💹Business Economics Unit 2 – Microeconomics: Core Principles
Microeconomics explores how individuals and firms make decisions in a world of scarcity. It delves into supply and demand, market equilibrium, and various market structures. These principles form the foundation for understanding economic behavior at the individual level.
Key concepts include opportunity cost, marginal analysis, and elasticity. The study also covers consumer behavior, production costs, and real-world applications like minimum wage and externalities. Understanding these principles helps explain economic phenomena and inform policy decisions.
Scarcity the fundamental economic problem of having limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants and needs
Opportunity cost the highest-valued alternative that must be given up to engage in an activity or make a choice
Calculated by considering the value of the next-best alternative foregone
Marginal analysis evaluating the additional benefits and costs of an activity to determine the optimal level of that activity
Positive economics objective analysis of economic behavior and outcomes based on facts and data
Normative economics subjective analysis of economic behavior and outcomes based on value judgments and opinions
Microeconomics the study of individual decision-making units (households and firms) and how they interact in markets
Macroeconomics the study of the economy as a whole, focusing on aggregate variables (GDP, inflation, unemployment)
Supply and Demand Basics
Supply the quantity of a good or service that producers are willing and able to offer for sale at various prices
Determined by factors such as input prices, technology, expectations, and the number of sellers
Represented by an upward-sloping supply curve, showing a positive relationship between price and quantity supplied
Demand the quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to purchase at various prices
Influenced by factors like income, preferences, prices of related goods, expectations, and the number of buyers
Depicted by a downward-sloping demand curve, illustrating a negative relationship between price and quantity demanded
Law of supply states that, ceteris paribus (all else equal), a higher price leads to a higher quantity supplied
Law of demand asserts that, ceteris paribus, a higher price results in a lower quantity demanded
Determinants of supply factors that shift the supply curve (input prices, technology, expectations, number of sellers)
Determinants of demand factors that shift the demand curve (income, preferences, prices of related goods, expectations, number of buyers)
Market Equilibrium
Market equilibrium a situation where the quantity supplied equals the quantity demanded at a given price
Occurs at the intersection of the supply and demand curves
Represents a price and quantity combination where there is no shortage or surplus
Equilibrium price the price at which the quantity supplied equals the quantity demanded
Also known as the market-clearing price
Equilibrium quantity the quantity bought and sold at the equilibrium price
Shortage a situation where the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at a given price
Occurs when the price is below the equilibrium price
Creates upward pressure on the price as consumers compete for the limited supply
Surplus a situation where the quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded at a given price
Happens when the price is above the equilibrium price
Puts downward pressure on the price as producers compete to sell the excess supply
Price mechanism the process by which changes in supply and demand lead to adjustments in prices and quantities to restore equilibrium
Elasticity and Its Applications
Elasticity a measure of the responsiveness of one variable to changes in another variable
Price elasticity of demand measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded to changes in price
Calculated as the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price
Elastic demand (|elasticity| > 1) quantity demanded is highly responsive to price changes
Inelastic demand (|elasticity| < 1) quantity demanded is relatively unresponsive to price changes
Unit elastic demand (|elasticity| = 1) quantity demanded changes proportionally with price changes
Income elasticity of demand measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded to changes in income
Normal goods have positive income elasticity (quantity demanded increases with income)
Inferior goods have negative income elasticity (quantity demanded decreases with income)
Cross-price elasticity of demand measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded of one good to changes in the price of another good
Substitutes have positive cross-price elasticity (quantity demanded of one good increases when the price of the other rises)
Complements have negative cross-price elasticity (quantity demanded of one good decreases when the price of the other rises)
Price elasticity of supply measures the responsiveness of quantity supplied to changes in price
Elastic supply (elasticity > 1) quantity supplied is highly responsive to price changes
Inelastic supply (elasticity < 1) quantity supplied is relatively unresponsive to price changes
Consumer Behavior and Utility
Utility the satisfaction or benefit a consumer derives from consuming a good or service
Measured in utils, which are subjective units of satisfaction
Marginal utility the additional satisfaction gained from consuming one more unit of a good or service
Diminishes as more units are consumed (law of diminishing marginal utility)
Total utility the overall satisfaction derived from consuming a given quantity of a good or service
Calculated by summing the marginal utilities of all units consumed
Consumer equilibrium the point at which a consumer maximizes total utility subject to a budget constraint
Occurs when the marginal utility per dollar spent is equal across all goods consumed
Indifference curve a graphical representation of different combinations of two goods that provide a consumer with the same level of utility
Downward-sloping and convex to the origin
Do not intersect, as each curve represents a different level of utility
Budget constraint a line showing all combinations of two goods a consumer can afford given their income and the prices of the goods
Slope equals the negative of the price ratio of the two goods
Consumer optimum the point where the budget constraint is tangent to the highest possible indifference curve
Represents the utility-maximizing combination of goods given the consumer's income and prices
Production and Costs
Production the process of transforming inputs (factors of production) into outputs (goods and services)
Short run a time period in which at least one input is fixed (usually capital)
Long run a time period in which all inputs can be varied
Total product (TP) the total output produced by a firm using a given amount of inputs
Marginal product (MP) the additional output produced by employing one more unit of a variable input, holding other inputs constant
Calculated as the change in total product divided by the change in the variable input
Average product (AP) the output per unit of a variable input, holding other inputs constant
Calculated as total product divided by the quantity of the variable input
Law of diminishing marginal returns states that as more units of a variable input are added to a fixed input, marginal product eventually declines
Fixed costs (FC) costs that do not vary with the level of output in the short run (rent, insurance, salaries)
Variable costs (VC) costs that change with the level of output (raw materials, hourly wages, utilities)
Total cost (TC) the sum of fixed costs and variable costs at each level of output
Marginal cost (MC) the additional cost of producing one more unit of output
Calculated as the change in total cost divided by the change in output
Average fixed cost (AFC) fixed cost per unit of output, found by dividing fixed cost by the quantity of output
Average variable cost (AVC) variable cost per unit of output, calculated by dividing variable cost by the quantity of output
Average total cost (ATC) total cost per unit of output, found by dividing total cost by the quantity of output or by adding average fixed cost and average variable cost
Market Structures
Perfect competition a market structure characterized by many buyers and sellers, homogeneous products, free entry and exit, perfect information, and no market power
Firms are price takers, facing a perfectly elastic demand curve
Long-run equilibrium occurs where price equals minimum average total cost
Monopoly a market structure with a single seller, unique product, high barriers to entry, and significant market power
Faces a downward-sloping demand curve and can set price or quantity, but not both
Produces less output and charges a higher price compared to perfect competition
Monopolistic competition a market structure with many sellers, differentiated products, low barriers to entry and exit, and some market power
Firms face a downward-sloping demand curve but have limited ability to set prices
Long-run equilibrium occurs where price equals average total cost, but firms operate with excess capacity
Oligopoly a market structure with few sellers, interdependent decision-making, high barriers to entry, and significant market power
Firms engage in strategic behavior, considering the actions and reactions of rivals
Outcomes can range from collusion (joint profit maximization) to competition (price wars)
Price discrimination the practice of charging different prices to different consumers for the same product or service
Requires market power, ability to segment the market, and prevention of resale
Can increase profits by capturing more consumer surplus
Real-World Applications
Minimum wage a legally mandated lower bound on the wage rate that employers can pay their workers
Creates a price floor in the labor market, potentially leading to unemployment if set above the equilibrium wage
Price controls government-imposed restrictions on the prices that can be charged for goods or services
Price ceilings (rent control) set a maximum price below the equilibrium price, causing shortages
Price floors (agricultural price supports) set a minimum price above the equilibrium price, resulting in surpluses
Taxes and subsidies government policies that can shift the supply or demand curves in a market
Taxes (excise tax on cigarettes) shift the supply curve to the left, raising the price and reducing the quantity
Subsidies (renewable energy subsidies) shift the supply curve to the right, lowering the price and increasing the quantity
Externalities costs or benefits of an activity that affect third parties not directly involved in the activity
Negative externalities (pollution) impose costs on society, leading to overproduction compared to the socially optimal level
Positive externalities (education) generate benefits for society, resulting in underproduction compared to the socially optimal level
Public goods goods that are non-excludable (cannot prevent non-payers from consuming) and non-rivalrous (consumption by one does not reduce availability for others)
Examples include national defense, public parks, and lighthouses
Often underprovided by private markets due to the free-rider problem, requiring government provision or funding