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Unit IIB – Nature and Functions of Product Markets (5-10% of AP Microeconomics exam) Objectives: NCEE Content Standard 7 – Markets exist when buyers and sellers interact. This interaction determines market prices and thereby allocates scarce goods and services. NCEE Content Standard 8 – Prices send signals and provide incentives to buyers and sellers. When supply or demand changes, market prices adjust, affecting incentives. NCEE Content Standard 9 – Competition among sellers lowers costs and prices, and encourages producers to produce more of what consumers are willing and able to buy. Competition among buyers increases prices and allocates goods and services to those people who are willing and able to pay the most for them. Vocabulary: (Big Topics are in bold) Welfare Economics Willingness to pay Cost Producer Surplus Equity Deadweight Loss Incidence of Tax Elasticity Utility Total Utility Marginal Utility Constrained Utility Maximization Normal Good Inferior Good Substitution Effect Price Ceiling Consumer Surplus Efficiency Excise Tax Budget Constraint Marginal Utility Diminishing Utility Maximizing Rule Income Effect Price Floor Numbers and Formulas: MUx/Px = MUy/Py Visuals: Consumption Possibility Frontier Supply and Demand Model Consumer and Producer Surplus Deadweight Loss Taxes and Elasticity Price Controls AP Microeconomics Activity Book (Answers to Unit 1 and Unit 2 m/c sample questions for Unit 2B) Unit 1: 32. C 33. D Unit 2: 1. E 5. D 6. C 9. D 11. A 12. E 14. A 16. B 18. B 22. D 23. A Unit IIB Calendar: Monday 7 Tuesday Wednesday 8 Budgets 14 Choice cont. Choice cont. Hwk: AP Micro Activities 2-2 Hwk: Read Module 49 Taxes Thursday 9 Budgets cont. Friday 10 Choice Theory 11 No School Hwk: Read Hwk: Unit 2B RP Module 51 and 46 due Tuesday, (p.458-460 only) 11/22 15 16 17 Surplus Surplus cont. Taxes Hwk: AP Micro Hwk: Read Activities 1-4, 1-6, Module 50 2-9 21 22 23 Price Controls No School No School Hwk: Read Hwk: AP Micro Module 8 and AP Activity 2-7 Micro Activity 2-6 28 29 Price Controls Unit 2B Test 30 24 December 1 18 25 No School 2 Hwk: Review for Test What should you know at the end of this unit? The income effect, the substitution effect and the law of diminishing marginal utility can explain why a demand curve is downward sloping. The law of diminishing marginal utility states that as more of a good or service is consumed in a given period of time, the additional satisfaction declines. Utility Maximizing Rule: MUx/Px = MUy/Py Consumer surplus equals buyers’ willingness to pay for a good minus the amount they actually pay for it; and it measures the benefit buyers get from participating in a market. Consumer surplus can be computed by finding the area below the demand curve and above the price. Producer surplus equals the amount sellers receive for their goods minus their costs of production; and it measures the benefit sellers get from participating in a market. Producer surplus can be computed by finding the area below the price and above the supply curve. An allocation of resources that maximizes the sum of consumer and producer surplus is said to be efficient. The equilibrium of supply and demand maximizes the sum of consumer and producer surplus. Markets do not allocate resources efficiently in the presence of market failures such as market power or externalities as well as price controls and taxes. A tax on a good reduces the welfare of buyers and sellers of the good, and the reduction in consumer and producer surplus usually exceeds the revenue raised by the government. The fall in total surplus (CS, PS and Tax Revenue) is called the deadweight loss of the tax. A tax on a good places a wedge between the price paid by buyers and the price received by sellers. When the market moves to the new equilibrium, buyers pay more for the good and sellers receive less for it. In this sense, buyers and sellers share the tax burden. The incidence of a tax depends on the price elasticities of supply and demand. The burden tends to fall on the side of the market that is less elastic because that side of the market can respond less easily to the tax by changing the quantity bought or sold. Because the elasticities of supply and demand how much market participants respond to market conditions, larger elasticities imply larger deadweight losses. A price ceiling is a legal maximum on the price of a good or service. If the price ceiling is below the equilibrium price, the quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied, resulting in a shortage. A price floor is a legal minimum on the price of a good or service. If the price floor is above the equilibrium price, the quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded, resulting in a surplus.