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Unit 2 Microeconomics Ch 4 – Demand Ch 5 – Supply Ch 6 – Prices and Decision Making Ch 7 – Market Structures • Microeconomics • The area of economics that deals w/ behavior + ______ ______ by _________, such as individuals + firms. • Micro = ______ Ch 4 – Demand • Demand • The _____, _____, + ________ to buy a product. • It is NOT just the ________ to have a product. • Ex. We all may desire a $100,000 sports car, but there isn’t that much of a demand since we cannot all ____ it or are not willing to pay the price the dealer is selling at. • Understanding demand is important to understand how the economy works + for good __________ ___________. • Ex. Knowing where the demand is to ____ a business, knowing the competitors’ ______ (or if no competition, to know what people can + are willing to _____), + knowing who your ___________ would be (for things like ____________). • Visualizing demand • A demand schedule is a listing that shows the various ____________ demanded of a particular product at all ________ prevalent in the market. Demand Schedule for Shoes at Payless Price Quantity Demanded $100 0 $90 5 $80 10 $70 20 $60 30 $50 35 $40 40 $30 60 • A demand curve is a ______ showing the ________ demanded at each + every ______ prevalent in the market. Demand Curve for Shoes at Payless 100 90 80 70 Price 60 50 40 30 D1 20 10 0 5 10 15 20 30 30 35 Quantity 40 45 50 55 60 • The Law of Demand • States that the _________________ of a good or service _______________ w/ its _______. • In other words, the ____ something costs, the ______ people demand. • Marginal utility is the ____ usefulness or satisfaction a person gets from getting 1 _________ of a good or service. • Ex. 2 Scoops of ice-cream. • Diminishing marginal utility is when the extra satisfaction we get from using ____________________ of a product or service begin ____________. • Ex. 6 Scoops of ice-cream End Section 1 • Change in the quantity demanded • A movement along the ___________ that shows a change in the quantity of the product purchased __________ to a change in price. • Causes a ______________ along the demand curve. • What causes a change in the quantity demanded? - ________________ of the item being graphed. the Sellers start charging more or less for product. • Change in demand • A demand curve shifts when consumers _________ more or less at ________ price. • Causes a _________ in the demand curve. • What causes a change in demand? - _____________________ You make more, you spend more + vice versa - _____________________ Things go out of style or become popular - ______________ Ex. Butter + margarine – if the price of one its substitute + vice versa , demand for - ______________ Ex. Peanut butter + jelly – If the price of one for its complement , demand - _____________________________ Ex. Forecast predicts a blizzard – more people buy milk. Ex. AT&T announces a new phone to be released in 6 months, many people wait to buy new phone - # of ________________ More or less people interested in an item End Section 2 • Cause-and- • Economics involves the study of _____________ effect + relationships. A business owner needs to know the effect a raise in prices ___________ would have on sales. A corporation needs to know the benefits of diversifying vs. the benefits of further investing in current production. An investor needs to know the effect various factors would have on his/her stock values. A country’s people need to understand the effects of gov.’t policies on the economy which could effect their income, jobs, retirement, entitlement programs, etc… A gov.’t needs to know the effect a tax increase would have on the economy (or on their chances of getting re-elected ) • Elasticity is a _________________________ that shows how a __________ variable responds to a change in an ____________ variable. • It shows how much one thing changes due to a change in ____________________. • Demand elasticity is the _____ to which a change in price causes a change in the __________ ___________. • Elastic ________ • Demand is elastic when a change in price causes a relatively _____ change in quantity demanded. • This is a ____________ to a price change. • Ex. People demand 20 widgets @ $15, but they demand 50 widgets @ $10. • Close to a ________ line on a graph. • Inelastic demand • Demand is inelastic when a change in prices causes a relatively _______ change in quantity demanded. • This is a ______________ to a price change. • Ex. People demand 30 whats-its @ $10, but they only demand 32 whats-its @ $5. • Includes things like basic ___________, salt, etc • Close to a __________ on a graph. • __________ • Unit elastic demand is when a product demand is __________ b/w elastic + inelastic. • Change in quantity demanded is ______________ to the change in price. • People demand 15 whatchacallits @ $20, but they demand 30 whatchacallits @ $10. P • So if price drops 50%, quantity demanded increases _____%. D1 Q • ___________ • What makes demand elastic or inelastic? of demand 1. _____________________________? elasticity - The more urgent the need, the more ________ demand tends to be. 2. _____________________________? - The fewer substitutes available, the more __________ demand tends to be. (- Also, depends on # of sellers for a ___________). 3. _______________________________ ______________________? - If the answer to this question is no, demand tends to be ______. - You can’t buy something if you don’t have the $. End Section 3 Ch 5 – Supply • Supply • The amount of a product that would be ______________ at all possible prices. • The law of supply says that suppliers will normally offer ____ for sale at ____ prices + _____ at _______ prices. • In other words, ______ will be offered at a _____________. • Visualizing supply • A supply schedule is a _______ of the various ____________ of a particular product supplied at all possible _____ in the market. Supply Schedule for Shoes at Payless Price Quantity Supplied $100 60 $90 55 $80 50 $70 40 $60 30 $50 20 $40 10 $30 5 • A supply curve is a ____ showing the various quantities _______ at each + every ______ that might prevail in the market. Supply Curve for Shoes at Payless 120 S1 100 Price 80 60 40 20 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 Quantity 45 50 55 60 65 • Change in the quantity supplied • A movement along the ___________ that shows a change in the ______ of the product _________________ in response to a change in ________. • Causes a _____________ along the supply curve. • What causes a change in the quantity supplied? - _______________ of the item being graphed. Sellers start charging more or less for the product. • Change • in supply • • A supply curve shift when _____________ more or less at _____________. Causes a ________ in the supply curve. What causes a change in supply? - _________________ If the cost of inputs , the amount supplied will NOTE: labor is an input + vice versa - ______________ An in productivity causes an versa in the amount supplied + vice - ______________ New technology causes an in the amount supplied UNLESS there is an unexpected problem - _______ + Subsidies (gov.’t payment to an individual, business, or other group to encourage or protect economic activity) An in taxes causes a in the amount supplied + vice versa An in subsidies causes a in the amount supplied + vice versa - Change in _______________ If sellers expect the price of their goods to amount supplied + vice versa in the future, the - ______________________ An in regulation causes a in the amount supplied + vice versa - # of _____________ An in the # of sellers causes an versa in the amount supplied + vice • Supply elasticity • Is a measure of the way in which ______________ responds to a change in __________. • The questions that determine demand elasticity (Substitutes? Delay? Large % of income?) ___________________!!!! • What makes supply elastic or inelastic? • ________________________ _______________________? • If a firm CAN react fast then it is ____________. • If a firm CAN NOT react fast then it is _____________. • Types of supply elasticities Supply • Elastic supply – when a change in price causes a relatively _________ change in the ___________________. • Ex. The price doubles + the quantity supplied triples. • Inelastic supply – when a change in _______ causes a relatively ________ change in the quantity supplied. • Ex. The price doubles + the quantity supplied only increases by 10%. P • Unit elastic supply – when a change in price causes a ________________ change in the quantity supplied. S1 Q • Ex. The price doubles + the quantity supplied doubles. End Section 1 • The Theory of • Deals w/ the ___________ b/w the __________ Production ____________ + the output of goods + services. • Usually based on the short run, when the only thing producers can change in input is ________. • During the long run producers can adjust the quantities of ___________________. • Ex. In the short run, BMW fires 50 employees, but in the long run it closes down one of its factories. • The Law of Variable Proportions says that in the short run, _____ will change as 1 ____ is varied while the others _______________. • In other words, if you change only 1 input, the output will ________. • Ex. Adding more salt to your meal changes the taste. • Economists prefer to change only _____ at a time to better judge the __________ each input has on the output. • The production function • A concept that describes the relationship b/w changes in output to different amounts of a single input ______________________________________. • Illustrates the Law of ___________ Production Schedule for BMW ________________. # of Total Marginal Workers Product Product • It can be illustrated w/ a schedule or w/ a graph. 0 0 0 • Measures marginal product (the extra 1 7 7 _______ or change in total product by 2 20 13 an addition of 1 more unit of ______). 3 38 18 4 62 24 5 90 28 6 110 20 7 129 19 8 138 9 9 144 6 10 142 -2 11 138 -4 12 129 -9 Current total product – Previous total product = ____________________ • The 3 stages of ______________ 1. Production Schedule for BMW # of Total Marginal Stage of Workers Product Product Production 0 0 0 1 7 7 2 20 13 3 38 18 4 62 24 5 90 28 6 110 20 7 129 19 8 138 9 9 144 6 10 142 -2 11 138 -4 12 129 -9 Stage 1 _________________ – The marginal return grows at an increasing rate. -Too many resources per worker so add a worker(s) + production 2. ___________________ – The marginal return grows at a decreasing rate. -Production at a ________ rate. 3. ___________________ – The marginal return decreases. -Workers are getting in Stage 2 the way + production Stage 3 End Section 2 • Measures of ______ • To run businesses __________, owners must analyze the _________________ of costs. • Fixed cost – the cost of production that _____ _______ when output changes. • These are costs the business ________ even if they ______________ anything. • ______________ combined make up a business’s overhead. • Ex. Executive salaries, rent, etc • Variable cost – the cost of production that __________ when output changes. • These are the costs the business can change to ___________________. • Ex. Labor, raw materials, electricity etc • ___________ + _____________ = total cost. • Marginal cost is the ____ cost incurred when a business produces 1 __________ of a product. • It is a type of __________ cost. • Measures • Revenue - $ ___________. of ______ • Total # of _______ x the ______________ per unit = total revenue • All the $ a __________________. • Ex: 7 units are sold at $15 each Total Revenue = 105 • Marginal revenue is the ____________ earned w/ the production + sale of 1 ____________ of output. • Ex: 5 workers produce 90 units and generate 1,350 total revenue. 6 workers produce 110 units (extra 20) and generate 1,650. Total revenue is increased by $300 by the additional 20. SO the marginal revenue is 15 dollars. (300 divided by 20). End Section 3 Ch 6 – Prices and Decision Making • Price • • • The ______________ of a product determined by _____________________. It communicates info: • _____ prices are signals for producers to produce _____ + for buyers to buy ____. • _____ prices are signals for producers to produce _____ + for buyers to buy ____. __________ of prices in a competitive market: 1. _____ – favor neither sellers nor buyers. 2. _________ – can adjust to unpredictable factors. 3. __________ of administration. 4. _______ + easy to ____________. • How can 1. Rationing – a system in which an resources be agency (usually a ________) decides __________ everyone’s “_____” share. w/o ______? • Often used in ______________. • Problems: almost everyone thinks their share is too ______, high ____________________, negative impact on people’s ________________ + produce. 2. _________________ – influential, powerful, member of the __________ in power (ex. Communist), etc… 3. __________ End Section 1 • Economic ________ • B/c transactions in a market economy are _______, buyers + sellers must _____________. • An economic model is a set of __________ that can be listed in a _____ or illustrated w/ a _____ to help analyze __________ + predict ___________. • We get an economic model by combining ______ + ______ info. - Remember the Payless Economic Model for Shoes at Payless examples? Quantity Quantity Surplus/ Price Demanded Supplied Shortage $100 0 60 60 $90 5 55 50 $80 10 50 40 $70 20 40 20 $60 30 30 0 $50 35 20 -15 $40 40 10 -30 $30 60 5 -55 Economic Model for Shoes at Payless 12 0 10 0 S1 Price 80 60 40 D1 20 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 Quantity 40 45 50 55 60 • What can we determine w/ the economic model? • The equilibrium price – the price at which _______________ = _________________. Economic Model for Shoes at Payless 12 0 Economic Model for Shoes at Payless Quantity Demanded Quantity Supplied Surplus/ Shortage $100 0 60 60 $90 5 55 50 $80 10 50 40 $70 20 40 20 $60 30 30 0 $50 35 20 -15 $40 40 10 -30 $30 60 5 -55 10 0 S1 80 Price Price 60 D1 40 20 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Quantity • What is the equilibrium price of the shoes? $______ • Market equilibrium • A situation in which the _______________ is equal to the ______________________. • ________ = _________ • Surplus • A situation in which the quantity supplied is ____________ the quantity demanded at a given ______. • ________ > _________ • Shortage • A situation in which the quantity demanded is ____________ the quantity supplied at a given price. • ________ < _________ • So why does this matter? • Economists + businesses use economic models to determine _________________ if there is a change in _______ or _________. End Section 2 • __________ • Sometimes we don’t want the market market to adjust to the ________________ – outcomes so we establish price ceilings + floors. • Price ceilings – the ______________ ______ that can be charged for a product or service. • Established by the _____ if they feel prices are too _______. • Problems – can lead to __________, little incentive for suppliers to be __________, suppliers may ___________ the product in favor of something more _________, etc… • Ex: Rent control. • Price floors – the _______________ ______ that can be paid for a good or service. • Established by the _____ if they feel prices are too _____. • Problems – can lead to _________, not as many people can ________ to purchase the goods/services, etc… • Ex: Minimum wage (another potential problem w/ minimum wage is that fewer workers may be hired). End Section 3 Ch 7 – Competition, Market Structures, and the Role of Gov.’t • Classifying market structures • The nature + _____________________ among firms operating in the ________________. • What determines a market structure? • • • • • How many buyers + __________ are there? How ________ are they? Does either have any influence over ________? How much _______________ exists b/w firms? What kind of ________ is involved (are they exactly the same or just similar)? • Is it easy or difficult for new firms to enter the market? • Economists group industries into 4 different market structures: • _____________________ • _____________________ • __________ • ___________ • Perfect competition • • Characterized by a ____ # of well-informed independent buyers + sellers who exchange ____________ products. Necessary conditions: 1. 2. 3. 4. Large # of ________________________. Buyers + sellers deal in identical products. Each buyer + seller acts _______________. Buyers + sellers are well-informed about products + prices (keeps prices _________). 5. Buyers + sellers are free to enter, conduct, or get out ________________. • Few if any perfectly competitive markets ______ (Ex: farmers selling produce out of their trucks). Imperfect competition is a market that is _____ one of the necessary conditions of a perfect competition. _____ businesses in the US are imperfect competition markets. • Monopolistic • The market structure that has all the competition conditions of perfect competition except for the __________________. • The products’ differences may be ___ or ________ or just in ____________. • Ex: Athletic shoes • ____________ is VERY important to inform potential buyers about why their product is ___________ to the competition. • Oligopoly • A market structure in which a __ very ____________ dominate the industry. • The product may be _____________ or __________. • Ex: Coke + Pepsi, automotive industry, etc… • Sometimes the businesses may take part in collusion – the formal agreement to ____________ or to otherwise behave in a ____________ manner. • In these cases, supply + demand doesn’t determine the _______. • _______. • Monopoly • A market structure w/ only _______ of a particular product. • Extremely _______. • It is a ___________. • Ex: Utilities – determined by the gov.’t (Microsoft, DeBeers, etc…). • Mostly _______. End Section 1 • ______ in a market economy • A ____________ economy needs 4 conditions: 1. ___________ competition. 2. Buyers + sellers must be reasonably well-informed about _________ + ____________ in the market. 3. _________ must be free to _____ from 1 industry to another. 4. Prices must ______________ the costs of __________ (includes the ________ for the entrepreneur). • A market failure can occur when any of these 4 conditions are ____________ __________. • Inadequate • Over time, _______ + acquisitions __________ have led to larger + ____ businesses dominating various industries. This has led to a in ___________ which has several important consequences: 1. ________________________ – including $ (instead of investing in the company, executives may get big bonuses + benefits). 2. Higher _____ + reduced output – “____________________” 3. Economic + ______________ • Inadequate • W/o knowing the _________ of goods __________ or services, market prices can be ________ high or low. Also, workers may be over or under ___. $ may be invested ________. Stocks could be priced unnaturally high + the market could crash causing a __________ or the housing market may be overvalued causing it to go bust which starts a _________ (sound familiar?). • __________ • If resources don’t ______ to where immobility they’re ___________, markets don’t function __________. • Ex: A factory closes in Greenville + many people are out of jobs. • Those same employees refuse to __________ in a factory in South Dakota that _________________ workers. • Ex: A gas shortage in the southeast causes gas stations to run out of gas while in other parts of the country, they’ve got plenty of gas. End Section 2 • The role of the _______ • Laissez-faire – is belief that the ____ should ___________ w/ or regulate industries or the __________. • Based on the idea that gov.’t ____________ only interfered w/ the ______________________. • What are some ways in which the gov.’t intervenes in the economy? • __________________ – to prevent monopolies + promote competition. • ______________ – allows monopolies when beneficial (ex: some utilities) • ________ – protective (ex: tariffs) • Public disclosure – requires businesses to make ______________ available to the _____ (ex: food labels, financial data, credit card agreements, “truth-in-advertising”, etc…) • ________ b/w labor disputes End Section 3