Micro Notes 2022
Micro Notes 2022
Micro Notes 2022
Chapter 3 – Demand
Market
- Buyers and sellers carry out economic transaction
o Product market
o Factor market
o Stock market
o International finance market
Demand
- Quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing
and able to purchase at different prices in a given time
period = if they are able to buy what they want it is known
as effective demand
Law of Demand
- As price of a product falls, quantity demanded of the
product increases (ceteris paribus)
- Demand curve slopes downwards
Non-price determinants of demand
- Demand shifts
- Income:
o Normal goods – increase in income, increases demand –
depends on the product, e.g., salt – small increase,
cinema tickets – large increase
o Inferior goods – demand falls, as income rises, higher
priced substitutes are bought, e.g., cheap wine
- The price of related goods
o Substitutes – change in price of one changes price of the other, e.g., fall of
price in chicken, increases its demand and decreases demand of beef – leads to
movement along for chicken and shift to the left for beef
o Complements – purchased together – if one’s price changes, the other’s does
too; e.g., decrease in game prices, increase in sales of games and game
consoles
o Unrelated goods – change in price of one has no effect on the other. E.g.,
increase in toilet paper price has no effect on pencils
- Tastes and preferences
o Tastes and preferences influence quantity demanded – decrease in quantity if a
product is less popular
Can be affected by marketing, media, peer pressure
E.g., = skateboarding advertised and televised then demand could
increase
- Future price expectations
o If consumers think that price will increase in the future, demand will increase
now
e.g., taxes on cigarettes announcement; decrease in demand could
happen during Black Friday
- Number of consumers
o If there is an increase in #of consumers, demand increase – strategies would
be based on the age of the populations
E.g., senior citizens number increases – ads are targeted at them
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- Default choice – pre-set option that is effectively selected (Google search engine)
OR/AND choice that is followed unless a decision is made to change it (always
getting caffe latte)
o Example with opt in opt out organ donation, where opt in option means that
people do nothing and organs will not be dontated
- Mandated choice – required by law to know in advance (organ donations)
- Nudge theory – choice architecture can nudge, encourage people to voluntarily
choose a better option for them
o Maintain their right to choose but make better choices
Placing healthy food more accessibly – encourages its consumption
Pension schemes – saving money using private schemes
• Problems of saving result from hyperbolic discounting and loss
aversion
o E.g., Save More Tomorrow program for young working
people to save money
- Key Element: When using nudge theory sovereignty must be present! People should
have the right to choose
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Elasticity
- Measure how something changes when there is a change in one of determinants and it
is a measure of responsiveness
- Elasticity of demand – how much demand for a product changes when there is a
change in one of the determinants
o PED (Price elasticity of demand)
o YED (Income elasticity of demand)
PED
- Quantity demanded of a product changes when there is a change in price
- Note: The elasticity is not the same in a slope – it can be elastic and inelastic when
moving downwards – low-priced products would be more inelastic than high-priced,
due to a smaller concern
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Determinants of PED
- Closeness and number of substitutes
o The more substitutes and the closer they are – the more elastic demand
o Elastic: household products, meat, fruit. Inelastic: oil
- Necessity
o Food is a necessity and should be inelastic, however if products are defined
more narrowly, i.e., other types of meat, then it becomes more elastic
o Important to note that necessity is different for different people (addictives)
- Proportion of income spent
o If a product is low-price – inelastic and vice versa
o E.g., $1.50 for coffee and 10% increase leading to $1.65 is not going to affect
a consumer who has a good salary
- Time period considered
o PED inelastic short-term and elastic long-term because it takes time to change
buying habits
o Austria heating oil prices – demand dropped slightly, however over the years
people started using gas, coal, wood, making PED elastic
Importance:
- Firms – makes revenues
- Governments – taxes on products and elasticity will impact on their revenue; if
demand falls, less workers are needed. Governments thus will put taxes on inelastic
goods
Primary commodities vs. manufactured products (HL)
- Primary commodities – raw materials (cotton, coffee) – inelastic necessities with
no/few substitutes = consumers are firms for production
o E.g., Coffee beans companies – price increases, demand falls slightly, price
increases, demand increases slightly (you make a set amount of coffee and
don’t need more)
- Manufactured goods – processed elastic goods with more substitutes
o E.g., Vacuum cleaner brands
Income elasticity of demand (YED)
- How much demand changes when there is a change in consumer’s income
- Steps are the same as for PED, but using income (see page 1)
- Values: sign of the equation is important to tell us whether it is a normal (rises as
income rises) or an inferior (falls as income rises) good
- Normal goods: YED – positive; if q.d% increase is less than %increase in income,
YED between 0 and 1 is income inelastic, if %q.d. increase is greater than % increase
in income, YED >1 and is income-elastic
o Bread – necessity good and is income-inelastic
o Holidays – superior goods and is income-elastic
- Inferior goods: YED – negative
o Inexpensive jeans demand falls as people buy brand jeans
Importance (HL)
- Decision making by firms
o See YED in order to increase their revenues to grow
E.g., If more people get more revenue, then demand for smartphones
will increase and producers will expand in rapidly growing economies
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Chapter 5 – Supply
- Quantity of a good/service that producers are able and willing to supply at different
prices in a given time period
- Effective supply – being able to supply a product
Law of supply
- As price of a product rises, quantity supplied with usually increase (ceteris paribus)
- Assumption that producers are rational maximizers of profits – thus taking advantage
of higher prices
Non-price determinants
- Cost of factors of production
o Increase in costs leads to decrease in supply, shifting it to
the left, and vice versa
- Price of related goods (competitive & joint supply)
o Competitive supply – producing more than one type of a
product
E.g., producing skateboards and roller skates,
when demand of one increases you supply more of one and less of the
other (shift for roller skates) (movement along for skateboards as more
are produced)
o Joint supply – production of goods at the same time
E.g., oil and diesel, if supply of one increases the supply of other also
increases
- Government intervention (taxes + subsidies)
o Indirect taxes – added on to the price of products, where producers pay, thus
shifting supply outwards
o Subsidies – payments to the business to reduce costs of production, shifting
supply downwards
- Expectations of prices
o If demand increases in the future, then producers can hold the product and
offer it at higher prices, thus increasing production for that period and vice
versa
- Technology
o Improvements in technology can increase supply; these are unlikely to shift
backwards
- Weather/Natural disasters
o Good weather – leads to bumper crops, poor weather, droughts – cuts in
supply
Movement along is price related; shifts are non-price related
Individual producer supply and market supply
- Supply of the market can be calculated by using method of horizontal summing,
adding individual producers together
Law of supply in-depth (HL)
- Short run
o Period in which at least one production factor is fixed; long run – all factors of
production are variable; production is short-run, planning is long-run
o Firms cannot rapidly increase production because factors are fixed, therefore
variable factors are applied to plan ahead
o Short-run – determined by how long it takes to increase quantity of fixed
factors – varies from industry to industry
Lawn mower – week delivery time; Electricity plant – two years
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o E.g., cocoa – time to harvest and plant takes time, therefore resources need to
be re-allocated; same with lower prices – you cannot lower output since you
harvested it
- Manufactured – elastic – easier to increase/decrease quantity demanded –
determinants of PES make them elastic
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- Excess supply occurs when producers raise the price, whereas excess demand occurs
at lower prices, where supply falls.
- To eliminate surplus and shortages the producers need to lower/increase the prices to
stabilize the equilibrium
- Equilibrium is self-righting – without outside disturbance will return to the original
position
Effect on equilibrium when there are changes in demand and supply
- Equilibrium is moved when there are changes to determinants of demand or supply.
After that shift the producers will need to readjust their prices to create a new
equilibrium
- Market, if left alone, will adjust to a new equilibrium
Price mechanism
- Forces of supply and demand that can be used to signal for an allocation of scarce
resource
- 3 Functions in a market:
o Signal information
Prices change and are set by actions of consumers and producers so
they signal when one should act
o Ration scarce resource
Help allocate resource, if demand is greater than supply, supply will be
rationed to consumers who are prepared to pay high price
o Incentives to consumers and producer
Lower prices – buy more of a good for more utility; higher price –
disincentive
Higher prices – incentive to produce more for profit
- Key takeaway: price mechanism is a signal to producers to create an incentive to
produce/consumer more/less
- Invisible hand moving factors of production to produce goods and
service that are wanted by buyers
Market efficiency
- Consumer surplus – satisfaction gained by consumers from paying a
lower price than what they were expected to pay
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Indirect taxes
- Indirect tax is imposed upon expenditure – goods and services (GST) and value added
tax (VAT), sales, excise
- Why: provide government revenues, discourage consumption – extra
tax on undesirable goods
o E.g., Chile – 54.1% indirect taxes as a total revenue, USA – 17%
- Indirect tax is placed upon the selling pruce of a product – raises firm
costs and shift supply by amount of tax
- Two types:
o Specific tax: fixed amount of tax
o Percentage tax (ad valorem tax): tax is a percentage of the
selling price, tax will shift as a percentage
Effect on stakeholders:
- Producers raise price
- Consumers pay more
- Government earn more revenue
- Less workers
- Society is better off (less demerit goods)
Who pays:
- Different amount for consumer and producer depending on elasticities
o If supply is inelastic and demand is elastic most of the burden will fall onto the
producer because a large increase in price will significantly lower demand
o If supply is elastic and demand is inelastic most of the burned will fall onto the
consumer because consumers will not react to changes in price
o When value of PED = PES, burden will be shared
o PED > PES, burden will be placed on producers
o PED < PES, burden will be placed on consumers
How to calculate amount of tax (HL)
- To calculate the amount, subtract the difference between supply curves
- Government revenue – number of drinks * tax
- Consumers pay – increase in price * number of drinks
- Producers – amount of tax per unit – what is paid by consumer * supply quantity
- Consumer expenditure: Amount spent after tax – amount before tax
- Producer revenue: producer revenue before tax – revenue after tax
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Subsidy
- Amount of money paid by government to a firm.
- Given for:
o Lower price of essential goods to consumers, to increase consumption
o Supply of necessary products for economy – basic food or power source
o Enabling competition with overseas trade
- Supply shifts downwards, as it reduced costs of production, and will be passed to
consumers in form of lower prices
- Specific subsidy – specific amount of money
- Effect on stakeholders:
o Producers – increase revenues
o More workers employed
o More expenditure
o Less government revenue
- Things to be considered:
o Opportunity cost of spending money on other projects
o See if producers need to compete with foreign producers
o Who is paying the taxes when funding the subsidy
o What damage is done to foreign producers – some subsidies may lead to
overproduction and will harm sustainability. It will also be hard for
developing countries to grow, because they cannot compete with countries that
sell products at lower prices
Why and how do governments impose price controls?
Price ceilings
- Are put below the equilibrium, setting a maximum price –
producers cannot price their products above
- Are set to help consumers and are normally placed when
the product is a necessity or a merit good (underprovided
beneficial good)
o E.g., agriculture during food shortages or helps
with rented accommodation
- Problems of excess demand:
o Black markets – where products are sold at a higher
price
o Queues, where producers may decide who would be able to receive products
- How to reduce excess demand:
o Shift demand to the left – however that limits consumption which is not what
the government wanted
o Shifting supply to the right:
Subsidies to encourage production
Direct provision – government produces the product
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Solution:
- Screening: getting relevant information from the other party
o E.g., health insurance asking information about the buyer and offering
different insurance plans with different prices
- Signaling: party with more information provides information
o E.g., information about quality of the used cars and explanation why it costs
more as well as guarantees and promises to fix problems or show documents
Moral hazard – after transaction was made
- People have an incentive to alter behaviour and take risk even when negative
consequences are borne by others
o E.g., driver with a car insurance drives riskier because insurance will pay –
insurance companies might implement deductibles – driver pays an amount
o E.g., workers with fixed salaries do minimum work, knowing that they are
paid – bonuses and limited-term contracts are awarded to incentivize workers
o E.g., banks giving out more loans in 2008 than they could afford and were
bailed out by governments – could take higher risks knowing that
Solution:
- Regulations – which are not liked by businesses
- Bailed and fines for risky behaviour
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Other objectives
Corporate social responsibility
CSR – including public interest in decision making – accepting responsibility for the impact
of activities on other areas
- Education projects
- Reducing negative impacts on environment
- Provision of aid
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- Advantages:
o Better workforce
o Better reputation
o Brand loyalty
o If are active in reducing issues that it reduces the need for government
intervention
- Concerns:
o Companies adopt CSR to gain a good reputation to take away attention from
their main product
Satisficing
Satisficing – economic agent aims to perform satisfactory rather than to a maximum level in
order to pursue other goals
- Many work hard enough to make a reasonable living and will follow other goals to
pursue leisure
o E.g., firm owned by shareholders, where managers do not necessarily gain
anything from max profits – managers will do enough to satisfy
Growth maximization
- Set target to achieve growth in short-term to get more market share and dominate in
long run
o Measured in quantity of sales, sales revenue, employment or % of market
share
Revenue maximization
- Amount of revenue made – maximize sales revenue by producing when MR = 0 –
produce above profit maximizing level of output
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Market power
- Ability of a firms to raise market price of a good/service above marginal cost – able to
influence market outcomes to increase price
- Perfect competition – no market power – if prices are raised demand falls – they are
PRICE TAKERS
- Imperfect competition – can raise prices without losing customers – they are PRICE
MAKERS – can alter price or quantity supplied *not both*
o Altering quantity supplied creates market failure – moves the market away
from MSC=MSB – governments would implement legislation
Market forms
- Used to predict and understand operation of the markets
- Perfect competition, monopolistic competition oligopoly and monopoly
Perfect competition
Assumptions
- Made up of very large number of firms
- Small firm compared to size of industry – incapable of altering own output and be
noticeable and thus cannot affect the supply of industry or the price of the product –
PRICE TAKERS
- Identical, homogenous, products – no marketing and brands
- Free to enter/leave – NO BARRIERS TO ENTRY
- Producers/consumers – perfect knowledge of prices and costs, working, quality and
availability (does not happen in reality)
o Example: (close to perfect competition): EU wheat markets – small farms do
not have an impact on the industry and have to sell at given prices
Market power in perfect competition
- Firm has no market power and sells at point P (also is the equilibrium price) – cannot
increase prices, as it will lose customers but it can increase output because it does not
alter the industry
Maximizing profits in short run
- Profit maximization is at MC=MR – at the level of
output q (which is very small in relation to the whole
industry)
- Short-run – 2 main situations regarding profit/loss
o Short-run abnormal profits – covering total costs +
opportunity costs
o Short-run losses – not covering total costs – loss
minimizing because they are still producing at profit-
maximizing point
Long-run equilibrium
- Firms are making normal profits, where production is at profit maximizing point –
MC=MR
- No incentive for firms to enter and leave so. It will most likely stay the same unless
there are changes to demand curves or costs
Efficiency
1. Productive efficiency
o When firm produces at the lowest possible unit cost (AC)
o Productive efficient level is at MC=AC
o Important because: resources are combined efficiently as
possible and resources are not wasted by inefficient use
2. Allocative efficiency
o Socially optimum level of output, where suppliers are
producing the optimal mix of goods/services required by
consumers
o P > MC – good is valued more than its cost; MC > P –
society is using more resources to produce the good than its
value
o Allocative efficiency = MC = AR
o Important because = impossible to make someone better off
without making someone else worse off
o In perfect competition in abnormal profits then the firm is producing at profit
maximizing and allocatively efficient points however not at the most efficient
level of output – the same is seen with the loss
Market failure to be rectified in perfect competition?
- Profit-maximizing firms in long-run produce at lowest point of AC and all firms sell
at the same price and minimize their AC by producing at MC=AC, also produce at
allocatively efficient level at MC=PR
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- This means that there is no market failure because it produces everything allocatively
efficient – no need for government intervention
- No market power and are price takers
Imperfect competition
- Imperfect if MSC is not equal to MSB – in normal demand
curves – monopolistic and other firms because they restrict
outputs to maximize profits and increase price
- Because production occurs at MC=MR there is less
supplied, meaning a consumer and producer surplus losses
occur and welfare loss occurs (blue triangle and light blue
triangle combinations)
- More imperfect, the greater the market power and the grater
the market failure
Assumptions of monopolistic competition
- They are: competing firms where each has a bit of market power – sometimes set their
own prices
- Assumptions:
o Industry is made up of a large # of firms
o Firms are small – its actions are unlikely to affect others (are independent)
o Differentiated products
o No barriers to entry/exit
- Main difference is production differentiation – packaging, colour,
appearance, design
o Those include: nail salons, plumbers, jewelers
- Different structure: mainly affected by brand loyalty where the
consumer will stay with that producer even if prices are raised
o Consumers stay with the same plumbers because they believe
their skills are better than the competitions’
- Demand is elastic; however, firms are to an extent PRICE
MAKERS, with maximizing profit point at MC=MR
Market power in monopolistic competition
- Price-makers – can raise prices but can expect a fall in quantity
demanded
- Firm has little market power because firms are small – cannot
increase overall prices by producing less
Maximizing profits in short-run
- Can have abnormal profits and losses by producing at MC=MR and
having AC less than or above the selling price of P
Short-run profits/losses in the long-run
- Similarly, because of no barriers to entry firms will
enter/leave when other firms are producing abnormal
profits/losses
o Sushi shop has many customers – new restaurants will
open up and offer product differentiation to differ from one
another = non-price competition
- End up having normal profits in the long-run
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Efficiency
- Allocative and productive efficiencies are not reached because the firm is producing
at the point of MC=MR – the same happens in the long-run as well
- Brand loyalty
o Products that are known for their brand name discourage competition if they
are not able to produce a different product
E.g., Hoover vacuum cleaner
- Anti-competitive behaviour
o Legal/illegal practices – e.g., setting up low prices to
sustain losses and drive out the new business
Market power
- Have the power to control price/quantity – not both – monopoly
is the industry and the level of market power is significant
Profit situations
- If a firmis making abnormal profits in the short run that will
continue in the long run as well – are maximizing profits
- Monopolists can earn losses if there is little demand they will
need to plan their production in the long run to earn
normal/abnormal profits otherwise they will shut down
Efficiency
- Produce at a level that is not productively or allocatively efficient – production
occurs at profit-maximizing level
Market failure to be rectified in monopoly
- Advantages of monopoly that could outweigh market failure:
o Economies of scale – in which MC curve would be pushed downwards and
more output at lower price could be made – relative price/output idea is
debatable
o Higher levels of R&D – investment of profits into research and development
that will benefit consumers and provide better products
- Disadvantages of monopoly against perfect competition
o If there aren’t economies of scale then output could be restricted and higher
prices could be placed
o High profits are seen as unfair and the firm can use its power to abuse the
market
Main problems: inefficiency, high price and low output and anti-competitive behaviour
Oligopoly
Assumptions of oligopoly
- Few firms dominate an industry – are determined by a concentration ratio of CRx
where x is a number of firms
o E.g., US malt beverages of 160 firms with CR4 of 90% indicated that the 4
firms are the largest producers, and thus are an oligopoly
- Can be differentiated or same products with different names
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Firms competition
- Non-price competition – brand names, packaging, features, ads, promotion, sponsors,
publicity
- Marketing is aimed to increase brand loyalty and make demand less elastic
o E.g., Pepsi and Coke, Adidas and Nike
o Interesting to note that many brands are bought by MNCs – e.g., Unilever and
Procter & Gamble
Market failure to be rectified in oligopoly
- Because oligopolies act as monopolies, they will also be
inefficient and maximizing profits, the same will happen in
non-collusive oligopolies but with a lower market power
When does the government intervene
1. Restriction of output – if the prices are increased and there
is less output then there will be a loss of consumer surplus
2. Lower consumer choice – The less firms there are the less
choice there is
3. Productive inefficiency – causes a waste of resources
4. Allocative inefficiency – underallocation because value of output > its cost
5. Abnormal profits and inequity – high prices exploit low incomers and high profits of
firms lead to unequal distribution of income
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