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AP MICROECONOMICS REVIEW #1 Rixie April 6, 2017 FUNDAMENTALS OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS Key Terms; PPC; Absolute & Comparative Advantage Central Dilemma ■ Societies have limited resources and unlimited wants, so the study of economics must determine how to best allocate these limited resources. 4 Factors of Production ■ Labor – Workers (mental & physical) ■ Land – The land itself & natural resources ■ Capital – Machines, technology, buildings, etc. ■ Entrepreneurial Ability – Someone to put it all together Key Foundations ■ People are rational and follow their own selfinterest ■ People seek to maximize utility (satisfaction/happiness) ■ All choices involve trade-offs (alternatives) ■ Opportunity cost is the value of your next best alternative Marginal Analysis ■You should always continue to do something as long as the benefits outweigh the costs ■Marginal means additional ■Should I eat the next slice of pizza?? Is it worth it? Production Possibilities Curve/Frontier ■ Points on the curve represent the combination of products a country/firm/person can produce at a given time with set resources ■ Points inside the curve represent inefficiency/underutilization of resources ■ Points outside the curve are unattainable currently What is the opportunity cost of moving from point B to point C? A loss of 30 capital goods Production Possibilities Curve/Frontier ■The whole curve can shift in (left) or out (right) ■Shift in: loss of resources ■Shift out: economic growth (more resources or better tech/education) Law of Increasing Opportunity Costs ■As you continue to gain more of one thing, you must give up more and more of the other thing ■Represented by bowed out (concave out to the origin) shape of the PPC ■A straight PPC would indicate constant opportunity costs Two Types of Efficiency ■Productive efficiency – Using all resources in the most efficient/cost-effective way possible ■Allocative efficiency – Producing the optimal combination of goods to meet societal needs Specialization & Trade ■People/countries/firms use their resources to specialize in specific tasks ■They can benefit from trading with each other instead of each trying to make everything Absolute Advantage vs. Comparative Advantage ■ Absolute: – Being able to produce something more efficiently (at a lower cost) than someone else ■ Comparative: – Being able to produce something at a lower opportunity cost than someone else (you give up less than they do to produce the same thing) Input v. Output Problems ■ Input problem – you’re given varying resources (like time) that go into production ■ Output problem – you’re given varying amounts of the total product/service that comes out of production ■ Short-cut – cross multiply! – For input, take the lowest number – For output, take the highest Apples per day (thousands) Oranges per day (thousands) Country A 3 12 Country B 2 4 ■ Output problem – looking for most product, so highest number ■ 3 x 4 = 12 ■ 2 x 12 = 24 ■ Second combo is the highest number, so Country B should produce apples (has the comp. adv.) and Country A should produce oranges (has the comp. adv) Minutes to produce 1 bushel of apples Minutes to produce 1 bushel of oranges Country A 10 20 Country B 20 80 ■ Input problem – looking for fewest resources used, so lowest number ■ 10 x 80 = 800 ■ 20 x 20 = 400 ■ Second combo is the lowest number, so Country B should produce apples (has the comp. adv.) and Country A should produce oranges (has the comp. adv) Market vs. Command Economic Systems ■ Market System – Private ownership of property – Gov’t role is limited; free enterprise – Competition; incentives ■ Command System – Gov’t owns most property & the means of production – Gov’t makes most economic decisions BASICS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Laws; Determinants; Market Equilibrium; Welfare Analysis Law of Demand ■ As price increases, quantity demanded decreases, and vice versa. ■ Inverse relationship between price & quantity demanded ■ Downward sloping demand curve Some reasons behind the law of demand… ■ Substitution effect: if two goods are substitutes and the price of one decreases in relation to the other, people will switch to the cheaper one (demand more of it since it’s cheaper) ■ Income effect: as the price of a good decreases, people can afford more of it relative to their income Determinants of Demand ■ When one of these changes, demand will increase or decrease ■ TRIBE: – T: tastes/preferences of consumers – R: related goods’ prices (substitutes & complements – I: income of consumers – B: number of buyers – E: expectations of consumers Key Distinction ■ A change in quantity demanded is a movement along the demand curve and results only from an increase or decrease in the price of the good. ■ A change in demand means one of the determinants is at play, and the demand curve has shifted left (decrease in demand) or right (increase in demand). Normal v. Inferior Goods ■ If a good is normal, consumers will demand more of it when their income increases, and less when income decreases – New clothes, electronics, restaurant meals ■ If a good is inferior, consumers will demand less of it when their income increases, and more when income decreases – Used clothes, Ramen noodles Substitute v. Complementary Goods ■ If 2 goods are substitutes, one can easily be used in place of the other. If the price of one increases, consumers demand less of that one and more of the other. – Nike & Adidas shoes; paperback book & an eBook ■ If 2 goods are complements, they are often used together. If the price of one increases, consumers will demand less of it and therefore also demand less of the complementary good. – Movie tickets & popcorn; hotdogs & hotdog buns Law of Supply ■ As price increases, quantity supplied increases, and as price decreases, Qs decreases. ■ Direct relationship between price & quantity supplied ■ Upward sloping supply curve Determinants of Supply ■ When one of these changes, supply will increase or decrease ■ ROTTEN: – R: resource prices – O: other goods’ prices – T: taxes or subsidies – T: technology – E: expectations of producers – N: number of sellers Key Distinction ■ A change in quantity supplied is a movement along the supply curve and results only from an increase or decrease in the price of the good. ■ A change in supply means one of the determinants is at play, and the supply curve has shifted left (decrease in supply) or right (increase in supply). Typical Market Diagram & Market Equilibrium ■ Supply slopes upward ■ Demand slopes downward ■ Equilibrium is where they intersect ■ P* is equilibrium price ■ Q* is equilibrium quantity ■ Always label the curves, each axis (Price & Quantity), and whatever else you are asked to identify! Practice shifting the supply & demand curves due to a change in one or more determinants! ■ Always sketch a quick market diagram to see what the effect will be on the equilibrium price & quantity. ■ Just one shift – show it on the diagram (use arrows to show the direction) and analyze how equilibrium price & quantity changed. ■ Double shift – you should draw two market diagrams and show each shift separately – The variable that changes in the same direction both times will definitely change in that direction. – The variable that changes in a different direction on each diagram is indeterminate. – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0AQ9rK8MN4&index=9&list=PL6B2 DBE4C2FC8F845 Government-set price floors & ceilings Price floor – minimum price (only effective if above equilibrium) Results in surplus (Qs > Qd) Price ceiling – maximum price (only effective if below equilibrium) Results in shortage (Qd > Qs) Welfare Analysis ■ Consumer surplus – the difference between what you are willing to pay for something and what you actually pay (as long as you benefit) ■ Producer surplus – the difference between what a seller is willing to sell a product for and what they actually sell it for (as long as they benefit). Consumer & Producer Surplus in a Market in Equilibrium ■ The sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus is known as total welfare, or total benefit to society.