* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Unit 3: Markets, not just for fleas and stocks!
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Unit 3 Markets: not just for fleas and stocks! Specialization and Voluntary Exchange Specialization Specialization: people/companies learn and practice a small set of skills then work or trade with others with different skills to produce something Improves efficiency/productivity The assembly line idea Why does specialization work? Skills are developed at a deeper level people become “experts” in their field Costs are cut because time needed to produce is decreased Training can be more focused and in-depth Remember: People, Stores & industries specialize Examples of specialization Doctors – cardiologists, dermatologists, dentists, podiatrists, rhinologists Examples of specialization Teachers – grade level, subject, coaches Stores at the mall – food court, hats, electronics, shoes, clothes Write two examples of specialization in each of these areas: Restaurant Movie Courts How does specialization relate to voluntary exchange? Because we specialize, we rely on others for the things we don’t produce (CAUSE AND EFFECT!) In an exchange, BOTH sides are looking to gain something BOTH sides gain in VOLUNTARY, NON- FRAUDULENT EXCHANGE How does each side gain in these potential transactions? LAWYER Circular Flow GPS SSEMI1 The student will describe how households, businesses, and governments are interdependent and interact through flows of goods, services, and money. Illustrate by means of a circular flow diagram, the Product market; the Resource market; the real flow of goods and services between and among businesses, households, and government; and the flow of money. Explain the role of money and how it facilitates exchange. Components of the circular flow Product market Factor (resource) market Households Businesses Government Money Goods/services Resources Taxes Taxes GOVERNMENT Goods and Services Supply and Demand GPS SSEMI2 The student will explain how the Law of Demand, the Law of Supply, prices, and profits work to determine production and distribution in a market economy. Define the Law of Supply and the Law of Demand. Describe the role of buyers and sellers in determining market clearing price. Demand vs. Quantity Demanded Demand Description What changes it? What does it look like? Quantity Demanded Demand vs. Quantity Demanded Demand Description Quantity Demanded the amount of a Amount of a good or service good/service people people are willing/able will buy at ONE to buy at ALL possible price prices It is a POINT!!!! It is a LINE, a series of points Demand vs. Quantity Demanded Demand What changes it? One of 5 determinants from RIPEN Quantity Demanded ONLY PRICE! Demand vs. Quantity Demanded Demand What does it look like? (Increase) Quantity Demanded Price Price (P) P1 P2 D1 Quantity (Q) D2 D Q1 Q2 Quantity Supply vs. Quantity Supplied Supply Description What changes it? What does it look like? Quantity Supplied Supply vs. Quantity Supplied Supply Description amount of a good or service people are willing/able to sell at ALL possible prices It is a LINE, a series of points Quantity Supplied Amount of a good/service people will sell at ONE price It is a POINT!!!! Supply vs. Quantity Supplied Supply What changes it? One of 5 determinants from GRENT Quantity Supplied ONLY PRICE! Supply vs. Quantity Supplied Supply What does it look like? (Increase) Quantity Supplied Price Price (P) S1 S2 S P2 P1 Quantity Q1 Q2 Quantity Demand amount of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to purchase at various prices this can be represented by a graph or by a table DIFFERENT THAN QUANTITY DEMANDED QUANTITY DEMANDED – amount a consumer is willing and able to purchase at a SPECIFIC price Demand Graph Essentialline components Demand =D Price (P) $2, Y axis = prices At there is a of good X axis = quantity of good QUANTITY DEMANDED of 5 AXES MATTER! Demand line = D $2 D 5 Quantity (Q) Law of Demand THERE IS AN INVERSE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PRICE and QUANTITY DEMANDED Why? the more expensive something becomes, the more likely people are to find a substitute diminishing marginal utility Supply amount of a good or service that producers are willing and able to sell at various prices this can be represented by a graph or by a table DIFFERENT THAN QUANTITY SUPPLIED QUANTITY SUPPLIED – amount a producer is willing and able to sell at a SPECIFIC price Supply Graph Essential components Price (P) Y axisline = prices Supply = S of good X = quantity of good At a axis price of $2, there is a Supply lineSUPPLIED =S QUANTITY of 3 S $2 3 Quantity (Q) Law of Supply THERE IS A DIRECT RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PRICE AND QUANTITY SUPPLIED Why? the higher the price, the more likely the chance for a greater profit to be made DEMAND SHIFTS (IRDL) Market for Diamond Rings P $200 What happens Assume that a diamond if people’sring costs $200 income doubles? At $200 Now, at $200, buyerspeople are buying want around 150 rings. 100 a day If the price What aboutwere at $100? $100,Will buyers would be people want buying more150 or less? a day $100 D 100 150 D2 Q Price IF ALL THAT CHANGES IS PRICE, then ONLY QUANTITY DEMANDED or SUPPLIED CHANGES!!!!!!!! P P1 P2 D Q1 Q2 Q RIPEN and GRENT “Determinants of Supply and Demand” Determinants of Demand (Things that shift the entire line!) R elated goods (Complements and Substitutes) Complements: if price of complement increases, demand for the other good decreases; if price of the complement decreases, demand for the other good increases Substitutes: if price of substitute increases, demand for other good increases; if price of substitute decreases, demand for other good decreases Income – income increases, demand increases; income decreases, demand decreases Preferences – preferences increase, demand increases; preferences decrease, demand decreases E xpectations – expect higher prices in future, current demand increases expect lower prices in future, current demand decreases Number of buyers – # of buyers increase, demand increases; # of buyers decrease, demand decreases Determinants of Supply (Entire Line) G R esource prices or availability - overnment decisions TAXES – taxes increase, supply decreases; taxes decrease, supply increases SUBSIDIES –subsidies increase, supply increases; subsidies decrease, supply decreases REGULATIONS – regulations increase, supply decreases; regulations decrease, supply increases •resource prices have an inverse relationship with supply •resource availability has a direct relationship with supply – expect to sell more, supply increases; expect to E xpectations sell less, supply decreases; expect to sell at future higher prices, immediate supply decreases. N umber of producers – direct relationship to supply T echnology or training – direct relationship to supply GPS SSEMI2 The student will explain how the Law of Demand, the Law of Supply, prices, and profits work to determine production and distribution in a market economy. Describe the role of buyers and sellers in determining market clearing price. Illustrate on a graph how supply and demand determine equilibrium price and quantity. Explain how prices serve as incentives in a market economy. GPS SSEMI2 The student will explain how the Law of Demand, the Law of Supply, prices, and profits work to determine production and distribution in a market economy. Define the Law of Supply and the Law of Demand. Describe the role of buyers and sellers in determining market clearing price. Illustrate on a graph how supply and demand determine equilibrium price and quantity. Explain how prices serve as incentives in a market economy. GPS SSEMI3 The student will explain how markets, prices, and competition influence economic behavior. Identify and illustrate on a graph factors that cause changes in market supply and demand. Explain and illustrate on a graph how price floors create surpluses and price ceilings create shortages. Define price elasticity of demand and supply. Market Structures GPS SSEMI4 The student will explain the organization and role of business and analyze the four types of market structures in the U.S. economy. Identify the basic characteristics of monopoly, oligopoly, monopolistic competition, and pure competition. Market Structures MOST COMPETITIVE LEAST COMPETITIVE Pure Competition Oligopoly Monopolistic Competition Monopoly Competitive Markets 2 Major Types of Competitive Markets Pure Competition Monopolistic Competition PURE COMPETITION No single buyer or seller controls supply, demand, or prices There are 4 conditions for PC Many Buyers and Sellers Identical Products Informed Buyers Easy Market Entry and Exit 1. Many Buyers/Sellers Each company or producer accounts for a small portion of goods Everyone acts INDEPENDENTLY, little or no teamwork among competitors 2. Identical Products Buyers choose goods almost SOLELY based on price, not quality Consumers are highly informed about product 3. Informed Buyers Buyers will decide if prices are acceptable This is possible because all the products are nearly identical Offers easy comparison between competitors 4. Easy Market Entry Extremely easy to enter the market and make a profit Low start-up costs, few regulations Easy to switch between goods if you’re already in the market Real World PC? Pure Competition is a model AGRICULTURE is closest to pure competition Many farmers, food is very similar, buyers are informed Commodities also are close Gold, silver, dairy, etc MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION Similar to pure competition in some areas Many producers Fairly easy to enter market Primary difference between pure competition is sellers try to DIFFERENTIATE their products through advertising Monopolistic Competition (cont’d) Competition based on things other than price Quality, size, perks, color… Advertising differences is key Differences other than Price Differences other than Price What are these companies selling? Problem with Profits MC and PC face problem of non-sustainable profits 2 major problems 1. No real control over price If price goes too high, consumers purchase from someone else If profits are extremely large, other firms enter the industry because it’s easy to get in 2. In MC, advertising constantly changes the playing field Consumers change back and forth from one brand to another based on their preferences SHORT RUN profits are possible with differentiation Journal 21 Identify 3 different goods that are monopolistically competitive (shoes, hamburgers, etc) For each good, identify 3 different brands Explain what each brand has that the other two don’t have Imperfect Competition Imperfectly Competitive Markets Unlike competitive markets, firms in imperfectly competitive markets may be able to set prices or production - 2 types: Oligopoly and Monopoly - 3 Conditions for Oligopoly 1. Few LARGE sellers - top 3-4 companies/sellers handle 75% of demand 2. Identical or VERY similar products - producers less willing to take chances 3. Difficult market entry - Large firms have already paid start-up costs Oligopolies at Work Typically try to use non-price competition T.V. Stations, Cars, Movie studios Oligopolies At Work INTERdependent pricing Firms set prices based on other firms Price leaders: largest seller sets a price and others follow Oligopolies at Work Collusion: when the major sellers set a price or production level Typically the price is above equilibrium, but there are no cheaper substitutes Oligopolies at Work Cartels: an open form of collusion where production levels or prices are announced OPEC or DeBeers Usually short-lived because of greed/self-interest 3 Conditions for Monopolies 1. Single Seller 2. No reasonable substitutes Total control of production and price setting Forces demand for good, even if prices are too high 3. Difficult or Impossible Market Entry Too high start-up costs or too technical field Examples of Monopolies or near Monopolies •Currently under investigation. NFL – •Potentially trying Convicted to form a of being an in the monopoly •Standard Oil, Used Video illegal upmarket. in but Game monopoly in •Had competition frombroken Livenation, 1911 1980 are currently under negotiations to • Claiming ebay/amazon as buy Livenation competition Not all Monopolies are “bad” •The cost to build more rail lines would be tremendous just for someone to make a little bit of profit •Fayette county water authority is a “natural monopoly” •The costs to society of having another competitor are too great Why not charge outrageous prices? 1. Consumer Demand: Increase in price of too much would cause demand of zero 2. Potential Competition: Startup costs are extremely high, but if prices got high enough, entrepreneurs would have incentive to enter 3. Government Regulation No journal. Get out the market structures sheet from yesterday. Complete the market structure practice sheet Business Organizations GPS SSEMI4 The student will explain the organization and role of business and analyze the four types of market structures in the U.S. economy. Compare and contrast three forms of business organization—sole proprietorship, partnership, and corporation. Business Organizations 3 basic business structures Sole Proprietorship – one person owns/manages Partnership – 2 or a small group Corporation – a group of shareholders Each has various costs and benefits All types must deal with 4 general issues Liability, life expectancy, financial options, and taxes Sole Proprietorships Advantages Low start-up costs Keeps all profits Full control Can respond to market quickly Easy to discontinue Disadvantages 100% Owner liability Legal, debt, taxes, etc Life expectancy of company Limited access to resources Partnerships Advantages Low startup costs Take advantage of specialization Larger pool of capital Disadvantages Potential for conflict Unlimited liability General partnership vs. limited liability Corporations Advantages Limited liability Much larger pool of capital Take advantage of specialization Prestige Disadvantages Difficulty of startup Double taxation corporate charter, stocks The corporation is a SEPARATE individual from the people who run it. Loss of control More regulation 25000 20000 15000 Non farm proprietorships Partnerships 10000 Corporations 5000 0 Total receipts (in billions) # of firms (in thousands) What’s On the Test Specialization/Voluntary Exchange Circular Flow Which direction do the arrows flow? What are the components? Market Structures Why do people trade? Why do we specialize? What are the characteristics of the 4? How does each structure affect prices/profits? Business Organizations Pros/Cons of each type of Organization Supply/Demand How are prices set in a market? Law of Supply/Law of Demand RIPEN/GRENT What happens to equilibrium price/quantity when supply/demand shift Price Floors/Ceilings