Elasticity, Microeconomic Policy, and Consumer Theory Elasticity Price Elasticity of Demand Formula Range of Price Elasticity 0 < Elasticity < 1 Inelastic Elasticity = 1 Unit Elastic 1< elasticity Elastic Perfect Inelasticity Perfect Elasticity Warning Determinants of Elasticity # of close substitutes Proportion of income Time Total Revenue Test Income Elasticity of Demand Formula Normal, Luxury If income elasticity > 1, then the good is normal and income elastic (luxury) (filet mignon) Normal, Necessity If income elasticity is > 0 but < 1, then the good is normal and income inelastic (necessity) (hamburger) Inferior If income elasticity < 0, then the good is inferior (Spam) Cross Price Elasticity Formula Complements – cross price elasticity < 0 (ex. Peanut butter and jelly) Substitutes – cross price elasticity > 0 (ex. Mercedes Benz v. Lexus) Price Elasticity of Supply Time and elasticity of supply Microeconomic policy and applications of elasticity Excise Taxes Demand Elasticity and incidence of taxation Price Elasticity of Demand Perfect Elasticity Elastic Demand Government Revenue Least Falling Decrease in Consumption Most Sizeable Incidence of Tax Paid by Consumers 0% < 50% Incidence of Tax Paid by Suppliers 100% > 50% Inelastic Demand Perfect Inelasticity Rising Most Minimal Least Microeconomic policies and cost to society Dead Weight Loss Illustrated: Subsidies Price Floors Over allocation of resources Price Ceilings Under allocation of resources Consumer Choice Utility Total utility Marginal utility Unconstrained Consumer Choice Consumer maximizes utility Diminishing Marginal Utility Constrained Utility Maximization Consumer maximizes utility to the point that MB = P > 50% 100% < 50% 0% Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility and Law of Demand Constrained Utility Maximization, 2 goods Formula: Individual v. Market Demand IV. The Firm, Profit, and the Costs of Production The Firm defined: an organization that employs the factors of production to produce a good or service in order to sell and make a profit. Accounting v. Economics – normal profit, economic profit, explicit and implicit costs Short-run v. Long-run Production and cost The production function Fixed v. variable Short run production measures Total product Marginal product Average product Law of diminishing returns Marginal Product and Average Product Graph Short-run costs Total fixed costs (TFC) Total variable costs (TVC) Total cost (TC) TC = TFC + TVC Marginal Cost (MC) = change in TC / change in output Average fixed cost (AFC) Average variable cost (AVC) Average total Cost (ATC) Graphing Costs curves Long-run cost Economies of scale Constant returns to scale Diseconomies of scale MICRO Mr. Syroney AP Microeconomics Review Day 3 V. Market Structures Perfect competition Monopoly Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly V. Market Structures Perfect Competition Characteristics Many small buyers and sellers which act independently Firms produce standardized product (ex. Eggs, wheat, ball bearings) No barriers to entry Firms are price takers Demand faced by Perfectly Competitive Firms 2 demands market and individual Competitive firms maximize profits MR=MC or where TR – TC is greatest MR change in Total Revenue / change in Quantity To the competitive firm MR = P The firm’s production function determines their most efficient level of output and their marginal cost of production To the competitive firm demand=P=M=AR and supply=MC Graphing profits in the perfectly competitive firm If price > average total cost, then profits > 0 If price < average total cost, then profits < 0 If price = average total cost, then profits = 0 Competitive firms and short-run losses Hint: find q where P = MR = MC Next: find ATC vertically at q. If you move downward, profits >0 if you move upward profits <0 move horizontally from ATC to y axis to complete the rectangle to identify the area of profit/loss Decision to shut down Firms shut down at the point where p = mr = mc = avc Short run Supply MC above AVC = S for competitive firm Sum of MC curves = Market supply Long run adjustment to profits Profits attract producers Producers create more supply More supply means a lower market price Profits fall to break-even Q increases -q decreases Graph Long run adjustment to losses Losses drive some producers out of the market Producers create less supply Less supply leads to higher market price Profits increase to break-even Q decrease -q increases Graph Monopoly Characteristics One producer No close substitutes Barriers to entry Legal barriers Economies of scale Control of key resources Market power Monopolists face market demand and must therefore obey the law of demand Note: demand is horizontal for the competitive firm, but downward sloping for the monopolist Why monopolies are bad Qm < Qc Pm > Pc Pm > MC therefore not allocatively efficient Monopolies create dead weight loss Pm > minimum ATC so not productively efficient Monopoly profits > 0, therefore consumer surplus is transferred to producer Price Discrimination 3 conditions - firm must have monopoly pricing power firm must be able to discriminate amongst consumers firm must be able to prevent resale between consumers examples senior citizen and student discounts at the movies airline tickets for business travelers v. tickets for vacationers which require id cell phone plans that have peak and off-peak pricing coupons for price sensitive consumers bulk discounts Monopolistic Competition Large # of firms Differentiated products Ease of entry and exit For monopolistic competition demand is downward sloping because product is differentiated, but it is flatter than for a monopoly because there are close substitutes Short Run Profit Max: MR=MC Long run adjustment new firms enter because of profits in industry Why monopolistic competition is bad Qmc < Qc Pmc > Pc Pmc > MC therefore not allocatively efficient Dead weight loss exists but < monopoly Pmc > ATC therefore not productively efficient Profits = 0 in the long-run, so monopolistic competitors do a great deal of advertising to keep product differentiation going Excess capacity exists in industry Qatc – Qmc Oligopoly Few large producers Standardized or differentiated products (ex. Oil or cars, beer and sodas) Barriers to entry Interdependent behavior Industry Concentration Four firm concentration ratio If 4 firm ratio exceeds 40, or the four largest firms control >40% market share, then industry is oligopolistic Game Theory and non-collusive interdependent behavior Prisoner’s dilemma Collusion and Cartels (Oligopolists jointly acting like a single monopolist) OPEC Weaknesses of cartels Coming to agreement Incentives to cheat High profits invite competition MICRO Mr. Syroney AP Microeconomics Review Day 4: VI. Factor Markets Factor Demand Least cost hiring of multiple inputs Factor supply and market equilibrium Imperfect competition and market equilibrium VII. Public Goods, Externalities, and the Role of Government Public goods and spillover benefits Pollution and spillover costs Income distribution and Tax Structures VI. Factor Markets Factor Demand also known as resource or input demand Factor demand is the demand for the factors of production in the factor market Competitive Factor Markets In competitive factor markets firms are both price takers in the factor and product market Marginal Revenue Product The value of what the next unit of input brings into the firm MRP = MR * MP = P * MP Profit maximizing resource employment If mb > mc, then do more of it If mb < mc, then do less of it If mb=mc, then stop hers The marginal cost of hiring resources is Marginal Resource Cost In the competitive factor market the marginal resource cost or mrc = wages Supply and demand for labor in competitive factor markets The MRP becomes the demand for labor or other inputs The MRC or wage becomes the supply of labor or other input Derived Demand The demand for the factors of production is derived from the demand for the product that the firm is producing Increased demand for a product increases the price of the product, and because the mrp = mp * p then demand for labor increases and as a result the amount of labor hired at a given wage will increase Determinants of Resource Demand Product demand Productivity Capital Technology Quality of variable resources Prices of other resources Substitute resources Substitution effect If capital is cheaper, then demand for labor declines Output effect If capital is cheaper, then costs of production fall and the firm can demand more labor to satisfy increased ability to produce more. Confused? If SE > OE, then demand for labor declines, however if OE > than SE, then demand for labor increases. Complementary Resources As the price of complementary resources decline demand for the complement increases and vice versa. Ex. As fuel prices climb, airlines cost of production increases and as a result, airlines produce less output causing a decline in the demand for airline pilots. Least Cost Hiring Rule For a producer: 1. production of Q units of output will be produced at lowest TC 2. or, at some level of TC, what amount of Q can be produced MPL/PL = MPK/PK which means the marginal product of labor divided by the price of labor = the marginal product of capital divided by the price of capital Thus, situation Firm will… MPL/PL > MPK/PK Increase labor and decrease capital Increase capital and decrease labor MPL/PL<MPK/PK Which causes… Marginal product of labor to decline Marginal product of capital to decline And… Until Marginal product of capital to increase Marginal product of labor to increase MPL/PL=MPK/PK MPL/PL = MPK/PK Factor Supply and market equiliubrium Supply of labor Reflecting the law of supply, as wages increase the quantity of labor supplied will increase and as wages decrease the quantity of labor supplied will decrease Wage determination Wages are determined in the labor market where supply of labor = demand for labor Imperfect Competition in product and factor markets Because MR < P in imperfectly competitive markets, then the MRP in imperfectly competitive markets is < the MRP in competitive markets. Therefore, there is less demand for labor and other resources in noncompetitive markets than in competitive markets. Also, in imperfect markets wages are less than in competitive markets VII. Public Goods, externalities and the role of government Public goods and externalities Private v. public goods Private goods – rival and excludable (ex. Snickers bar, Hummer) Public goods – non-rival and nonexcludable (ex. National defense, environmental protection) Private goods are priced according to the laws of supply and demand, if you want the good you must pay the price Public goods are kind of like a group project, if you want a good grade you may be paying for it while someone else is a free rider. The free rider problem is the fact that some people consume a good without paying for it. Spill over benefits and costs Positive Externality- a spill over benefit Graph: The existence of positive externalities from the production of a good often mean that the good is underproduced, which is a misallocation of scarce resources. Subsidy- government payments to producers in order for them to produce more of a product than they would in the free market Graph: Pollution and spill over costs Spill over costs – exists when one consumers consumption of a good adversely affects another consumer and this cost is not reflected in the market price of the good in question Graph: Negative externality- an economic side effect that harms a third party (ex. pollution) .Graph: Income distribution and tax structures Equity- fairness, free markets produce where mb = mc, but often don’t produce where msb=msc Does fair mean equal? NO! Productivity share your wage is a function of your marginal revenue product However, because of past patterns of discrimination or disability some people’s wage is less than their marginal revenue product Measuring Income Distribution Quintiles Quintiles (households) Lowest 20% Second 20% Third 20% Fourth 20% Highest 20% % of total income 4.2% 9.7% 15.4% 22.9% 47.7% Upper income limits $24,000 $41,127 $62,500 $94,150 No limit Lorenz Curve % of income % of families Gini Ratio = Area A / (Area A + Area B) The closer Gini gets to zero the more equally distributed is the income The closer Gets to one the more unequally distributed is the income Sources of Inequality Ability Human capital Discrimination Personal Preferences Market power Luck and connections Income redistribution Government collecting taxes from one part of society and giving to another part of society Ex. Welfare money is taken from productive members of society and given to non productive members of society Marginal and Average Tax Rates Marginal tax rate- the tax rate paid on the last dollar earned Average tax rate- the proportion of total income paid in taxes Tax progressivity Progressive Taxes Ex. Federal Income tax Regressive Taxes Ex. State sales taxes Proportional Taxes Ex. Federal Corporate Taxes