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Chapter 1 1.1 What is economics Definition of Economics: Resources versus Wants Box 1.1 1.2 Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost Wants: more and better → unlimited Versus Needs: essential → limited (calculate)Versus Demand: want + ability to pay Resources: Natural/ Human/ Man – Made → limited Scarcity: Because resources are (1)scares, has to (2)choose. Example: Time Definition of Opportunity Cost: (3) Best Forgone opportunity 1.3 Illustrating scarcity, choice and opportunity cost: the production possibility curve Production possibility Curve(concave): levels of output + given limited resources + given fixed production techniques (figure 1.1) Illustrate: choice, scarcity and opportunity cost (trade – off) 1.4 Further applications of the production possibilities curve (Box 1.2) Goods versus Services: Tangible versus Non Tangible Consumer versus Capital Goods: Individuals versus Production Non- versus Semi-versus Durable consumer goods: Times used Final versus Intermediate Goods: When used Private versus Public goods: Who used Economic versus Free Goods: Cost + Price Homogeneous (exactly the same) versus Heterogeneous Goods (different varieties) Production possibilities Curve: Figure 1.1 unattainable, inefficient Shifts in the production possibility curves: Figure 1.2-4 Continue next slides 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 1 Chapter 1 1.5 Economics as a social science As a social science: behaviour of human beings in changing environment versus Natural science controlled environment, example chemistry Ceteris paribus: “all other remain the same” to explain unpredictable outcomes. Also Empirical science: measured economic performance 1.6 Microeconomics and macroeconomics Microeconomics: individual parts of Economy, example: consumers, households. Box 1.3 Macroeconomics: Economy as a whole, example: Total production, income and expenditure. Box 1.3 1.7 Positive and normative economics Positive statement: Facts Normative statement: Debated 1.8 A few points to note: Only Levels and rate of change Levels: example, wages and income versus Rates: example, inflation and growth Example: Box 1.5 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 2 Chapter 2 2.1 Different economic systems What, How, For Whom Traditional\ Command\ Market\ Box 2.1 Property Rights Coordinating mechanism ( Mixed) 2.2 The traditional system Rigid system – slow to adapt Substance economy – stagnate Economic activity is secondary to religious and culture values 2.3 The command system Political planners own factors of production - no motive for improvement No profit motive – inefficient production 2.4 The market system Adapt and innovate Self – interest promotes economic activity Co-ordination occurs without planning 2.5 The mixed economy Mix depends on the perceived problems in society Box 2.4 Prices - Rationing function - goods and services vs allocation function - factors of production 2.6 South Africa's mixed economy Privatisation vs Nationalisations 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 3 Chapter 3 3.1 Introduction Micro vs macro (image) 3.2 Production, Income and Spending Production generates Income (for various factors of production) which use for spending on Production (fig 3.1) Stock (once) versus flow variable(time dimension or continues) Box 3.1 3.3 Sources of production: the factors of production Natural resources: non-renewable Labour: quality and quality Capital: Depreciation (not money) Entrepreneurship Technology Capital intensive vs labour intensive 3.4 Sources of income: remuneration of the factors of production 3.5 Sources of spending: the four spending entities (only subsections) Households: people who make economic decisions and sells factors of production on the factor market Firms: employs factors of production and produce goods and services for the goods market Box 3.4 Continue next slides 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 4 Chapter 3 3.6 Putting things together: a simple diagram Figure 3.2 3.7 illustrating interdependence: circular flows of production, income and spending (only subsection) Figure 3.3 and figure 3.4 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 5 Chapter 4 4.1 Demand and Supply: an introductory overview Functioning of a specific market with household (intended demand) and firms (intended supply). Figure 4.1 4.2 Demand Absolute and relative prices - box 4.1 Definition: Quantities of a good or service that the potential buyers are willing and able to buy. (flow) Quantity demand(Qd) depends on: price of the good(Px), the price of related goods(Pg), income of the individual(Y), taste(T), number of people(N) → Qd = f (Px, Pg, Y, T, N) Qd = f (Px) ceteris paribus for (Pq, Y, T, N) Example: Table 4.1 → Figure 4.2 (also words, schedules, equations) Law of demand: higher prices, lower quantity demand → negative, inverse relationship Market Demand: adding individual demand curves horizontally (Figure 4.3) Movement Along a demand curve(fig4.4) ⌂ P → versus Shift of the demand curve → ⌂ P of related good (Substitutes (fig 4.5)/Complements(fig 4.6)) Pg / ⌂ consumer tastes or preferences, T / ⌂ population, N / ⌂ expected future price / ⌂ Income / Etc. Demand: a summary, Table 4.3 figure 4.7 4.3 Supply Definition: q of a good or service that the producers plan to sell at each possible price Quantity supply(Qs) depends on: price of the good(Px), price of alternative products(Pg), price of factors of production and other inputs(Pf), expected future price(Pe), state of technology(Ty) → Qs = f (Px, Pg, Pf, Pe, Ty) Qs = f (Px) ceteris paribus for (Pg, Pf, Pe, Ty) Example: Table 4.4 → figure 4.8(also words, schedules, equations) Law of supply: higher prices, higher quantity supplied → positive, direct relationship Market Supply: adding individual supply curves Movement Along (fig 4.9) a supply curve ⌂ P→ versus Shift of the supply curve → Pg, Pf, Pe, Ty, etc. Supply: a summary: Table 4.5 and Figure 4.10 Continue next slides 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 6 Chapter 4 4.4 Market Equilibrium Move towards equilibrium, never reach - Box 2.4 Table 4.6 → Figure 4.11 Excess Demand: Qd > Qs, Excess Supply: Qd < Qs, Equilibrium: Qd = Qs Function of prices in a market economy: Rationing goods + services to who can afford them Allocating factors of production where it is needed (cost) the most. 4.5 Consumer surplus and producer surplus Consumer surplus: the difference between what consumers pay and the value they receive Fig 4.12 Producer surplus: the difference between the lowest prices at which producers are willing to supply the different quantities and the price they actually receive Fig 4.13 Consumer and producer surplus at equilibrium Fig.4.14 combination of the above 4.6 Algebraic analysis of demand and supply Appendix 4.1 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 7 Chapter 5 5.1 Changes in Demand Increase in demand (any determinants except price) equilibrium ↑P ↑Q → figure 5.1(a) and Decrease in demand ↓P↓Q →figure 5.1(b) Figure 5.2 5.2 Changes in Supply figure 5.3 & 5.4 5.3 Simultaneous change in Demand and Supply Precise outcome cannot be predicted; change may work in opposite direction. Example: Increase in Demand + Decrease in supply = 3 different Q → figure 5.5 table 5.1 5.4 Interaction between related markets Substitutes figure 5.6 Complements figure 5.7 5.5 Government Intervention (exclude subsidies – import tariffs) Maximum prices (price ceiling) → figure 5.8 + 5.9 Consequences: shortage (excess demand)/ prevent market mechanism from allocating/ black market activity Example rent control Minimum prices (price floor) Figure 5.10 + 5.11 Consequences: surplus (excess supply)/ artificially high prices/ farms owned by big companies benefit/ inefficient producers are protected/ disposal of surplus – further cost. 5.6 Agricultural prices Figure 5.18 fallacy of composition 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 8 Chapter 6 6.1 Introduction Direction and how much ⌂Q 6.2 A general definition of elasticity Responsiveness of dependent variable (Q) to change in independent (p) formula p104 6.3 Price elasticity of demand (ep) Definition: 1%⌂P →? %⌂Q Meaning of ep 1.5 = 1%⌂P → 1.5%⌂Q Calculate price arc elasticity of demand Box 6.1 ep = (Q2-Q1)/(Q2+Q1) --------------------(P2-P1)/(P2+P1) ep versus TR → figure 6.2 and box 6.2 Five categories of ep Table 6.2 and Figure 6.3 Impact of a change in supply Figure 6.1 Determinants of ep: substitutes >; complements <; Types of wants satisfied ⌂; Time >; proportion of income>. 6.4 Other demand elasticity's Income elasticity Definition: ey: %⌂Y →%⌂Q + ey = normal goods /- ey = inferior goods / ey >1 = luxury goods / 1> ey >0 = essential goods Example Table 6.3 Cross elasticity eC): %⌂Pa →%⌂Qb +substitutes, -complements Table 6.4 interpret values (exclude Supply elasticity) 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 9 Chapter 7 7.1 Introduction to the indifference approach Degree of satisfaction, derives, consumption of goods and service. Cardinal Utility: can be measure versus Ordinal Utility: can be ranked(place in order of preference) 7.2 Marginal utility and total utility Subjective Marginal utility: extra utility derives from the consumption of one additional unit Total utility: sum of marginal Law of diminishing marginal utility: marginal utility eventually declines Table 7.1 Box 7.1 relationship between total, average and marginal magnitudes 7.3 Consumer equilibrium in the utility approach Weighted marginal utilities are equal and all income spend (total utility is max) Table 7.2 7.4 Derivation of an individual demand curve for a product Table 7.4 With Budget R10.00 2 Chocolates and 2 Yoghurt – Price of chocolate = R2.00 Table 7.5 With budget R10.00 4 Chocolates and 2 Yoghurt – Price of chocolates = R1.00 Demand curve derived from above Figure 7.1 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 10 Chapter 9 9.1 Introduction Types of firms (individual proprietorships, partnerships, companies, close corporations, cooperative, trusts, public corporations) The goal of the firm (maximize profit but principal-agent problem) Profit, revenue and cost (profit is surplus of revenue over cost, TR=PxQ, AR=TR/Q, MR=⌂TR/⌂Q : Box 9.2) short run (fixed capital equipment, variable labor) and the long run (variable labor and capital) in production and cost theory 9.2 Basic cost and profit concepts TC=cost of production, AC = TC/Q, MC = ⌂TC/⌂Q Opportunity Cost = Alternative sacrificed Explicit cost = monetary payment versus Implicit cost = opportunity cost not reflected in monetary payment Economic cost: Explicit + Implicit cost Profit (Figure 9.1) : Accounting profit = TR – Explicit cost Economic profit = TR - economic cost (Explicit + Implicit) Normal profit = TR equal to economic cost Economic loss = TR < economic cost 9.3 Production in the short run Definition: Physical transformation of inputs into output Fixed input: cannot be altered in the short run versus Variable input can be altered in the short run Production function: relationship between inputs and outputs Law of diminishing returns: more inputs/ production process/ point is reached/ MP↓, AP↓, TP↓ Table 9.2 → Figure 9.2 MP & AP relationships in figure 9.3 9.4 Cost Economic cost include Opportunity cost = Implied cost Fixed Cost: remains constant irrespective of Q versus Variable cost: change when total product changes AFC = TFC/TP, AVC = TVC/TP, AC = TC/TP, MC = ⌂TC/⌂TP Table 9-4 → Figure 9.4 and 9.5 Relationship between production and cost: (Fig 9.6) Maximum MP → Minimum MC, Maximum AP → Minimum AVC 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 11 Chapter 10 10.1 Market Structure Perfect Competition vs. Monopoly vs. Monopolistic Competition vs. Oligopoly → Table 10.1 Number of firms/ Nature of product/ Entry/ Information/ Collusion/ Control over price/ Demand curve/ Economic Profit Equilibrium : MR = MC 10.2 The equilibrium conditions Shut down rule: TR = > TVC → TR just sufficient to cover TVC, continue in order to retain employees and clients Profit maximizing rule: MR = MC → revenue earned from the last additional unit (MR) is equal to the cost of producing the last unit (MC). MR < MC → profit decreasing MR > MC → expanding production increase profit 10.3 Perfect Competition Definition: No market participant → influence → price →”Price Taker” Requirements: large number of buyers and sellers/ no collusion/ identical products/ freedom of entry and exit/ perfect knowledge/ no government intervention/ mobile factors of productions Relevance: Analysis of various markets 10.4 The Demand for the product of the firm Demand Curve = Sales Curve → horizontal at market price (figure 10.2) Higher → another supplier, lower → not optimum “Price Taker” Receive same price for any number of units therefore MR = AR = P (Box 10.2 – Numerical proof) 10.5 Equilibrium of the firm under perfect competition Figure 10.3 Different equilibrium positions: figure 10.4 AR > AC → Economic Profit AR = AC → Normal Profit AR < AC → Economic Loss (if AR = AVC → shut down point) Continue next slides 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 12 10.6 The supply curve of the firm and the market supply curve Figure 10.5 → various quantities at different prices. Not below (b) → close down point (does not cover variable cost) Supply curve slope = MC curve slope → because MC↑ as output(supply)↑ Market Supply = ∑ individual supply curve 10.7 Long-run equilibrium of the firm and the industry 2 Options: leave/enter or change size Figure 10.6-8 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 13 Chapter 12 12.1 Introduction Figure 12.1 12.2 The labour market versus the goods market Box 12.1 – money (nominal) wages: amount of actual money received versus real wages: purchasing power of money received Versus goods market p.209 12.3 Perfect competitive labour market Requirements for perfect competition p.210 Equilibrium in the labour market figure 12.2 The market supply of labour: figure 12.4 shift due to non-wages determinants p.212 The market demand of labour: figure 12.6 shift due to non-wages determinants p.215 Study Guide: Employ more workers (profit) when labour (wages) MRP (MPP x P) until Wage = MRP 12.4 Imperfect labour markets Reasons for imperfect p.216 Trade unions: craft versus industrial p.218/9 figure12.9 Government intervention in the labour market Minimum wages: Figure 12.11 2017-05-23 http://johan008.bizhat.com 14