Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
1. Circular Flow of Economic Activity- Graphical (visual) way of showing how productive resources, money, and goods and services flow between individuals (households), firms (businesses), government and international sector. 2. Resource/ Factor MarketMarket where productive resources are exchanged for $. 3. Product Market- Market where money is exchanged for goods and services. Circular Flow Diagram Resource Market Businesses Households Product Market Resource Market Resources- $ Income/ Costs 1. Natural- Rent 2. Human- Wages, Salaries, Tips Commissions 3. Capital- Interest 4. Households EntrepreneurshipProfit Businesses Product Market Injections ($) 1. Government Spending 2. Exports 3. Investment Withdrawals ($) Circular Flow of Economic Activity 1. Taxes 2. Imports 3. Savings Both Flows Are Equal Resource Market Businesses Households Product Market 3 Withdrawals of $ from the Flow 1. Taxes 2. Imports 3. Savings 3 Injections of $ into the Flow 1. Government Spending 2. Exports 3. Investment International Sector Exports $ $ Imports Product Market Fin Mkt Savings $ Households G&S $ G&S G&S $ Investment Businesses Government PR G&S $ Productive Resources Resource Market 4. Demand- The desire plus the ability and willingness to pay. 5. Demand Schedule- A chart showing the quantity demanded at different prices at a given point in time. Ex: Compact discs Price 6. Law of Demand- Demand for a product varies inversely with its price. More will be demanded at a lower price than at a higher price (Thumbs different). D 0 Quantity Individual Demand P 6 P $5 Qd 10 4 20 3 35 2 55 1 80 5 Price (per bushel) Individual Demand 4 3 2 1 0 D 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Quantity Demanded (bushels per week) Q Price 7. Change in the quantity demanded (∆Qd)- The change in the amount purchased in response to the change in price(movement along the demand curve). ∆Qd P1 P0 D0 0 Price 8. Change in Demand (∆D)- A shift in the entire demand curve. Caused by changing conditions other than price! Q1 Q0 Quantity ∆D D1 D2 D0 0 Quantity Demand Can Increase or Decrease P 6 P $5 Qd 10 4 20 3 35 2 55 1 80 5 Price (per bushel) Individual Demand Increase in Demand 4 3 2 1 0 D2 Decrease in Demand 2 4 6 8 10 D1 D3 12 14 16 18 Q Quantity Demanded (bushels per week) Demand Can Increase or Decrease An Increase in Demand Means a Movement of the Line P 6 P $5 Qd 10 4 20 3 35 2 55 1 80 5 Price (per bushel) Individual Demand A Movement Between Any Two Points on a Demand Curve is Called a Change in Quantity Demanded 4 3 2 1 0 D2 Decrease in Demand 2 4 6 8 10 D1 D3 12 14 16 18 Q Quantity Demanded (bushels per week) 9. Supply- The quantity of a product that would be produced and offered for sale at each and every possible price. 10. Supply Schedule- A chart showing the quantity produced at each and every possible price in the market. Ex: Yard Work 11. Law of Supply- The quantity of a product offered for sale varies directly with price. More will be supplied at a higher price than at a lower price (Thumbs same). Price S 0 Quantity Individual Supply P 6 P $5 Qs 60 4 50 3 35 2 20 1 5 S1 5 Price (per bushel) Individual Supply 4 3 2 1 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Quantity Supplied (bushels per week) Q Price 12. Change in the Quantity Supplied (∆Qs)- The change in the amount of a product offered for sale (supplied) because of a price change. Movement along the supply curve. S P1 ∆QS P0 0 Price Q0 Q1 Quantity S2 S0 S1 13. Change in Supply (∆S)- A shift in the entire supply curve. Caused by changing conditions other than price! ∆S 0 Quantity Supply Can Increase or Decrease P 6 P $5 Qs 60 4 50 3 35 2 20 1 5 S1 5 Price (per bushel) Individual Supply S3 S2 4 3 2 1 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 Quantity Supplied (bushels per week) Q Supply Can Increase or Decrease P 6 P $5 Qs 60 4 50 3 35 2 20 1 5 5 Price (per bushel) Individual Supply A Movement Between Any Two Points on a Supply Curve is Called a Change in Quantity Supplied S3 S1 S2 4 3 2 An Increase in Supply Means a Movement of the Line 1 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 Quantity Supplied (bushels per week) Q Elasticity Notes 14. Price Elasticity of Demand- The extent to which changes in price cause changes in the quantity demanded. 15. Elastic Demand- A change in price leads to a relatively large change in quantity demanded. Ex: Ice Cream, Disneyland Vacation Price P1 P0 D 0 16. Inelastic Demand- A change in price leads to a relatively small change in quantity demanded. Ex: Gasoline, Cigarettes Q1 Q0 Quantity Price Looks like an “I” P1 P0 D 0 Q1 Q0 Quantity Elasticity Notes 15. Products that have elastic demand curves have these characteristics: Ex: Ice Cream, Disneyland Vacation 1. Many Substitutes 2. Luxuries 3. Relatively Expensive Elasticity Notes 16. Products that have inelastic demand curves have these characteristics: 1. Few Substitutes 2. Necessities 3. Relatively Inexpensive Ex: Gasoline, Cigarettes Extreme Cases Perfectly Inelastic Demand P D1 Perfectly Inelastic Demand (Ed = 0) 0 Q Perfectly Elastic Demand P 0 Perfectly Elastic Demand (Ed = ∞) D2 Q Elasticity Notes 17. Price Elasticity of Supply- The extent to which changes in price cause changes in the quantity supplied. Price 18. Elastic Supply- A change in price leads to a relatively large change in quantity supplied. Ex: Fast Food, T-Shirts S P1 P0 0 19. Inelastic Supply- A change in price leads to a relatively small change in quantity supplied. Ex: Sports car, Space Shuttle, Oil, Gold Q1 Quantity Q0 Price S P1 Looks like an “I” P0 0 Q0 Q1 Quantity Elasticity Notes 18. Products that have elastic supply curves have these characteristics: Ex: Fast Food, T-Shirts 1. Low technology 2. Easy to find or produce 3. Few skills needed Elasticity Notes 19. Products that have inelastic supply curves have these characteristics: Ex: Sports car, Space Shuttle, Oil, Gold 1. High technology 2. Difficult to find or produce 3. Skilled workers needed Price Elasticity of Supply Applications Antiques/ Original Art and Reproductions With originals it’s hard /impossible to make more With Reproductions you can mass produce them quickly Gold Prices- Boom and Bust cycles Gold Prices have shot up so can gold mines produce a lot more gold quickly? The fastest way to produce more gold has been to do what? Think about all of the “We Buy Gold! “ signs around town… Get people, mostly women, to sell their old jewelry There are even “gold parties” where women gather to have fun and sell their old gold jewelry that they don’t wear any more. Marginal Utility Notes 20. Marginal Utility- The extra utility or satisfaction a person gets from acquiring an additional "unit" of a product. Amount added "at the margin". 21. Principle of Diminishing Marginal Utility- Each additional unit of a product will be less satisfying than the previous one. The more of a product a person acquires, the less likely they will consume (purchase) more. Ex: Candy consumption, Buying in bulk (Costco, Sam’s Club, Buying a case of soda instead of a can 22. Market Price- The price where quantity supplied equals quantity demanded (Qs = Qd). Occurs at the intersection of the supply and demand curves. Also known as equilibrium price and market clearing price. Price 3 Names for the intersection point: 1. Market Price S Qs = Qd P0 2. Equilibrium (Price) D 0 Q0 Quantity 3. Market-Clearing Price Market Equilibrium 200 Buyers & 200 Sellers Market Demand 200 Buyers $5 6 Qd 2,000 4 4,000 3 7,000 2 11,000 1 16,000 S 5 Price (per bushel) P Market Supply 200 Sellers 4 3 P Qs $5 12,000 4 10,000 3 7,000 2 4,000 1 1,000 2 1 0 D 2 4 6 7 8 10 12 14 16 18 Bushels of Corn (thousands per week) Determinants of Demand and Supply 23. Determinants of Demand: Reasons for Change/ Shift in Demand (SEPTIC) A change in: Price of Substitutes- things that replace each other: pork v. beef, pinto beans vs. black beans, TV shows and video rentals (If P of Substitute ↑, D for other good ↑) (If P of A ↑, D for B ↑). Consumer Expectations-if they expect a change in prices or their income to happen in the future or a prediction is made Determinants of Demand and Supply 23. Determinants of Demand: Reasons for Change/ Shift in Demand (SEPTIC) A change in: Population: Number of consumers, more or less people means more or less demand Consumer Taste- preferences, styles, fads, fashion, health, advertising, popularity Determinants of Demand and Supply 23. Determinants of Demand: Reasons for Change/ Shift in Demand (SEPTIC) A change in: Income (y) (If Y ↑ , D ↑. If Y↓, D↓) more or less income means more or less demand. Ex: Steak, Sports Car Price of Complementary good- things that go together: ketchup and fries; movies and popcorn, cars and gasoline (If P of Complement ↑, D for other good ↓) (If P of A ↑, D for B ↓). Determinants of Demand and Supply 24. Determinants of Supply: Reasons for Change/ Shift in Supply (GETNoCredit) A change in: Government Policies - taxes, regulations, tariffs, quotas, setting prices, or any other government action. Expectations- businesses expect a change to occur to sales, profits, etc. in the future. Determinants of Demand and Supply 24. Determinants of Supply: Reasons for Change/ Shift in Supply (GETNoCredit) A change in: Technology- increases the efficiency of your natural, human, capital, and entrepreneurship resources. Number of Suppliers- Companies entering or leaving the market. Determinants of Demand and Supply 24. Determinants of Supply: Reasons for Change/ Shift in Supply (GETNoCredit) A change in: Costs of Production- anything that increases or decreases the cost of your land , labor, capital, and entrepreneurship. 25. Price Floor- Legislated or regulated minimum price below which transactions (buying or selling) are prohibited. Will cause a surplus (Qs › Qd). Done for Producers! 26. Price Ceiling- Legislated or regulated maximum price above which transactions (buying or selling) are prohibited (Qd › Qs). Will cause a shortage. To get around this producers and consumers will create a black market. Done for consumers! Price Floor on the TOP! S Pf P0 D 0 Price Qd Q0 Qs Quantity Ceiling on the BOTTOM! S P0 Pc D 0 Qs Q0 Qd Quantity Floors and Ceilings When the government sets the price 200 Buyers & 200 Sellers Market Demand 200 Buyers $5 6 Qd 2,000 4 4,000 3 7,000 2 11,000 1 16,000 6,000 Bushel Surplus 5 Price (per bushel) P Market Supply 200 Sellers S P Qs $5 12,000 4 10,000 3 7,000 $2 Price Ceiling 2 4,000 1 1,000 $4 Price Floor 4 3 2 7,000 Bushel Shortage 1 0 2 4 6 7 8 10 D 12 14 16 18 Bushels of Corn (thousands per week) Government-Set Prices Price Ceilings on Gasoline Rationing Problem Black Markets Rent Controls Price Floors on Wheat Optimal Allocation of Resources 3.2 Why is it that some industries have a small number of business firms that dominate the industry and other industries have many firms with no one firm that dominates? Economists have been able to classify different industries into 4 broad categories or structures based on how much competition there is in an industry: United States only (2011) US Auto Market Share 2011 TV Global Market Share August 2014 Spectrum of Market Structures MOST COMPETITIVE----------------------------LEAST COMPETITIVE 100%/ Total Competition---------------------------0%/No Competition Number of firms in the industry Perfect Competition Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly Monopoly 1. Many Buyers and Sellers 1. Many Buyers and Sellers 1. A few firms dominate the industry 1. One seller dominates the industry Spectrum of Market Structures MOST COMPETITIVE----------------------------LEAST COMPETITIVE 100%/ Total Competition---------------------------0%/No Competition Perfect Competition Type of Product Sold Monopolistic Competition Oligopoly 2. 2. Slightly 2. Very Homogeneous Differentiated Differentiated / Same/ Identical Monopoly 2. Unique/ One of a kind Spectrum of Market Structures MOST COMPETITIVE----------------------------LEAST COMPETITIVE 100%/ Total Competition---------------------------0%/No Competition Ease of Entry and Exit from the Industry Perfect Competition Monopolistic Competition 3. Easiest 3. Easy Oligopoly Monopoly 3. Difficult because of high cost of capital or marketing costs 3. Entry can be blocked by government protections Spectrum of Market Structures MOST COMPETITIVE----------------------------LEAST COMPETITIVE 100%/ Total Competition---------------------------0%/No Competition Control firms have over the price they charge Perfect Competition Monopolistic Competition 4. None; firms must accept the market price 4. A little; firms can charge more for a special service or feature they might have Oligopoly 4. A lot; price can be set higher than other nondifferentiated products Monopoly 4. Complete; business is a “price setter” at the price where profits are maximized Spectrum of Market Structures MOST COMPETITIVE----------------------------LEAST COMPETITIVE 100%/ Total Competition---------------------------0%/No Competition Perfect Competition Non-price 5. None, all of competition/ the products product are the same differentiationcompetition based on things other than price (ads, brand names, color, taste, quality, features, packaging, etc.) Monopolistic Competition 5. A little; firms offer special services or features they might have but most can be easily copied Oligopoly 5. A lot; large amounts of advertising; emphasis on branding, design, style, quality, etc. Monopoly 5. Little or none since entry can be controlled; ads focus on building goodwill towards the company or product superiority Banking consolidation/ mergers creates an oligopoly dominated by 4 banks: Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, BofA, and Wells Fargo Media Family Tree: Top 15 Media Companies Spectrum of Market Structures MOST COMPETITIVE----------------------------LEAST COMPETITIVE 100%/ Total Competition---------------------------0%/No Competition Examples Perfect Competition Grain farming Monopolistic Competition Doctors, Lawyers, Dry Cleaning, Real Estate Agents, Sit down restaurants, Fruits and Vegetables, Oligopoly Monopoly Soda, Beer, Airlines, Fast Food, Soap, Shampoo Computers, Cereal, Groceries, Coffee, Diapers, Entertainment, Banking 4 types of legal monopolies; allowed by government b/c they benefit society in some way 1. Patents 2. Copyrights 3. Trademarks 4. Public UtilitiesElectricity, Cable, Nat Gas, Phone, H2O Total Revenue Test- If Price (P) ↑ and Total Revenue (TR) ↓ , then Elastic; If Price (P) ↑ and Total Revenue (TR) ↑ , then Inelastic. Why? Price Price P1 P1 Price Effect P0 P0 Q1 Q Effect D0 Quantity Effect 0 Price Effect Q0 Quantity Price Effect- Increase in P of the ONE item increases TR Elastic products: Quantity effect is greater than Price effect 0 Q1 Q0 D0 Quantity Quantity Effect- Increase in P reduces the # of units sold and decreases TR Inelastic products: Price effect is greater than Quantity effect The Total Revenue Test W 18.2 Total Revenue (TR) TR = P x Q Elastic Demand P $3 a 2 1 b D1 0 10 20 30 40 Q The Total Revenue Test Total Revenue (TR) TR = P x Q Inelastic Demand P c $4 3 2 d 1 D2 0 10 20 Q W 18.2 The Total Revenue Test W 18.2 Total Revenue (TR) TR = P x Q Unit-Elastic P e $3 2 1 f D3 0 10 20 30 Q