Page 1 - Microeconomics
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        OVERVIEW                        • CHANGE  IN  SUPPLY  (Shift  in  the  entire  supply  curve):  Results   CONSUMER CHOICE
    • ECONOMICS:  The  study  of  how  scarce   from change in the cost of production, business taxes, expected future   & PREFERENCE
    resources are allocated among competing uses.  price or quantity, change in the price of other produced goods, change in
    • KEY ECONOMIC QUESTIONS INCLUDE:    the number of sellers, change in planned sales at all prices, and change in   UTILITY THEORY
                                         technology.
    1. What is produced?                                                                   • UTILITY  or  TOTAL  UTILITY  (TU)  is
    2. How is it produced?              MARKET EQUILIBRIUM            P                     the  satisfaction  obtained  by  the  consumer
    3. Who gets what is produced?       • EQUILIBRIUM: Occurs at price (Pe)   S             from consuming a good.
    • PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY FRONTIER:   where  quantity  demanded  =  quantity            • MARGINAL  UTILITY  (MU)  is  the
      The alternative combinations of final goods and   supplied. At Pe, all sellers willing to sell   Price Floor  extra  utility  from  an  additional  unit  of
    services that could be produced in a given time   will be able to sell and all buyers willing  Pe  Equilibrium  consumption.
    period with all available and limited resources and   to buy will be able to buy.  Price Ceiling  TOTAL UTILITY
    technology.                         • PROPERTIES OF EQUILIBRIUM:                             Utility  MU 2    U
    1. Illustrates opportunity cost: Obtaining more   1. P > Pe, surplus     D                      MU 1
      production of one good requires a reduction in   2. P < Pe, shortage  O  Qe  Quantity
      the production (lost opportunity) of one or more   3. P = Pe, stable
      other goods.                      • PRICE CONTROLS:
    2. Law of increasing opportunity cost: Obtaining   1. Price ceiling: BELOW equilibrium = shortage, Q D  > Q S
      more of a good in equal amounts requires giving   2. Price floor: ABOVE equilibrium = surplus, Q D  < Q S   Q
      up ever larger amounts of the alternative good.  • CHANGES IN EQUILIBRIUM: Equilibrium price (Pe) and equilibrium   • Marginal utility (MU) is the slope of the total
    3. Inside  frontier:  Unemployed  resources  or   quantity  (Qe)  will  change  whenever  the  regularly-shaped  supply  or   utility curve. MU decreases as more quantity is
      resources used inefficiently.      demand curve shifts.                               consumed. This is the law of diminishing MU.
    4. Expanding frontier: Occurs (a) when resources                                       • LAW  OF  DIMINISHING  MARGINAL
      are  increased  and/or  (b)  due  to  technological                                   UTILITY: Additional  consumer  satisfaction
      advancements.                     SHIFTS IN THE SUPPLY & DEMAND                       from  the  last  unit  of  consumption  falls  as
    • HOW CHOICES ARE MADE:             CURVES (IMPACT ON EQUILIBRIUM)                      more of the good is consumed.
    1. Market  mechanism:  Supply  and  demand   SUPPLY INCREASE  SUPPLY DECREASE
      determine the price; owners allocate resources      S↑→P*↓, Q*↑     S↓→P*↑Q*↓        INDIFFERENCE CURVE (IC)
      to obtain the highest monetary rewards.                                                     B     U 1  = U 2
        2. Command  economy:  Central  authority      S 0   S                 S 1   S                   Slope = – (MU A  /MU B )
         determines  the  price  and  allocates              1                       0               U 1
         resources to achieve goals.                                                           MU A
        3. Mixed: An economy that uses both market   P 0 *       P 1 *                                  U 2
         and non-market signals to allocate goods   ↓             ↓                                             IC  A
         and resources.                                                                              MU B
    • MACROECONOMICS: The study of economic   P 1 *              P 0 *
    aggregates  such  as  national  production  and  the   D                    D 0        • An  indifference  curve  is  a  convex  curve
                                                                                            that  represents  different  bundles  of  goods
    price level.                                         0
    • MICROECONOMICS:  The  study  of  the       Q 0 *→Q 1 *             Q 1*←Q 0*          that provide the SAME levels of utility.
    behavior  of  consumers  and  producers  operating   DEMAND INCREASE  DEMAND DECREASE  INDIFFERENCE CURVE
    in the individual markets of the economy.                          D↓→P*↓, Q*↓         MAPPING
                                               D↑→P*↑, Q*↑                                       B
    SUPPLY & DEMAND                      P 1 *        S 0                     S 0                               U↑
    DEMAND                                ↑                      P 0* ↑
    • DEMAND  CURVE  (SCHEDULE):  A  curve                       P 1*
    (table)  showing  the  quantities  of  a  good  a   P *
                                          0
    consumer is willing and able to buy at alternative    D                      D 0
    prices.                                          D     1                 D 1
    • LAW OF DEMAND: Increase in price (P) causes     0                  Q 1 *←Q 0*                              A
    decrease in quantity (Q) demanded.           Q 0 *→Q 1 *
    • CHANGE  IN  QUANTITY  DEMANDED    SIMULTANEOUS SHIFTS (IMPACT ON EQUILIBRIUM)        • An indifference curve map shows a group
                                                                                            of indifference curves representing utilities
    (Movement along the demand curve): Caused                                               that increase in a northeasterly direction.
    by a change in the price of the given good.     P        2B      Supply                • Why indifference curves do not intersect:
    • CHANGE  IN  DEMAND  (Shift  in  the  entire
    demand curve): Results from changes in tastes,
    income,  personal  taxes,  prices  of  related  goods   2A  1  2C                                   A     B
    (substitutes  or  complements),  expected  future
    price or quantity, number of buyers, or a change                                                          C
    in planned consumption at all prices.                    2D
    SUPPLY                                                           Demand                 1. Given two indifference curves that intersect,
    • SUPPLY  CURVE  (SCHEDULE):  A  curve                                 Q                 U B  > U C  since point B is above point C.
         (table)  showing  the  quantities  of  a  good  a   * One variable clearly moves in a specific direction, the other variable   2. Since  point  A  and  C  are  on  the  same
        seller is willing and able to sell at alternative   is unclear.                      indifference curve, U A  = U C .
        prices at a given cost of production.  At 2B and 2D, P* clearly increases or decreases, therefore  3. Since  point  A  and  B  are  on  the  same
    • LAW OF SUPPLY: Increase in price (P) causes   2B→S↓D↑→P*↑Q*?                           indifference curve, U A  = U B .
    increase in quantity (Q) supplied.   2D→S↑D↓→P*↓Q*?                                     4. By transitivity, U B  = U C  which conflicts
    • CHANGE  IN  QUANTITY  SUPPLIED     At 2A and 2C, Q* clearly increases or decreases, therefore  with the initial assertion: U B  > U C .
    (Movement along the supply curve): Caused by   2A→S↓D↓→P*?Q*↓                             Therefore,  indifference  curves  cannot
    a change in the price of the given good.  2C→S↑D↑→P*?Q*↑                                 intersect.
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